Weekly Sports Quiz: How Many Tries Did England Score? Test Your Six Nations and Marathon Knowledge
There are weeks in the sporting calendar that feel like a slow burn, and then there are weeks like this one. Over the last seven days, the world of sport has served up a relentless buffet of drama, endurance, and sheer unpredictability. From the gruelling 26.2 miles of the London Marathon, where personal bests were shattered and charity runners defied the elements, to the nail-biting finale of the National League, where promotion and relegation battles went down to the final whistle, it has been a whirlwind. And let’s not forget the Women’s Six Nations, which delivered another round of bone-crunching tackles and breathtaking tries.
But here’s the question that is currently dividing our quiz community: How many tries did England score? It is a deceptively simple question, yet one that requires you to have paid close attention to the weekend’s action. If you think you have the answer, you are in for a treat. Our latest weekly sports quiz is live, and it is designed to separate the casual fan from the true statistician.
Last week, only 26% of quizzers achieved full marks. That is a brutally low pass rate, suggesting that even the most ardent fans missed a key detail or two. Will you make the grade this week? Or will you join the 74% who fell short? Let’s break down what you need to know before you take the plunge.
The Anatomy of a Perfect Quiz Score: Why the England Try Count Matters
The headline question—How many tries did England score?—is not a trick. It is a pure test of your memory and attention span. In the latest round of the Women’s Six Nations, England’s Red Roses continued their dominance, but the exact try count is a figure that many fans misremember. Did they cross the whitewash four times? Five? Or did they run riot with seven? The answer lies in the match report, but the quiz is designed to make you work for it.
This question is a perfect example of why our quizzes are gaining a cult following. They don’t just ask for the final score; they ask for the granular detail. It is the difference between knowing who won and truly understanding the game. The weekly sports quiz also includes questions about the London Marathon’s elite men’s and women’s winners, the surprise package in the National League title race, and a curveball about a Premier League managerial departure that happened under the radar.
To give you a fighting chance, let’s recap the key events from the past seven days that are likely to feature:
- Women’s Six Nations: England faced a spirited opponent. The try count is a direct reflection of their attacking efficiency. Did they convert pressure into points, or did they struggle against a resolute defence?
- London Marathon: The weather played a major role. Who faded in the final miles, and who surged? The winning times were slower than expected, but the human stories were faster than ever.
- National League Finale: The promotion race went to the wire. One team secured an automatic spot, while another faces the lottery of the playoffs. The quiz will ask for the exact points margin.
- Premier League Manager Departures: The season of the sack race continues. One more manager lost their job this week. Can you name them all from the entire season?
Pro tip: When you sit down to take the quiz, do not overthink the try count. Look at the rhythm of the game. If England dominated possession, the number is likely higher than you initially guess. If the opposition had a strong defensive set, the number might be lower. The quiz rewards precision, not panic.
Expert Analysis: What the London Marathon and National League Tell Us About Form
Beyond the quiz questions, this past week offered a fascinating insight into the current state of several sports. The London Marathon is always a barometer for the health of endurance sports. This year, we saw a tactical shift. The early pace was blistering, but the final 10km became a war of attrition. The winner’s time, while impressive, was not a world record. This suggests that the field is becoming more competitive, but the conditions—a slight headwind and rising temperatures—leveled the playing field. For the quiz, you need to remember the name of the British athlete who finished in the top five. That detail has tripped up many quizzers.
Meanwhile, the National League served up a thriller that Hollywood scriptwriters would envy. The title was decided not by a goal in the 90th minute, but by a defensive mistake in the 85th. The promoted team has been a story of resilience, bouncing back from a mid-season slump that saw them drop out of the automatic places. The quiz will ask for the final goal difference that separated the champions from the runners-up. It is a number that looks small on paper but represents a chasm of effort on the pitch.
And then there is the Women’s Six Nations. England’s performance was statistically dominant, but the scoreboard did not always reflect it. The try count is a key metric because it shows whether they are simply grinding out wins or playing the expansive, running rugby that head coach Simon Middleton has been preaching. If you guessed that England scored more than five tries, you are likely correct. If you guessed fewer, you might have been watching a different match. The quiz also touches on a controversial yellow card decision that swung the momentum of the game.
Prediction: Based on the data from the last three rounds, I predict that the average quiz score this week will be 6 out of 10. The try count question will be the most missed, with 60% of people getting it wrong. The London Marathon question will be the second hardest. If you want to beat the 26% full-marks rate, you need to be ruthless with your recall.
Beyond the Quiz: Your Next Challenge Awaits
If you have already aced our weekly sports quiz, or if you want to warm up before attempting it, we have a treasure trove of challenges waiting for you. We know that once you get a taste of the trivia, you will want more. That is why we have curated a series of dedicated pages to keep your brain sharp.
First, head over to our Football Quizzes page. It is a graveyard for even the most knowledgeable supporters. We are currently running a Premier League quiz: Name every manager departure this season. This is a brutal test of your memory. From the early-season sacking of Paul Heckingbottom at Sheffield United to the mid-season chaos at Chelsea and Nottingham Forest, the list is longer than you think. Can you name all 15+ managers who have left their posts? Most people get stuck around number 10. The key is to remember the caretaker managers who lasted only a few weeks.
Second, do not miss our Quiz: Name every team to have been relegated from the Premier League. This is a history lesson disguised as a challenge. It covers the entire Premier League era, from the original 22-team format to the current 20-team structure. You need to remember the one-season wonders like Swindon Town and the fallen giants like Leeds United. This quiz separates the millennials from the Gen Z fans. If you can name the three teams relegated in the 1994-95 season without Googling, you are a legend.
To make sure you never miss a new challenge, sign up for notifications. We will send the latest quizzes straight to your device the moment they go live. Whether it is a Formula 1 quiz after the Grand Prix or a rugby quiz after the Six Nations, you will be the first to know. We also have a Sports Quizzes page that covers everything from the NFL to the NBA, from cricket to cycling. It is the ultimate destination for the trivia-obsessed fan.
Strong Conclusion: The Final Whistle
Sport is a game of inches, seconds, and, in the case of our quizzes, a single correct digit. The question “How many tries did England score?” is more than just a trivia point. It is a testament to your ability to focus on the details that matter. In a world of hot takes and highlight reels, the true fan remembers the scoreline, the try scorer, and the moment the game turned.
This week’s quiz is your chance to prove you are in the top 26%. It is your chance to show that you were paying attention when the London Marathon runners hit the wall, when the National League trophy was lifted, and when the Red Roses crossed the line. Do not let the 74% of last week’s losers discourage you. Use the analysis above, trust your memory, and take the quiz with confidence.
Remember: the answer is out there. It is in the match report. It is in the highlights. It is in your own recollection. So, go ahead. Take the quiz. And when you get that perfect score—and you will—share it with your friends. Rub it in. Because in the world of sports journalism, there is no greater victory than being right about the details.
Ready to play? Visit our Football Quizzes and Sports Quizzes pages now. And do not forget to sign up for notifications. The next quiz is already being written, and it will be even harder than this one.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
