Saturday 11 March 2017 18:55, UK
England have equalled New Zealand's tier-one record for successive victories after their Six Nations success over Scotland on Saturday.
The 61-21 triumph at Twickenham means England have won 18 successive Test matches, and Eddie Jones' side can break the record with a Grand Slam-clinching win in Dublin next weekend.
We look back at England's spectacular winning streak...
A meaningless rout of Uruguay was the final act of Stuart Lancaster's regime, England having already been knocked out of their own World Cup.
George Kruis and Jack Nowell crossed either side of half-time as the Eddie Jones era was launched with a victory founded on a strong second-half performance in Edinburgh.
The "good hiding" of Italy demanded by Jones was duly delivered with Jonathan Joseph plundering a hat-trick of tries.
England began healing their World Cup wounds by dispatching Six Nations title rivals, Ireland, in their first match at Twickenham since being pummelled by Australia.
The Grand Slam started to become a reality, but England were forced to survive a dramatic late fightback by Wales having led 19-0 and 25-7.
England completed their first Grand Slam since 2003, but a tense victory was arguably their worst performance of the campaign.
This time, Wales launched an early onslaught only to fade in the money-spinning fixture that at least provided England with a warm-up for their tour to Australia.
England were overrun during an early onslaught by the Wallabies, but responded magnificently with Joseph, Marland Yarde and Nowell crossing.
A first series triumph in the southern hemisphere was delivered after England's defensive heroics held out Australia's relentless second-half attacks.
In whitewashing the Wallabies, England delivered possibly their finest display under Jones as they concluded an exhausting season with a thrilling victory.
A first win over South Africa since 2006 opened the autumn in spectacular fashion, but the Springboks were a pale shadow of their former selves.
Nine tries were amassed with Joseph, Semesa Rokoduguni and Joe Launchbury crossing twice, but England's defence was fragile.
Elliot Daly was sent off in the fifth minute as England built a 16-0 lead, survived a Pumas fightback, and then finished as the more dangerous team.
A 14th Test victory, matching England's previous record, was earned as an alarming early start eventually subsided with an opportunist try from Joseph being the turning point.
It took the arrival of the cavalry from the bench to break French resistance, Ben Te'o producing strong carries before picking a clever line for the decisive score.
The most exciting win of Jones' reign saw England snatch victory through a dramatic late try from Daly, engineered by George Ford and Owen Farrell.
Italy's refusal to form rucks confused England, who trailed 10-5 at half-time before powering clear in the final 10 minutes with Nowell crossing twice.
Scotland were blown away by England in the latest edition of the Calcutta Cup, with Joseph registering his second hat-trick in under Jones as England clinched back-to-back Six Nations titles.