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Le XV de départ des All Blacks face à l'Irlande

George Bell (Photo de Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Scott Robertson, sélectionneur des All Blacks, a dévoilé son XV de départ pour affronter l’Irlande. Il fait confiance en l’équipe qui a battu l’Angleterre.

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Internationals
England
22 - 24
Temps complet
New Zealand
Toutes les stats et les données

Codie Taylor et Beauden Barrett étant forfaits du fait du protocole commotion, Asafo Aumua débutera au talon et Damian McKenzie sera titulaire à l’ouverture.

Les seuls changements sont apportés au banc. George Bell, jeune talonneur des Crusaders, intègre le groupe des 23, tout comme Stephen Perofeta.

Outre la titularisation d’Aumua et McKenzie, le reste du XV de départ reste inchané.

Tamaiti Williams conserve sa place en première ligne car Ethan de Groot est de nouveau absent une semaine pour non-respect du protocole collectif la semaine passée.

Ruben Love et Harry Plummer étaient attendus mais ils n’ont pas été appelés.

Face à face

5 dernières rencontres

Victoires
2
Nuls
0
Victoires
3
Moyenne de points marqués
22
25
Le premier essai gagne
60%
L'équipe recevante gagne
20%

Le XV de départ des All Blacks

1. Tamaiti Williams
2. Asafo Aumua
3. Tyrel Lomax
4. Scott Barrett (c)
5. Tupou Vaa’i
6. Wallace Sititi
7. Sam Cane
8. Ardie Savea (vc)
9. Cortez Ratima
10. Damian McKenzie
11. Caleb Clarke
12. Jordie Barrett (vc)
13. Rieko Ioane
14. Mark Tele’a
15. Will Jordan

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Remplaçants

16. George Bell
17. Ofa Tu’ungafasi
18. Pasilio Tosi
19. Patrick Tuipulotu
20. Samipeni Finau
21. Cam Roigard
22. Anton Lienert-Brown
23. Stephen Perofeta

Cet article a été initialement publié en anglais sur RugbyPass.com et adapté en français par Idriss Chaplain.

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Nickers 56 minutes ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

Razor seems totally at sea to me.


He squandered his first year when he could have been bringing in loads of new players at the expense of results. Instead he chased the win from week to week, ironically using the same players that have been underperforming and NOT winning for years to put in mediocre performances.


The new generation of players is here right now but Razor is clearly not ready for them. Lakai, Love, Proctor, Plummer etc... could all have 5 or so games under their belt. Instead they get 2 minutes at the end of the game to win a "cap" like this is still the 80s.


He had a license to be bold this year - an obligation after 4 years of conservatism under Fozzie. But in reality it wasn't until inuries forced his hand that any progress was made this season.


Worryingly, much like Fozzie, he seems unable to diagnose and fix what is not working on attack. He desperately needs some better assistants around him.


The comparison to SA is not really a fair one. Rassie is probably under the least pressure of anyone in all of World Rugby this year coming off back to back World Cups win. It's like the ABs in 2016 - everyone thought they would have a post world cup slump but it was the exact opposite. With no pressure and no fear they payed some of the most incredible rugby that has ever been played by the All Blacks, every new player was an instant super star and it seemed like nothing could go wrong. Much the same way 2017 hit the ABs like a ton of bricks I'm sure SA will endure something similar in 2025.

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