England head coach Eddie Jones conceded he had not “done a good enough job” after his side suffered a 25-13 loss to France, who secured a long-awaited Six Nations title and Grand Slam on Saturday.
A second-half try from Freddie Steward gave England hope, but Antoine Dupont went over on the hour to secure victory for Les Bleus at the Parc des Princes.
It was England’s third defeat of the tournament, and the third time they have lost as many under the Australian, having done so just twice in 16 editions before his appointment in 2015.
Questions have been asked about Jones’ position, but following the defeat, the 62-year-old said they were “for other people”.
“That is not a question I need to answer,” he said. “I just do my job, it is a question for other people to answer. I am not even thinking about that.”
“I’m disappointed, disappointed for the fans, for the players, I obviously haven’t done a good enough job, I accept that, but we’re moving in the right direction. The results aren’t good enough. When you rebuild a team it takes time.
“France are deserved champions of the Six Nations, they are the best team, but we had enough chances to win that game, we just didn’t put them away, we were not quite clinical enough in doing that.
“That has been a little bit of the story of us in the Six Nations, we have put ourselves in position to win the three games we have lost but not been clinical enough, not been good enough, particularly in some of our clean out work to win those games.
“So that is disappointing, but the spirit we showed is going to make sure this team keeps moving in the right direction.”
England finished in third-place after Wales’ shock loss to Italy and Ireland’s win over Scotland in the final round of matches in the 2022 tournament.