Édition du Nord
Select Edition
Nord Nord
Sud Sud
Mondial Mondial
Nouvelle Zélande Nouvelle Zélande
France France

RC Toulon : Esteban Abadie prolonge jusqu'en 2028

Par AFP
Toulon's French flanker Esteban Abadie catches the ball during the European Champions Cup rugby union match between RC Toulon and Harlequins at the Mayol stadium in Toulon, southern France, on January 12, 2025. (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP) (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images)

Le troisième ligne international Esteban Abadie, en fin de contrat avec le RC Toulon, a prolongé de trois ans jusqu’en 2028, a annoncé mardi le club.

ADVERTISEMENT

Arrivé dans le Var en 2023, le joueur de 27 ans est devenu un élément clé de l’équipe troisième du Top 14 avec treize matchs depuis le début de la saison. Il a connu une sélection avec le XV de France lors du Tournoi des Six Nations 2024 contre l’Italie.

« Je suis ravi de prolonger mon aventure avec le RCT. Ce club et ses supporters m’apportent énormément, et je suis impatient de continuer à défendre les couleurs ‘rouge et noir’ avec détermination », a-t-il expliqué dans le communiqué du club.

Le troisième ligne est dans le groupe des 42 joueurs retenus par Fabien Galthié pour préparer la prochaine rencontre des Bleus face à l’Angleterre samedi (17h45).

Rencontre
Six Nations
England
26 - 25
Temps complet
France
Toutes les stats et les données

Related

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
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 Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

G
GrahamVF 27 minutes ago
The times are changing, and some Six Nations teams may be left behind

The main problem is that on this thread we are trying to fit a round peg into a square hole. Rugby union developed as distinct from rugby league. The difference - rugby league opted for guaranteed tackle ball and continuous phase play. Rugby union was based on a stop start game with stanzas of flowing exciting moves by smaller faster players bookended by forward tussles for possession between bigger players. The obsession with continuous play has brought the hybrid (long before the current use) into play. Backs started to look more like forwards because they were expected to compete at the tackle and breakdowns completely different from what the original game looked like. Now here’s the dilemma. Scrum lineout ruck and maul, tackling kicking handling the ball. The seven pillars of rugby union. We want to retain our “World in Union” essence with the strong forward influence on the game but now we expect 125kg props to scrum like tractors and run around like scrum halves. And that in a nutshell is the problem. While you expect huge scrums and ball in play time to be both yardsticks, you are going to have to have big benches. You simply can’t have it both ways. And BTW talking about player safety when I was 19 I was playing at Stellenbosch at a then respectable (for a fly half) 160lbs against guys ( especially in Koshuis rugby) who were 100 lbs heavier than me - and I played 80 minutes. You just learned to stay out of their way. In Today’s game there is no such thing and not defending your channel is a cardinal sin no matter how unequal the task. When we hybridised with union in semi guaranteed tackle ball the writing was on the wall.

190 Go to comments
Close
ADVERTISEMENT