There are only three teams left in the Six Nations title race with two games to go.
France are the only side left with a chance of a Grand Slam after strolling past Scotland, with the game between England and Ireland now essentially a knockout after they beat Wales and Italy respectively.
French dominance, disarray in Dublin and England's possible identity crisis were all on the agenda in the third round of the Rugby Union Daily review.
France dominated Scotland in their first away game of the tournament, winning 36-17.
The result on the road is a real sign that France can win their first title since 2010, according to former British and Irish Lions captain Sam Warburton.
He said that he was in awe watching them.
They put Scotland to the sword and went away. It was an amazing counter- attack.
It is going to be very difficult to stop them from winning the Grand Slam.
If anyone can stop France, England can.
While Scotland struggled to match the power offered by 22st 12lb prop Uini Atonio or talented lock Cameron Woki, Warburton thinks England can take France on up front when they travel to Paris on the final weekend.
England have the power and pace to potentially match France, so they are most likely to stop them.
It will be fascinating to see what England does in France.
Italy were forced to go down to 13 men against Ireland, which was the most confusing moment of the weekend.
The starting hooker of the Azzurri, Gianmarco Lucchesi, went off injured when replacement Hame Faiva was given a red card for a high tackle on Dan Sheehan in the 18th minute.
Italy lacked a specialist in the front row. The visitors had to replace a back with a forward to make sure they had eight in their pack and lost a player for being responsible for scrums.
Down to 13 men, a heavy defeat was a foregone conclusion and Ireland claimed a 57-6 bonus-point win.
Dylan Hartley is hoping the incident will prompt a review of rugby's lawbook.
He said that he lost interest as soon as that happened.
They have a chance to address that before the World Cup comes around.
Ireland head coach Andy Farrell would have gotten more out of that game if it was 15 on 15. What do you learn from that? Does anyone benefit from that?
The impact of a player leaving the field is huge. I would like to see that addressed.
Eddie Jones' side relied on a solid defence to hold on for a 23-19 win against Wales as New England struggled to emerge from the old.
He was confused by the performance, wondering what England's current identity is.
The hosts struggled to string together their attack and scored one try to Wales.
England are an attacking team based on a good set-piece foundation according to Hartley.
Whether they are executing it 100% or not, I don't think they are quite there yet, but they are working on it and that is plain to see.
They have changed their philosophy to an attacking one. You have to attack to win games. You can not defend, exert pressure or try to squeeze points out.
The hosts shut down Wales in the last play of the game after they had come back from 17-0 down.
They did not cross the tryline until the 74th minute against Ireland and then in the 31st minute against Scotland.
Jonathan Davies questioned why Wales only produced their best rugby when England was ahead.
He said on the Rugby Special that they threw caution to the wind.
They played off the cuff when they had the opportunities. They played in a structured manner in the first half.
Scotland lost to Wales and France in their last two games, which ended their title hopes.
The side made 24 handling errors against France, which they could not afford against a strong side.
Davies saw room for improvement in the backs, but Hartley believes Scotland struggled to match France physically.
Scotland made too many mistakes and had no continuity.
They were so aggressive. Scotland at the moment looks lovely and they have talented players, but they can't go outside.