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Lynn praises Wales' never say die spirit against world's best

Yahoo Sports

Sean Lynn is in charge of his second Six Nations campaign with Wales [Huw Evans Picture Agency] Head coach Sean Lynn has praised Wales' never say die attitude, but admits there is still plenty to work on if they are to close the gap on the world's best teams. Seren Lockwood scored in the 80th minute to secure a try bonus-point against Grand Slam-chasing England, who ran in 10 tries of their own in a ruthless display. Wales' 24 points at Ashton Gate was also the most they have ever scored against the Red Roses in 24 Six Nations meetings.

"Twelve months ago we would've flopped and fallen away, but to show that character to come back and score two tries and get a bonus point, I cant fault the character," said Lynn. "Obviously we're disappointed we leaked 62 points, but that's a very good Red Roses side who were clinical today. " Few predicted any other result than a convincing England win, but Lynn said the performance was always going to be about them.

Wales showed variation in set piece attack, with two training ground lineout moves catching England cold for Keira Bevan and Kelsey Jones' first-half tries. "We've got to be a little bit more clever now in those red zones, so it was lovely to see the first one come off and then the second. We've always got to be asking questions of the defence," said Lynn.

But a lack of clinical edge in promising positions continues to be Wales' downfall, with England thriving on the counter attack. "We just didn't keep the ball and then they score from those opportunities when we're in really good areas, those were the big frustrations from us as a coaching team," said Lynn. Wales' discipline was improved, with only six penalties conceded, although Kayleigh Powell's 52nd minute yellow card proved costly.

There were also 40 missed tackles which England duly punished, while Wales' loose kicking game needs serious attention. England sweep aside Wales to continue dominant run Welsh fire, England captain - how Meg Jones became a dual-nation icon Despite Wales' shortcomings, England captain, Wales-born Meg Jones, said she knew she had been in a Test match after the final whistle. "They love coming to the breakdown, they hit really hard, that's something they'll always have," said Jones.