England players described their pride even in defeat to Ireland on Saturday after playing more than 78 minutes of the Six Nations match with 14 men.
The Red Rose’s championship hopes were ended by the 32-15 reverse at Twickenham – their heaviest ever home Test loss to Ireland – but few fans had any issues with the team’s fight and desire.
Charlie Ewels was shown a red card after just a minute and 22 seconds for his dangerous tackle on James Ryan – the earliest dismissal in a Six Nations match – giving England a huge uphill battle.
Eddie Jones’ men still might have upset title-chasing Ireland, who were all square at 15-15 heading into the closing stages before taking the match away from their hosts.
Rather than rue their failure to take their championship challenge to Grand Slam candidates France for their fifth and final game, England’s battlers preferred to reflect upon a heroic effort.
Hooker Jamie George said: “Right up to that last try, I genuinely had belief, and I think that says a huge amount about the character we have in the squad.
“This sounds ridiculous but it’s one of the proudest days I’ve had in an England shirt. I genuinely feel that. I feel quite emotional from this game and the feedback we had from the crowd.
“Playing a team like Ireland, they’re respected as one of the best teams in the world. To play like that with 14 men for 78 minutes takes some doing, and I’m proud to be part of the group.”
17 – Ireland’s 32-15 victory at Twickenham was their biggest victory away to England in a Test match and their joint third biggest win against England overall. Advantage.
Full-back Freddie Steward suggested this performance should set the standard for England sides moving forward.
“You come into a game, and you never expect that to happen,” he told BBC Radio 5 Live. “The boys responded really well.
“It would have been easy for us to lose a man and for heads to drop and them to walk all over us. I think that shows the spirit of this team. We fought, we dug in, the boys gave it everything. There’s a lot to learn from that.”
Steward added: “We sat in at half-time and we had a genuine belief that we could go and win the game. The boys came out in that second half and wanted to do it, we wanted to do it.
“Unfortunately, on 60, 70 minutes, we ran out of steam at the end there.
“But I think this team is one that is not going to give up. We’re not going to not fight, and we went to the trenches for each other today.”