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Prolongation en vue pour Gustard ?

Paul Gustard pourrait prolonger l'aventure à Paris (Photo de GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP via Getty Images)

Le Stade Français a ouvert des discussions avec Paul Gustard en vue d’une éventuelle prolongation de contrat, qui expire en fin de saison. Son ancien club, les Leicester Tigers, n’avait pas réussi à lui faire une offre satisfaisante pour racheter sa dernière année de contrat.

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Gustard, 49 ans, évoluait avec Leicester quand l’équipe avait battu Paris en finale de Champions Cup – alors H Cup – en 2001. Il était pressenti pour succéder à Michael Cheika sur le banc du club anglais cet été.

Mais Hans-Peter Wild, président du SFP et l’un des hommes les plus riches d’Europe, aimerait récompenser Gustard et son bon travail en lui offrant une prolongation.

Le multimilliardaire veut conserver les services de l’Anglais, qui a remplacé Karim Ghezal fin septembre, alors que ce dernier avait été licencié après seulement quatre matchs de championnat.

Gustard a pris seul les commandes du sportif après le licenciement de Laurent Labit, directeur du rugby, en février. Paul Gustard a réussi à redresser la barre sur le plan comptable, même si le club se bat encore pour son maintien. Il pointe aujourd’hui à la 12e place mais avec six points d’avance sur Vannes, dernier.

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


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Flankly 52 minutes ago
Late Makazole Mapimpi try earns the Sharks win away to Edinburgh

Jake White described this as the strongest Sharks lineup ever. There is no doubt that it is at least an impressive roster. They did win, which is obviously an achievement against a good Edinburgh side. However …


For much of the first half Edinburgh seemed easily able to create 2 on 1 opportunities on both wings, with the defensive wingers biting in on the inside runner and cover defence being AWOL. Conversely the Sharks showed little ability to get behind the Edinburgh defensive line, with the sole exception of a nicely-exploited Am mismatch against a second row (which led to the Fassi try).


In general the Sharks, with their full complement of Bok firepower, do not look that dangerous in attack, and while tackling was good on the whole and goal line defence was impressive at times, they were exhibiting surprising breakdowns in open play defensive structures.


Also, the Sharks continue to be inaccurate, with material impact on the scoreboard. Missing two very kickable penalties is not the way to be the best. It looked to me like the Sharks contestable kicks were not well enough executed, and were too hard to recover.


Not sure what the running attack was trying to do, but my guess is that they were trying to pull off a Harlequins-style bash-and-offload game off of 12 (Esterhuizen). That’s not a terrible idea with the personnel available, but it would require creativity and a precision on second phase that was not in evidence.


Lastly, you have to have better discipline. It’s great that the team can cope with a 13 vs 14 period (of almost 10 minutes), but smart teams a avoid cards.


Having said that it was great to see the win. I thought that Edinburgh were cynical and niggly. Always hanging around on the wrong side of the breakdown, lots of intentional obstruction, illegal dummying at the base of the ruck, etc. They played a dirty game and the ref tolerated it. Always good to see that not succeed.


Overall the “best Sharks lineup ever” scraped the win, but under-performed their Bok-laden potential. Again.

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