Édition du Nord

Select Edition

Nord Nord
Sud Sud
Mondial Mondial
Nouvelle Zélande Nouvelle Zélande
France France

"Six Nations : Au Contact - Saison 2" : qui seront les personnages principaux

Nolann Le Garrec (France) tente de repousser le ballon de George Ford (Angleterre) lors du match du Tournoi des Six Nations 2024 entre la France et l'Angleterre au Groupama Stadium, le 16 mars 2024 à Lyon, en France. (Photo par David Rogers/Getty Images)

La saison 2 de Six Nations : Au Contact (“Six Nations: Full contact”, en anglais) promet un plongeon captivant dans les coulisses du rugby international. Contrairement à la première saison où les portes du XV de France avaient été partiellement fermées, cette fois, les Bleus devraient être plus visibles.

ADVERTISEMENT

Selon les informations de RugbyPass, en plus d’un focus particulier sur Nolann Le Garrec, on devrait avoir plus de Fabien Galthié et de Shaun Edwards, entraîneur adjoint en charge de la défense des Bleus.

Voici qui seront les stars de la saison 2.

Nolann Le Garrec (France)

Le jeune demi de mêlée a été propulsé sous les projecteurs en remplaçant Antoine Dupont. À 21 ans, il dévoile les défis d’une ascension fulgurante et les coulisses de sa vie sur et en dehors du terrain.

Marcus Smith & George Ford (Angleterre)

Deux talents opposés mais complémentaires. La série explore leur rivalité pour le maillot numéro 10 du XV de la Rose et leur quête commune de succès pour l’Angleterre.

Lorenzo & Niccolò Cannone (Italie)

Frères et piliers du pack italien, Lorenzo et Niccolò incarnent la fougue et la résilience des Azzurri. Leur rôle dans la révolution italienne sous Gonzalo Quesada est central.

Immanuel Feyi-Waboso (Angleterre)

À seulement 21 ans, l’ailier s’impose déjà comme un talent de classe mondiale. Entre défis internationaux et attentes élevées, il illustre l’avenir du rugby anglais.

Peter O’Mahony (Irlande)

Vétéran charismatique, surnommé le “War God”, il montre l’équilibre entre intensité sur le terrain et passion pour le jardinage en dehors. Une leçon de leadership et d’humanité.

Duhan van der Merwe (Écosse)

Machine à marquer, Van der Merwe révèle la préparation et la détermination derrière ses exploits. Une plongée dans l’esprit d’un compétiteur féroce.

George North (Pays de Galles)

Avec plus de 100 sélections, North s’apprête à tirer sa révérence lors du Tournoi 2024. Entre nostalgie et détermination, la série explore l’émotion de ses derniers moments en rouge.

Six Nations : Au Contact sera disponible début 2025 sur Netflix.

Découvrez les coulisses des deux camps lors de la tournée des Lions britanniques et irlandais en Afrique du Sud en 2021. A voir en exclusivité sur RugbyPass TV dès maintenant.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Commentaires

0 Comments
Soyez le premier à commenter...

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez vraiment !

Inscription gratuite
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

H
Head high tackle 27 minutes ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

I really dont know what the problem is Nick. Cane was immense this year and no one below him demanded the job. TJ perhaps less so but he was always going to start the season at 9 anyway due to the thing they call experience. I think guys like Lakai will have learnt a lot from the likes of Cane and Ill garrantee TJ has helped the Roigard/Ratima/Hothem settle in to their roles much better than they would have had there been no experience around. At the start of 2024 these guys had 3 tests between them. Im glad TJ was around.

The biggest fail area from my pov is centre. Razors lack of desire to change what is clearly failing is a worry. Is he waiting for a full year of SR? Is he not sure? I dont know the answer of course but He fiddled where he shouldnt have and didnt touch the area he should have. WJ at 15 is an experiment. Its not a clear decision yet either. WJ is an amazing attacking player. He isnt an amazing kicker or an amazing decision maker.

The 10 position is being handled very badly too. Its Dmac but BB is constantly in there, Its BB but no 15 to back that up or its no one. GET RID of the centre pairing and get Love in at 15. The backs will function way better. All the players get their SR backs working far better than Razor has gotten, and with no dedicated backs coach in the ABs its a clear problem area.


Also this comparing SA with NZ when 1 side is retaining all their stars and the other side has had some major changes isnt a apples with apples comparison. Imagine comparing a F1 racing team where 1 team was 100% settled and the other was brand new....Just not a comparison worth doing as it proves nothing other than the blatently obvious.

14 Go to comments
J
JW 1 hour ago
'Razor's conservatism is in danger of halting New Zealand's progress'

Razor is compensating, and not just for the Foster era.


Thanks again for doing the ground work on some revealing data Nick.


This article misses some key points points that are essential to this debate though;


Razor is under far more pressure than Rassie to win

Rassie is a bolder selector than Razor, and far more likely to embrace risk under pressure than his counterpart from New Zealand.

It doesn't realise the difficulties of a country like South Africa, with no rugby season to speak of at the moment, to get full use out of overseas internationals

Neither world player of the year Pieter-Steph du Toit nor all-world second row Eben Etzebeth were automatic selections despite the undue influence they exert on games in which they play.

The last is that one coach is 7 years into his era, where the other is in his first, and is starting with a far worse blank slate than where upon South Africa's canvas could be layered onto after 2017.

The spread at the bottom end is nothing short of spectacular. Seventeen more South Africans than New Zealanders started between one and five games in 2024.

That said, I think the balance needs to be at least somewhere in the middle. I don't know how much that is going to be down to Razor's courage, and New Zealands appetite however.


Sadly I think it is going to continue and the problem is going to be masked by much better results next year, even forgotten with an undefeated season. Because even this article appears to misconstruing the..

known quantities

as being TJP and Sam Cane. In the context of what would need to change for the numbers above to be similar, it's players like Jordie Barrett, Beauden Barrett, Rieko Ioane, Sevu Reece, Ethan Blackadder, Codie Taylor, where the reality needs to be meet face on.


On Jordie Barrett at Lienster, I really hope he can be taught how to tackle with a hard shoulder like Henshaw and Ringrose have. You can see in these highlights he doesn't have the physical presence of those two, or even the ones behind him in NZ like ALB and AJ Lam. I can't really seem him making leaps in other facets if he's already making headlines now.

14 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ 'It doesn’t make sense for New Zealand to deny itself access to world-class players' 'It doesn’t make sense for New Zealand to deny itself access to world-class players'
Search