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Angleterre - France : ça va trop vite pour les Bleues

Par Jérémy Fahner
L'Anglaise Tatyana Heard est plaquée par Romane Menager (R) et Agathe Sochat pendant le match entre les Red Roses et la France au stade Kingsholm le 7 septembre 2024 à Gloucester, Angleterre (Photo David Rogers/Getty Images).

Première période compliquée pour l’équipe de France féminine, menée 19-0 à la pause à Gloucester par l’Angleterre, en match de préparation au WXV.

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Face à la nation N.1 mondiale, les Françaises ne trouvent pour le moment pas la solution, malgré quelques situations intéressantes dans les 22 m adverses.

A l’inverse, et comme d’habitude serait-on tenté d’écrire, les Red Roses sont cliniques dans leurs intentions. Et si le premier essai vient d’une séquence de jeu à une passe conclue par la capitaine Marlie Packer (7-0, 11e), les autres essais ont été plus construits.

L’essai de Jess Breach (12-0, 18e) puis celui d’Helena Rowland (19-0, 22e) ont été l’œuvre d’actions de grande ampleur.

Les séquences défensives des Bleues ont malgré tout été intéressantes, mais elles rentrent au vestiaire sans avoir réussi à inscrire le moindre point.

 

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E
EV 4 hours ago
Is this why Ireland and England struggle to win World Cups?

Rassie is an extremely shrewd PR operator but the hype and melodrama is a sideshow to take the attention from the real reason for the Boks dominance.


Utimately the Boks dominate because Rassie and his team are so scientific and so driven. His attention to detail and obsessive analysis smacks of Tom Brady's approach.


He has engineered a system to find and nurture talent from the best schools to the most desolate backwaters. That system has a culture and doctrine very similar to elite military units, it does not tolerate individuals at the expense of the collective.


That machine also churns out three to five world class players in every position. They are encouraged to play in Ireland, England, France and Japan where their performance continues to be monitored according to metrics that is well guarded IP.


Older players are begged to play in the less physical Japanese league as it extends their careers. No Saffa really wants to see Etzebeth or Peter Steph or Pollard play in France or British Isles. And especially not in South Africa, where you just have these big, physical young guns coming out of hyper competitive schools looking for blood.


Last but but no means the least is the rugby public's alignment with the Springbok agenda. We love it when they win between World Cups but there is zero drama if they lose a game or a string of games for the sake of squad depth.


It's taken time to put it together but it has just matured into a relentless machine.

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