Édition du Nord

Select Edition

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

Le Racing 92 vainqueur laborieux de l'USAP

Le 3e ligne sud-africain du Racing Hacjivah Dayimani a inscrit le 3e essai des siens en première période. (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD/AFP via Getty Images)

Le Racing a peut-être cru que sa saison, laborieuse jusqu’ici, était enfin lancée, ce samedi contre Perpignan.

ADVERTISEMENT
Rencontre
Top 14
Racing 92
30 - 23
Temps complet
Perpignan
Toutes les stats et les données

Vingt-cinq premières minutes idéales, couronnées de trois essais, et une domination nette et sans bavure face à des Catalans apathiques.

Pas forcément du grand rugby, mais de l’efficacité : Owen Farrell qui prolonge du pied un ballon qui traîne pour aller marquer son premier essai en Top 14 ; la vista de Nolan Le Garrec qui joue un petit côté déserté ; une percée de 50 m de Max Spring conclue par Dayimani.

Related

24-3 à ce moment-là, tout allait bien pour les Franciliens. Trop bien ? En tout cas, le match a changé de physionomie dès la demi-heure de jeu.

Dominateurs en mêlée mais maladroits ballon en main, les Usapistes marquaient tout d’abord un premier essai sur un ballon porté dominateur (37e).

Signe de la fébrilité du Racing, Le Garrec tapait une pénalité pour reprendre 17 points d’avance plutôt que d’aller en touche pour essayer de récupérer le bonus offensif (50e).

Terriblement indisciplinés, les joueurs de Stuart Lancaster écopaient de deux cartons consécutifs (58e, 62e). À 15 contre 13, l’USAP croyait à la remontada avec un essai signé Barraque puis deux pénalités d’Aucagne (27-23, 79e).

ADVERTISEMENT

Pénalités

15
Pénalités concédées
9
3
Cartons jaunes
0
0
Cartons rouges
0

Synthèse du match

3
Coups de pied de pénalité
3
3
Essais
2
3
Transformations
2
0
Drops
0
81
Courses avec ballon
94
7
Franchissements
3
13
Turnovers perdus
18
6
Turnovers gagnés
2

Mais une faute un peu bête du champion olympique de Sevens offrait à la sirène la pénalité que Le Garrec passait entre les perches, assurant une courte victoire des siens tout en enlevant le bonus défensif aux visiteurs, pas récompensés.

« Je fais l’erreur à la fin, je ne le vois pas (il touche Gibert dans les airs, NDLR) », plaidait coupable Barraque. « Je suis vraiment désolé auprès de mes coéquipiers et du club. On perd ce point de bonus. »

Le Racing pouvait souffler, mais n’aura pas beaucoup de points de satisfaction à retirer de ce match, passé la demi-heure de jeu.

ADVERTISEMENT

Top 14

P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
Bordeaux
8
6
2
0
28
2
Toulouse
7
5
2
0
24
3
La Rochelle
7
5
2
0
22
4
Toulon
7
4
3
0
19
5
Clermont
7
4
3
0
19
6
Castres
7
4
3
0
19
7
Bayonne
7
4
3
0
18
8
Lyon
7
4
3
0
18
9
Pau
8
3
5
0
15
10
Racing 92
7
3
4
0
14
11
Perpignan
7
3
4
0
14
12
Montpellier
7
2
5
0
10
13
Stade Francais
7
2
5
0
9
14
Vannes
7
1
6
0
7

Visionnez gratuitement le documentaire en cinq épisodes “Chasing the Sun 2” sur RugbyPass TV (*non disponible en Afrique), qui raconte le parcours des Springboks dans leur quête pour défendre avec succès leur titre de Champions du monde de rugby

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

J
JW 51 minutes ago
All Blacks report card: Are Razor's troops heading in the right direction?

First, thinking automatic success comes with succession. I think a heavily hand made succession can work but they need to be a whole lot more ruthless with their processes.


Then, as pointed out in a recent article, by the same author as this one I think, they went with what Razor would these days call the "quarter back" style 10 rather than a facilitator. This, along with a second playmaker, removed all desire to select alround players who have the skill to keep the ball alive and enable those wonderful team try's we used to see. We became 'strike' team with specific focal points, and a reliance on those players.


Two defend those players, and the idea itself I suppose, the two you name in particular were heavily affected by their concussions and the idea they can break a neck playing like they way they were. Neither were anything like that specifically due to injurys imo, this, combined with the same mentality that causes the team not to want to replace a future coach (Foster) with someone better, means they stuck with their man. There is also a heavy amount of fiscal perspective in things like investment in a player that dictated a lack of desire to move sooner (the delay in selecting someone like Mo'unga and using Scott as a 6 in conjunction with Ardie at 7).


Ah, yes, I see that you see. Yeah it was definitely another one of these pretty ideas like succession of coachs wasn't, naming the new 7 as captain, after McCaw. Combined with the look of your next paragraph, I'm going to suggest that again it is one of these 'AB philosophies' that are to blame of sticking with your investments till ruin or bust. I can't remember what injury Read had but there was also a conscious choice to play him tighter and we were robbed by his wide running and passing game by a loss of pace. But both of them were indicative of a lack of investment (by necessity no doubt) in securing talent behind them Lachlan was better than Cane for multiple years before he finally decided to go, guys you knew would deliver to a certain standard like Elliot Dixon, Squire, Robinson, Tuafua, even Messam, were constantly overlooked to play certain All Blacks into the ground and have them needing to be excluded from the start of SR seasons as a result. It's so indicative of now with players like Kirifi stonewalled to give Cane a farewell but more glaring grinding blood our of Ardie for one more performance. Not to mention passing up on players like Sotutu.


I see you have great names as well, fully agree, especially about how that Foster teams run ended. While I don't think you understand the dynamics of what selecting from overseas is likely involve, I'm on board, because I don't really care too much about SR. I'd prefer it if NZR had to do what you suggest and invest in the grass roots and NPC and everyone can turn up to a NPC game without paying a cent because the people involved are there for the love of the game.


Realistically though, and thinking with that All Black mindset of perfection, nothing should change until these problems weve highlighted with the setup, and this current coaches failings, have been fixed. Make the change to opening up when you don't need to open it up, that is the 7 point play to make.

311 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Caelan Doris lets slip Ireland admission as Andy Farrell heads to exit 'Other teams are getting better': Caelan Doris concedes Ireland must e
Search