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Top 14 : McNamara prolonge à Bordeaux-Bègles

Par AFP
Noel Mcnamara (Photo de ROMAIN PERROCHEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

L’Irlandais Noel McNamara, en charge des lignes arrières de Bordeaux-Bègles depuis 2023, a prolongé son contrat de deux saisons avec le club girondin pour lequel il est désormais lié jusqu’en 2027, a annoncé mardi l’UBB.

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« Ravis de poursuivre notre aventure à l’UBB », a écrit le technicien irlandais sur X après cette annonce.

McNamara, 42 ans, fils d’un agriculteur et d’une infirmière sage-femme, est à l’origine un enseignant en éducation physique et en mathématiques, passionné de rugby qu’il n’a jamais pratiqué.

Devenu entraîneur dans un collège près de Dublin en multipliant les lectures sur le jeu et le coaching, il attire l’œil du Leinster qui lui confie ses équipes de jeunes puis la direction de son académie.

Nommé à la tête des équipes d’Irlande U18, U19, U20 et de l’équipe A, McNamara a approfondi ses connaissances au gré de voyages en Nouvelle-Zélande et en Afrique du Sud, à Durban notamment où il sympathise sur place avec Yannick Bru qui le convainc de le suivre à Bordeaux où le poste de manager l’attend pour la saison 2023/24.

Adepte d’un jeu de mouvement et de prises d’espaces et d’initiatives qu’il nomme « surfing », l’Irlandais a permis à l’attaque girondine de briller la saison dernière dans le sillage des internationaux tricolores Matthieu Jalibert, Louis Bielle-Biarrey, Nicolas Depoortere et Damian Penaud.

Cette saison, l’UBB est repartie sur des bases similaires avec déjà 42 essais inscrits (meilleure attaque) en neuf journées de Top 14.

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J
JW 1 hour ago
'It doesn’t make sense for New Zealand to deny itself access to world-class players'

There are a couple of inadequacies in this articles points as well.


First

Robertson, in what he has said publicly, is building his argument for change as a means to close the gap that is increasing between the All Blacks and South Africa.

Based on recent performances, the All Blacks are better than the Springboks.


Second

Both games saw the All Blacks lead coming into the last 30 minutes, only for the momentum to shift dramatically once the two sides emptied their respective benches.

The failings of the second half were game plan related, they happened regardless of whether the bench had yet (play got worse very early in the half, even in the first half) been used or not.


And third

Robertson’s view is that because the Boks don’t lose access to their experienced players when they head offshore, it gives them an advantage

Didn't Razor have the most experienced team all year?


Also

“Sam Cane and Ardie Savea with Wallace Siti, what a balance that is.

This is part of Razor's problem. That's a terrible balance. You instead want something like Sam Cane, Hoskins Sotutu, Wallace Sititi. Or Ardie Savea, Sititi, Scott Barrett. Dalton Papaili'i, Savea, Finau. That is balance, not two old struggling to keep up players and an absolute rookie.

It has changed. Not many go north, more go to Japan, so how do we get the balance right to ensure that players who have given loyalty, longevity and who are still playing well

Experience is a priceless commodity in international rugby and New Zealand has a system where it throws away players precisely when they are at their most valuable.

You mean how do we take advantage of this new environment, because nothing has effectively changed has it. It's simply Japan now instead of Europe. What's it going to be like in the future, how is the new American league going to change things?


Mo'unga is the only real valid reason for debating change, but what's far more important is the wide discussion happening that's taking the whole game into account. The current modem throws players away because they decided to go with a 5 team model rather than a 12 or 14 team model. Players have to be asked to leave at the point were we know they aren't going to be All Blacks, when they are playing their best rugby, reached their peak. In order to reset, and see if the next guy coming through can improve on the 'peak' of the last guy. Of course it's going to take years before they even reach the departing players standards, let alone see if they can pass them.


What if there can be a change that enables New Zealand to have a model were players like Jamison Gibson-Park, James Lowe, Bundee Aki, Chandler Cunningham-South, Ethan Roots, Warner Dearns are All Blacks that make their experienced and youth developemnt the envy of the World. That is the discussion that really needs to be had, not how easy it is to allow Mo'unga to play again. That's how the All Blacks end up winning 3 World Cups in a row.

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