The 2026 Six Nations continued to deliver high drama in Round Two, with statement victories, standout individual displays and major shifts in momentum across the championship.

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Ireland edged past Italy 20-13 in a bruising Dublin encounter, Scotland claimed a 31-20 Calcutta Cup triumph over England, and France ran riot with a dominant 54-12 win against Wales.

From Antoine Dupont’s electric return to Finn Russell’s Calcutta Cup masterclass and a powerful Italian front-row display, here is RUCK’s 2026 Six Nations Team Of The Week for Round Two.

Six Nations Team Of The Week: Round Two

1. Danilo Fischetti (Italy)

After conceding an early scrum penalty, Fischetti responded brilliantly. He grew into the contest against Thomas Clarkson and finished the first half in complete control, folding the Irish scrum to force a change at the break. Busy in the loose and combative throughout, it was a powerful display.

2. Julien Marchand (France)

Not flawless, but effective. Marchand’s handling wobbled at times, yet he threw accurately and stayed active. He was the beneficiary of France’s rolling maul early in the second half, dotting down to cap a solid showing.

3. Simone Ferrari (Italy)

Ferrari set the tone with a thunderous early hit on Garry Ringrose and never let up. His scrummaging was equally imposing, winning a key penalty before half-time and backing it up after the restart in a combative performance.

4. Gregor Brown (Scotland)

Brown’s work-rate was immense. Alongside Scott Cummings, he helped halt an England maul in a pivotal moment. Tireless in defence, he repeatedly hit, bounced up and reset to frustrate the visitors.

5. Scott Cummings (Scotland)

A dependable presence in the engine room. Cummings secured valuable lineout ball and put his body on the line in defence, completing 18 tackles in a gritty, disciplined display.

6. Michele Lamaro (Italy)

A captain’s performance. Lamaro was relentless at the breakdown, producing a huge counter-ruck and crucial turnover near his own line. Ferocious in contact and inspirational throughout.

7. Jamie Ritchie (Scotland)

Penalised twice and forced off with a knee injury at half-time, but Ritchie more than justified his recall. He was physical, disruptive and capped his impact with a well-taken try.

8. Ben Earl (England)

England lacked rhythm, but Earl never stopped carrying. He racked up 23 carries and topped the tackle count, showing sharp footwork in tight spaces. Rewarded with a late try in a tireless individual effort.

CONTINUES ON PAGE TWO

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