Men's Six Nations starts midweek and is cut shorter for 2026
Related: France deserve Six Nations coronation but fall short of royal performance | Andy Bull
Advertisement
It is understood that the unprecedented move to begin the championship on Thursday 5 February next year has been made following input from broadcasters with the 2026 Winter Olympics ceremony taking place in Milan the following day. It has also been made with the agreement of all six unions.
The Championship has also been truncated to six weeks with one of the traditional fallow weeks removed due to the inaugural Nations Cup, which is due to take place later in the year. That competition will feature four rounds of fixtures next autumn – the traditional Test window only accounts for three – so in exchange, the Six Nations will take place over six weeks. With just one fallow week, there will be three consecutive weeks of fixtures, followed by a week off, then two more to conclude the championship.
Round 1 [all times GMT]
Thurs 5 Feb: France v Ireland, 8.10pm; Sat 7 Feb: Italy v Scotland, 2.10pm; England v Wales, 4.40pm.
Advertisement
Round 2
Sat 14 Feb: Ireland v Italy, 2.10pm; Scotland v England, 4.40pm; Sun 15 Feb: Wales v France, 3.10pm.
Round 3
Sat 21 Feb: England v Ireland, 2.10pm; Wales v Scotland 4.40pm; Sun 22 Feb: France v Italy, 3.10pm.
Round 4
Fri 6 Mar: Ireland v Wales, 8.10pm; Sat 7 Mar: Scotland v France, 2.10pm; Italy v England, 4.40pm.
Round 5
Sat 14 Mar: Ireland v Scotland, 2.10pm; Wales v Italy, 4.40pm; France v England, 8.10pm.
The move to six weeks is unlikely to go down well with player welfare groups given a host of players have spoken of the need for two rest weeks in the past. Early this season, England players said they had voiced 'extensive concerns' about their workload with the Rugby Football Union when their contracts were announced for the coming year.
Advertisement
England will begin their campaign by hosting Wales on Saturday 7 February before travelling to Murrayfield to face Scotland and then welcoming Ireland to Twickenham. After the fallow week Steve Borthwick's side face consecutive away matches against Italy in Rome before taking on France in the final match on Super Saturday. Ireland, who will have the British & Irish Lions coach Andy Farrell back at the helm, host the only Friday night match of the championship, against Wales in round four of the competition.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
2 minutes ago
- New York Times
Cricket is eating itself
It says everything that just when England were finally handed the type of pitch they have been craving, green with pace and bounce, their best bowlers were too exhausted to use it. So demanding have been the slow, flat surfaces prepared for England's Test series against India, together with a schedule created more to maximise revenue than care for the welfare of players, both teams are out on their feet. Advertisement That means what should be a magnificent finale at the Oval to a five-match series full of drama, controversy and incident is in danger of being diluted, with so many star names of both England and India unfit or just unable to take to the historic stage in south London. None more so than England captain Ben Stokes who has finally been forced to concede defeat in his heroic attempt to bowl and bat his side to victory almost single-handed because of an injury born out of a brutal workload and relentless calendar. Joining him on the sidelines, with England 2-1 up and everything to play for, was Jofra Archer, the exciting spearhead of the England attack, and Brydon Carse, who had appeared in all four previous Tests and simply had nothing left to give. That meant only Chris Woakes was still standing from England's first-choice attack this summer. He was joined by the supporting cast in Gus Atkinson, Josh Tongue and Jamie Overton along with batting debutant Jacob Bethell in Stokes' place. If Stokes and Archer had been playing, with more swing and seam than at any time in the series, England could conceivably have bowled India out for fewer than 100 on a first day which was reduced to 64 overs by rain. As it was England were handed the best of the conditions when stand-in captain Ollie Pope won yet another toss – India, remarkably, have lost their last 15 tosses in men's international cricket, at odds of 32,768-1 – but saw their second-string attack largely waste them. England may have reduced India to 204 for six but this was a sub-standard bowling performance from a rusty and patched-up attack. Only Atkinson justified his selection, while Tongue encapsulated the England inconsistency. He produced a little of the sublime, with two unplayable deliveries to take wickets, but plenty of the ridiculous, spraying the ball around waywardly and giving away 11 runs in wides in his first over alone. In all England handed India 30 extras in the shortened day. Advertisement Meanwhile Woakes, one of only two seamers on either side to play in all five games along with India's Mohammed Siraj, was not standing for long and joined the injury list late on the first day when he damaged his shoulder trying to stop a boundary. It is not certain fatigue played a part in an injury which will leave England's attack even more depleted but asking a 36-year-old to play five Tests in a month and a half was always asking for trouble. India have been just as badly affected. They have said all along that Jasprit Bumrah, the best bowler in the world, would play no more than three Tests to protect him and were as good as their word when they named their team without him. He was one of four changes to the side who defied England for the last five sessions of the fourth Test to draw at Old Trafford, with another superstar, Rishabh Pant, missing out with a broken foot. All of which left the 27,000-strong crowd who had paid up to £165 ($218) for what should be the hottest ticket in town short-changed. Test cricket is expensive and however entertaining and dramatic the final game may still be in the coming days, it is akin to paying the highest rates for a London West End play only to be greeted with a cast of understudies. There was a time when a Test series would be played over the whole summer, each match an occasion with proper preparation. Touring teams would be allowed to acclimatise by playing warm-up matches and tour games against counties between Tests. That type of civilised schedule has long been impossible in a packed calendar but this marquee series has been squeezed into just 44 days, with only 72 hours between the second and third Tests and the gruelling Old Trafford match and this one. Compare that to perhaps the greatest Test series of all time, when England defeated Australia to win the Ashes 20 years ago. That took 11 days longer to complete. Even this winter's Ashes in Australia will last a week longer than this rushed and compromised showpiece. And with every match so far going to the final session of the fifth day, mainly because of what are known in cricket as 'chief executive pitches' – prepared to last five days to maximise revenue for host counties – Test cricket is rapidly reaching its tipping point. There would be more time, of course, had it not been for the England and Wales Cricket Board's (ECB) latest and most controversial innovation. Almost the whole of August, the peak summer month, is now kept clear of Test cricket, with the longest form of the game replaced by the shortest in the Hundred. That begins with almost indecent haste on Tuesday, the day after this series ends. Advertisement It was created as the ECB's answer to the Indian Premier League, supposedly as a more attractive game for youngsters and families, but it has had such a damaging effect on the rest of the domestic calendar that cricket is effectively eating itself. It would not have taken much longer for this Test series to have a proper chance to breathe and for those paying spectators to have been given more of a chance to see the likes of Stokes, Archer and Bumrah competing at their best. As it is, the ECB made its priorities absolutely clear when it announced the signing of deals with new largely Indian owners for Hundred franchises on Wednesday, when all attention and focus really should have been on this huge Test series decider. The Oval will be full for the rest of this Test, as it always is, but if the ECB takes that support for granted by continuing to undermine its most valuable product then it will suffer, along with the players and those supporters denied the chance to watch them. Click here to read more cricket stories on The Athletic, and follow Global Sports on The Athletic app via the Discover tab.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Castleford sign prop Greacen on two-year deal
Castleford Tigers have signed Newcastle Knights prop Brock Greacen on a two-year deal for next season. The 23-year-old made his NRL debut for the Knights against Sydney Roosters earlier this campaign. "I'm over the moon to have been able to bring Brock to the Tigers for the 2026 & 2027 season," director of rugby Chris Chester told the club website. "His effort levels both sides of the ball are second to none and I can't wait to start working with Brock in pre-season."
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Surrey boost Championship title hopes with five-wicket win over Durham
Surrey boosted their Rothesay County Championship Division One title hopes with a five-wicket win over Durham. Durham were dismissed for 344 in their second innings at Chester le Street – Indian left-armer Sai Kishore taking five for 72 from 41.4 overs – to leave leaders Surrey needing 176 for victory. Surrey were briefly held up by bad light but reached their target in 38.2 overs. It was a joint effort with the top five batters all going past 20 and Sam Curran top scoring with 40. Yorkshire also seemed to be heading for a win inside three days at Scarborough after building on their impressive 545 for nine. Matthew Revis struck a brilliant unbeaten 152 and George Hill 75 as the pair put on 140 for the eighth wicket. Sussex, 323 behind on first innings, stumbled to 20 for three before Daniel Hughes (56 not out) and Danial Ibrahim (50 not out) engineered a recovery for the visitors to reach 115 for three. Warwickshire reached 465 for nine – 137 adrift of Essex – as Ethan Bamber compiled 107 for a maiden first-class century. Dan Mousley reached 75 along with Bamber's ton and Ed Barnard remains unbeaten on 90 at close alongside Oliver Hannon-Dalby on one. Corey Rocchiccioli was caught and bowled by Matt Critchley towards the end of the day as the Essex bowler reached stumps with five wickets for 156 runs. Nottinghamshire went past Somerset's 438 as Haseeb Hameed, the leading run-scorer in the Championship, reached another milestone with a double century. Hameed, resuming on 103, had made 208 from 388 balls before being run out by Tom Lammonby. Lyndon James (72) and Jack Haynes (70) added valuable contributions as Nottinghamshire closed on 511 for six – a lead of 73. Hampshire lead Worcestershire by 183 runs heading into the final day at New Road. Worcestershire were dismissed for 249 – 44 behind Hampshire's first-innings total – as opener Jack Libby carried his bat with 100. Sonny Baker took five for 72 for Hampshire, who finished the day on 139 for two with Nick Gubbins and Tilak Varma unbeaten on 55 and 33, respectively. In Division Two, Northamptonshire were pressing for victory against Derbyshire after making 550 for nine to take a first-innings lead of 173. Justin Broad (171) and Rob Keogh (125 not out) put on 208 for the seventh wicket, and Derbyshire were in trouble at 52 for four at the close as leg spinner Yuzvendra Chahal bagged two wickets. Kent added only 14 runs to reach 217 for three in reply to Leicestershire's 471 before rain ended the action in Canterbury. No play was possible at Cheltenham due to the soggy conditions, with Gloucestershire 54 for one in reply to Middlesex's 445.