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Andy Robinson
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=== International matches as head coach with England === <small>'''Note:''' World Rankings Column shows the World Ranking England was placed at on the following Monday after each of their matches</small> {| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width:100%" |- !colspan=8|Matches (2004β2006) |- !Matches !Date !Opposition !Venue !Score<br /><small>(Eng.βOpponent)</small> !Competition !Captain ![[World Rugby Rankings|World <br> Rank]] |- !colspan=8|2004 |- | align=center|'''1''' | 13 November | {{nrut|Canada}} | rowspan=3|[[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|70β0 | rowspan=3|[[2004 end-of-year rugby union internationals|Autumn internationals]] | rowspan=3|[[Jason Robinson (rugby)|Jason Robinson]] | align=center|3rd |- | align=center|'''2''' | 20 November | {{nrut|South Africa}} | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|32β16 | align=center|2nd |- | align=center|'''3''' | 27 November | {{nrut|Australia}} | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|19β21 | align=center|2nd |- ! colspan=8|2005 |- | align=center|'''4''' | 5 February | {{nrut|Wales}} | [[Millennium Stadium]], [[Cardiff]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|9β11 | rowspan=5|[[2005 Six Nations Championship|Six Nations]] | rowspan=3|[[Jason Robinson (rugby)|Jason Robinson]] | align=center|3rd |- | align=center|'''5''' | 13 February | {{nrut|France}} | [[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|17β18 | align=center|4th |- | align=center|'''6''' | 27 February | {{nrut|Ireland}} | [[Lansdowne Road]], [[Dublin]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|13β19 | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''7''' | 12 March | {{nrut|Italy}} | rowspan=5|[[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|39β7 | rowspan=5|[[Martin Corry (rugby union)|Martin Corry]] | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''8''' | 19 March | {{nrut|Scotland}} | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|43β22 | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''9''' | 12 November | {{nrut|Australia}} | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|26β16 | rowspan=3|[[2005 end-of-year rugby union internationals|Autumn internationals]] | align=center|5th |- | align=center|'''10''' | 19 November | {{nrut|New Zealand}} | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|19β23 | align=center|4th |- | align=center|'''11''' | 26 November | {{nrut|Samoa}} | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|40β3 | align=center|5th |- ! colspan=8|2006 |- | align=center|'''12''' | 4 February | {{nrut|Wales}} | [[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|47β13 | rowspan=5|[[2006 Six Nations Championship|Six Nations]] | rowspan=5|[[Martin Corry (rugby union)|Martin Corry]] | align=center|5th |- | align=center|'''13''' | 11 February | {{nrut|Italy}} | [[Stadio Flaminio]], [[Rome]] | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|31β16 | align=center|3rd |- | align=center|'''14''' | 25 February | {{nrut|Scotland}} | [[Murrayfield Stadium|Murrayfield]], [[Edinburgh]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|12β18 | align=center|4th |- | align=center|'''15''' | 12 March | {{nrut|France}} | [[Stade de France]], [[Paris]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|6β31 | align=center|5th |- | align=center|'''16''' | 18 March | {{nrut|Ireland}} | [[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|24β28 | align=center|5th |- | align=center|'''17''' | 11 June | rowspan=2|{{nrut|Australia}} | [[Stadium Australia]], [[Sydney]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|3β34 | rowspan=2|[[2006 England rugby union tour of Australia|Australia test series]] | rowspan=2|[[Pat Sanderson]] | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''18''' | 17 June | [[Docklands Stadium]], [[Melbourne]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|18β43 | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''19''' | 5 November | {{nrut|New Zealand}} | rowspan=4|[[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]], [[London]] | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|20β41 | rowspan=4|[[2006 end-of-year rugby union internationals|Autumn internationals]] | rowspan=4|[[Martin Corry (rugby union)|Martin Corry]] | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''20''' | 11 November | {{nrut|Argentina}} | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|18β25 | align=center|6th |- | align=center|'''21''' | 18 November | rowspan=2|{{nrut|South Africa}} | align=center bgcolor=#CCFFCC|23β21 | align=center|7th |- | align=center|'''22''' | 25 November | align=center bgcolor=#FFCCCC|14β25 | align=center|6th |- |} ==== Record by country ==== {| class="wikitable" |- ! Opponent ! Played ! Won ! Drawn ! Lost ! Win ratio (%) ! For ! Against |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Argentina}} {{WDL|decimals=0|1|0|0|1}} || 18 || 25 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Australia}} {{WDL|decimals=0|4|1|0|3}} || 66 || 114 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Canada}} {{WDL|decimals=0|1|1|0|0}} || 70 || 0 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|France}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|0|0|2}} || 23 || 49 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Ireland}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|0|0|2}} || 37 || 47 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Italy}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|2|0|0}} || 70 || 23 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|New Zealand}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|0|0|2}} || 39 || 64 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Samoa}} {{WDL|decimals=0|1|1|0|0}} || 40 || 3 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Scotland}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|1|0|1}} || 55 || 40 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|South Africa}} {{WDL|decimals=0|3|2|0|1}} || 69 || 62 |- align=center | align=left|{{ru|Wales}} {{WDL|decimals=0|2|1|0|1}} || 56 || 24 |- align=center ! TOTAL {{WDLtot|decimals=0|22|9|0|13}} ! 543 ! 451 |} In the summer of 2007, the [[Scottish Rugby Union]] appointed Robinson the new head coach of [[Edinburgh Rugby]], as well as joint coach of [[Scotland A national rugby union team|Scotland A]] with [[Glasgow Warriors|Glasgow]] coach [[Sean Lineen]]. In his first season as coach, he guided Edinburgh to the highest ever finish by a Scottish side at that time<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.skysports.com/rugbyunion/match_report/0,,11069_61543_1,00.html |title=Match Report | Glasgow v Zebre - 10th May 2014 | Sky Sports | Rugby Union News |access-date=16 October 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140831213645/http://www.skysports.com/rugbyunion/match_report/0%2C%2C11069_61543_1%2C00.html |archive-date=31 August 2014 }}</ref> in the [[Pro14|Celtic League]] (joint 3rd), despite numerous international players leaving the previous summer for more lucrative contracts in England and France. The following season (2008β09) Edinburgh leap-frogged [[Leinster Rugby|Leinster]] and the [[Ospreys (rugby union)|Ospreys]] on the final day of the competition to finish runners-up behind [[Munster Rugby|Munster]]. Edinburgh also finished highest points scorers. He stepped down in June 2009 to take up the role of head coach of Scotland, replacing [[Frank Hadden]]. Although his time as Scotland coach included a 2β0 series win in Argentina and home wins over Australia and South Africa β the latter advancing Scotland to a record sixth place in the world rankings β his stint ended after a string of disappointing results, culminating in defeat by Tonga on 24 November 2012 which was followed a day later by his resignation.
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