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Top 14 : Un nul frustrant pour Lyon et Toulouse

Le troisième-ligne français de Toulouse Leo Banos se bat pour le ballon avec le centre sud-africain de Lyon Arno Botha lors du match de Top 14 entre le Lyon Olympique Universitaire Rugby et le Stade Toulousain (Toulouse) au stade de Gerland à Lyon, centre-est de la France, le 22 décembre 2024. (Photo by JEFF PACHOUD / AFP) (Photo by JEFF PACHOUD/AFP via Getty Images)

Le Stade Toulousain a décroché un match nul (17-17) sur la pelouse de Lyon, dimanche 22 décembre, lors de la 12e journée de Top 14, après avoir été mené 14-7 à la mi-temps.

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Ce résultat permet aux Toulousains, qui restaient sur sept victoires lors de leurs huit derniers matchs, de rester au contact du leader, l’Union Bordeaux-Bègles, avec qui ils partagent la tête du championnat avec 41 points. De son côté, Lyon met fin à une série de cinq défaites en prenant un point précieux qui le fait remonter de la 13e à la 11e place, juste devant Perpignan et Pau.

Rencontre
Top 14
Lyon
17 - 17
Temps complet
Toulouse
Toutes les stats et les données

Pour autant, ce nul, le premier de la saison, reste frustrant pour les deux équipes. « Le pas est moins grand que prévu, mais c’est un pas en avant. On s’était promis de mettre du combat, de la solidarité, de l’engagement, une défense plus féroce. J’ai vu des duels gagnés défensifs, offensifs, des ballons grattés. Il y a eu un engagement total. Le carton fait mal. À quinze contre quinze, c’est déjà dur contre Toulouse », indiquait Karim Ghezal, entraîneur du LOU, qui vivait là son retour en Top 14 deux mois après avoir été débarqué du Stade Français.

Les Lyonnais, malgré une domination en touche et une défense bien en place, n’ont pas su conclure. Monty Ioane avait pourtant offert l’essai de l’avantage juste avant la pause (14-7), tandis que Léo Berdeu s’était montré précis avec quatre pénalités réussies en première période. Cependant, Berdeu a manqué deux pénalités décisives en fin de match (67e, 76e), laissant le LOU échouer à s’offrir une victoire tant attendue, malgré un état d’esprit combatif.

Synthèse du match

4
Coups de pied de pénalité
1
1
Essais
2
0
Transformations
2
0
Drops
0
109
Courses avec ballon
111
6
Franchissements
8
14
Turnovers perdus
12
4
Turnovers gagnés
6

« J’ai vu des joueurs déterminés, je suis déterminé à sauver ce club. L’attitude a été bonne, les joueurs se sont donnés, avec un engagement total. L’essentiel, c’est de laisser le club hors des deux dernières places et c’est ce qu’on va aller chercher. On est conscient du travail devant mais aussi du fait qu’on a du potentiel », poursuivait Ghezal.

Le réveil toulousain a été déclenché par une supériorité numérique après le carton jaune de Steeve Blanc-Mappaz (59e). En l’espace de quatre minutes, Blair Kinghorn a inscrit une pénalité (60e), et Théo Ntamack a marqué un essai puissant (64e) pour égaliser. Ce partage des points met fin à une série de cinq défaites consécutives pour Toulouse sur le terrain de Lyon, mais laisse le LOU dans l’urgence de retrouver la victoire en championnat.

Phases statiques

4
Mêlées
4
50%
% de mêlées gagnées
100%
15
Touche
15
100%
% de touches gagnées
67%
7
Renvois réussis
5
100%
% de renvois réussis
83%

« Franchement, on était venu pour gagner, mais ce match nul nous satisfait », nuançait Anthony Jelonch, capitaine du Stade Toulousain au micro du diffuseur Canal +.  « En première mi-temps, nous avons commis plusieurs imprécisions. On va plusieurs fois dans leur zone de marque et on ne sort pas. On n’a pas eu de réussite au but en première mi-temps non plus. On fait une belle partie dans le combat et je suis fier de mes coéquipiers. »

Jelonch ne pouvait ignorer que leur dernier succès à Gerland remontait au 26 novembre 2017. Désormais les Toulousains comptent sept matchs sans victoire à Lyon, avec deux nuls, une de leurs pires séries à l’extérieur.

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« On avait “fait tourner”, mais les mecs se sont envoyés comme des lions. On a eu la balle de match, mais ce soir cela ne nous a pas souri…» Le Stade Toulousain comptait en effet six de ses internationaux en vacances : Antoine Dupont, Thomas Ramos, François Cros, Julien Marchand (qui n’a donc pas eu la chance de jouer contre son frère Guillaume), Matthis Lebel et Romain Ntamack, alors que Rodrigue Neti, Dorian Aldegheri, Thibaud Flament, Jack Willis, Santiago Chocobares et Pierre-Louis Barassi étaient ménagés.

A l’occasion du Boxing Day, après quelques jours de congé, Lyon ira défier le Racing 92 et Toulouse recevra le Stade Français dimanche 30 décembre pour espérer regagner sa place de leader avant 2025.

Top 14

P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
Bordeaux
12
9
3
0
41
2
Toulouse
12
8
3
1
41
3
Toulon
12
8
4
0
37
4
Bayonne
12
8
4
0
34
5
Clermont
12
7
5
0
33
6
Stade Rochelais
12
7
5
0
32
7
Castres
12
6
6
0
27
8
Montpellier
12
5
7
0
25
9
Racing 92
12
5
7
0
24
10
Stade Francais
12
5
7
0
23
11
Lyon
12
4
7
1
20
12
Perpignan
12
4
8
0
19
13
Pau
12
4
8
0
19
14
Vannes
12
3
9
0
15


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M
Mzilikazi 1 hour ago
Is the overlap dying in modern rugby?

A very interesting article, Nick. On beautiful and unseasonly cool summer morning here in our part of Qld., as the sun rises over the distant Border Ranges beyond the misty Lockyer Valley, that winter of '63 in the British Isles is now a distant but clear memory. There was a very heavy snowfall in Ulster, I was at school in Belfast. The snow was so heavy by mid morning that the headmaster closed down, sent us all home. Fine for those 99% of the kids who lived within a few miles of the school in E. Belfast. But my brother and I lived up on the Antrim Plateau, a good hour away. It was an interesting journey home, including a three mile hike along narrow country lanes !


It will be interesting to see how Ireland go this year in the 6N. The Nienaber defence revolution at Leinster is bound to be to the fore, with the dominance of that province in the make up of the team. However I would hope the legacy of the Lancaster era is still strong too. I'm not feeling too confident atm, with the AB game and the 2024 England 6N defeat too fresh in the memory.


Great clips from the JPR era. I see John Dawes involved there, and he was so often crucial with his ability to pass accurately under pressure. That is what is missing in the LAR game clips. A John Dawes type ability to pass well under pressure. I feel the teams that cause the rush defence problems will always be those that use out the back accurate passes to create space for the wide player, be he a Cheslin Kolbe or a big fast modern age forward,

24 Go to comments
J
JW 2 hours ago
Scott Robertson has to take charge of his All Blacks in 2025

Haha crap man I wouldn't know if SR has ever made a profit. ABs subsidize everything. Factors like SR clubs not paying 'for' their ABs etc, normal having a star would cost you 2 or 3x as much as a regular, but NZR covers all that in NZ. Pretty sure was the case for the other two partners too. I doubt even NZR knows the exact ratios sponsors like Sky/Adidas/AIG/Altrad/Investec give for local product.


No doubt SR used to make more money with the 3 partners, but of course it was also split 3 way. TBH I don't think its going to be much different (I think the new deal is still higher than before?). That last deal was bumper despite the comp being in decline, then SA left and the deal was probably worth even more for NZ? Can't recall how that played out I think Sky kept the agreemnt (fully). They'll be taking a big hit but it would be anything to do with the state of the game.


So when you say bleeding, you mean since around 2013/14 right? When SA'n and Aussie crowds finally stopped turning up to watch NZ smash them every week. So again, I was just stating your picture was wrong, and you've got the wrong causes, I don't disagree too much with the idea it's 'bleeding' though, id1ots were complaining about NZ sides getting a rough deal come final time for a loooong period and lots of other things that dragged the game down but on the field it just kept getting better and better. The problem is this nationalistic concept, that caught up on them (previously being the great driver for interest) and fans didn't care about the top four teams like every other sports competition in the world. They only cared about their local teams not winning.


No, SR wasnt optimal, which is what it was recommended to have just the SR Pacific comp instead. I'm not sure how much better things are now though. It needs time?


I know how I'd like to find equilibrium and it's much like what you propose. One big difference is I just don't think they need to cut SR. I would switch investment into an NPC/fully domestic scene + youth, like you, I'd just have like a much shorter SR season and I'd try and create a university scene rather than high school, that little extra age demographic matters a lot to investment/interest.


It's what the NRL can pay, and I think I heard it recently for someone in the spot light. I used it as a future figure more than anything though, the idea being these other leagues are only going to be more and more competitive, so much so they take away local talent before it can have a chance to develop. And once it goes they're unlikely to develop into the player they would have here. Not choosing a path that can compete will be a disaster imo. Thus the All Black decline.


I think don't think theres any reason your ideas can't work though, with maybe a added little flair here and there to drive some extra revenue. 20 is just a number to get a picture how many of top 60 might dissapear, it's nothing Id calculated. Think of it as an 'at any particular time' number.


In general I think people so quickly forget those that leave and all hope is placed on the next guy. Think that were talking top 4 or 5 in a position, there are a lot of positions that don't place much past the number 3. Look at Bell, theres no one he would be one of NZ top dozen hookers, numerous people would have left without getting a shot and the likes of Riccitelli or Eklund are obvious better. You've got first fives like Burke, Jordan, Falcon, Black, Plummer next year, Ioane Sopoaga, West who at any one time are going to be 3, 4, and 5 in NZ order. You've TKB, Smith, now Perenara, Weber, even Ruru is having a standout season and ALL would be better than the 3rd best local in Hotham or Christie. Now weve got last season statistical best full back leaving in Stevenson, he's joining Moorby and Rayasi, Bridge, and god knows who else who's having an awesome year that would break him into the All Blacks if it was in Super Rugby. Midfield is stacked when at home would be scratching around for guys like the Umaga-Jensen boys hoping they were fit to fill out 4 or 5th best 2nd5 and centers, when the likes of TJ Faiane, Nankiville, Seta, Aso, Fekitoa, Goodhue, Leicester, Ngani, even one of my fav Rob Thompson would be better than getting down to picks like Aumua, Ennor, McCleod, Tupea, and those that would have to come after them. We've got some of my fav loosies in Lachlan Boshier, Charlie Gamble, Whetu Douglas overseas, now Akira, never my talented players like.


I think your top 60 must have be a picture of the 36 man Crusaders squad plus a list of last years All Blacks! Obviously I've gone off track here as sure, these players leave a big whole but it's not one that NZ hasn't been able to fill in the past while maintaining quality SR sides (the periods when it was rocking), but there will be a time when loosing too many of those quality players has a much bigger impact than the already currently disillusioned SR fan can take.


Bottom line is Australia have far more talent and players that we do (statistically) and all that would need to have in the short term to fix your perceived problem with Super Rugby is trade some the best NZ players into the Aus sides. Simple, problem solved, competitive comp achieved.

cut off super rugby and stop the bleeding . put all the money back into the remaining competitions

Is too quick, many will see it as an opportunity to leave and that starts the very risky slope. You have to have a plan. Any change needs to be gradual and with a better future prospect, until then, voices like yours are only going to undermine any possible immediate success.

87 Go to comments
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