Key events Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
15 mins. Underhill injured himself in the midst of scoring and is replaced by Chandler Cunningham-South.
On replay, he clearly dropped that ball over the line it seems, but no matter as the ref has allowed it and moved us on.
TRY! England 14 - 0 Japan (Sam Underhill)
14 mins. A penalty for the home side is despatched to the corner. The lineout is won with very little fuss and two phases later Underhill puts his head down and forces over from a metre out to ground it one-handed.
Converted by Smith.
11 mins. This will be a difficult enough afternoon for Japan without losing their own lineout, like they did here on halfway. Smith kicks the ball behind them once more and the ball is cleared to touch not far up the field.
Here come England again.
TRY! England 7 - 0 Japan (Ben Earl)
9 mins. The first bit of shape from England has Slade firing a kick in the left corner over the head of Osada, the ball is cleared to touch, but it simply invites the home side back at them. Smith calls a pattern off the lineout via an angled Lawrence run who finds Earl to go over under the posts. A very neat and tidy try.
Smith adds two.
6 mins. England snaffle some possession, but it’s lost by Earl and this gives a flash of space to Japan, who look left via a kick to Naikabula but his attempt to volley forward around halfway screws into touch.
The home side could be letting Japan blow themselves out a bit before putting their foot down, but it’s been mostly the Blossoms thus far.
MISSED PENALTY! England 0 - 0 Japan (Naoto Saito)
4 mins. More poor discipline from England as Earl is caught not rolling away at a ruck forty metres out. The Japan captain fancies it but he pulls the attempt at the posts left.
2 mins. Japan settle in to their familiar fast-paced handling game, which George Martin is too keen to try to prevent and gives penalty away. McCurran misses touch with his kick, with the return kick from England too deep and shepherded dead by Matsunaga.
Kick Off!
Ref Craig Evans blasts on his whistle and Marcus Smith boots us underway
The teams are out in the dusky early evening light, music blasting and lights flashing before we settle in for the anthems.
Pre match reading
Tell me a story, drop me a line on this very email with all your thoughts about what is about to unfold
Teams
First choice all over the park for England of players who are available. Steve Borthwick wants a proper win here.
Japan are without Warner Dearns, who is banned for four matches. There’s also no Harumichi Tatekawa so Nik McCurran comes in at stand-off.
England: 1 Ellis Genge, 2 Jamie George (captain), 3 Will Stuart; 4 Maro Itoje, 5 George Martin; 6 Tom Curry, 7 Sam Underhill, 8 Ben Earl; 9 Jack van Poortvliet, 10 Marcus Smith; 11 Ollie Sleightholme, 12 Henry Slade, 13 Ollie Lawrence, 14 Tommy Freeman; 15 George Furbank.
Replacements: 16 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 17 Fin Baxter, 18 Asher Opoku-Fordjour, 19 Nick Isiekwe, 20 Chandler Cunningham-South; 21 Harry Randall, 22 Fin Smith, 23 Tom Roebuck.
Japan: 1 Takato Okabe, 2 Mamoru Harada, 3 Shuhei Takeuchi; 4 Sanaila Waqa, 5 Epineri Uluiviti; 6 Kanji Shimokawa, 7 Kazuki Himeno, 8 Faulua Makisi; 9 Naoto Saito (captain), 10 Nicholas McCurran; 11 Jone Naikabula, 12 Siosaia Fifita, 13 Dylan Riley, 14 Tomoki Osada; 15 Takuro Matsunaga.
Replacements: 16 Seunghyuk Lee, 17 Yukio Morikawa, 18 Keijiro Tamefusa, 19 Daichi Akiyama, 20 Tevita Tatafu, 21 Ben Gunter; 22 Shinobu Fujiwara, 23 Yusuke Kajimura.
Preamble
So we reach the final chapter of England's current season of mists and mellow fruitlessness. An Autumn of testing themselves against the best of the southern hemisphere – plus Australia – and coming up short. Cue many pained dissections and death notices about the state of the game its birthplace, all of which are overstated.
Steve Borthwick’s team have had a tough little run of fixtures and have lost them narrowly, the team is broadly settled, the attacking gameplan is maturing and a new defensive system is bedding in. They should have won against Australia, probably, but this is no reason to go into full meltdown. Things are broadly fine and will continue to be so.
That said, it is helpful that they can sign-off this run of matches playing Japan at home with the clear probability of a comfortable win this brings; hence Borthwick has gone with a fully loaded squad for the match. But a decent and convincing win it must be against the returning Eddie Jones’s charges. A creaking November victory over the Brave Blossoms in 2018 during Jones’s England tenure increased the mutterings about his suitability for the job and England’s current man in charge will be keen to avoid yet another “explain yourself!” post-match interview to head into the long winter gap prior to the Six Nations.