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All Blacks' controversial double hit on Grosso has ended his tour

By Online Editors
Sam Cane

French back Remy Grosso’s series is over after the full extent of his injury at the hands of a controversial double hit from the All Blacks has emerged.

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France led 11-8 at the break, but while Gabrillagues was sidelined, the All Blacks asserted their dominance and scored two tries to set them on their way to victory, before a late flurry saw them pull clear.

The focus remained on referee Luke Pearce though, after another contentious decision in the second half went in favour of the All Blacks, as Sam Cane and Ofa Tu’ungafasi both caught Remy Grosso with high tackles and no action was taken against them.

Cane caught the wing with a swinging arm and Tu’ungafasi appeared to clash heads with Grosso, before the Frenchman had to subsequently be taken from the field and to hospital.

The French camp have revealed that Grosso’s has a double facial fracture, including a fractured sinus, as a result of the hit.

“The injury of Remy Grosso is quite serious,” France coach Jacques Brunel said in a post-match interview.

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“I think that the way he was done by the All Blacks pair was illegal.”

Brunel was not happy with some of the officials’ decisions, but said that his team struggled to match the All Blacks, especially when they were a man down.

“The first half was good, in the second half the yellow card was key.

“It was very hard to fight with the All Blacks after that. Yellow card or not yellow card, we had to deal with it.”

New Zealand coach Steve Hansen admitted France lock Paul Gabrillagues did not deserve a yellow card for a high tackle in the second half as the All Blacks defeated Les Bleus 52-11 in Auckland.

Hansen did not agree with Pearce’s decision on Gabrillagues’ yellow card, but was happy with how his team performed, especially as they were behind at the break.

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“It was high but I don’t think it was a yellow card personally, but I’m not the ref,” he said.

“Ten minutes before half-time we started to understand what we had to do, which was look after the football and go forward and try to go through them a wee bit, rather than try to go around them.

“Then we quietly talked amongst ourselves and continued to want to do that, and had a plan on how we were going to do that. And slowly we picked them apart.”

The second Test is in Wellington on June 16.

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mitch 4 hours ago
The Wallabies team Joe Schmidt must pick to win back Bledisloe Cup

Rodda will be a walk up starter at lock. Frost if you analyse his dominance has little impact and he’s a long way from being physical enough, especially when you compare to Rodda and the work he does. He was quite poor at the World Cup in his lack of physicality. Between Rodda and Skelton we would have locks who can dominate the breakdown and in contact. Frost is maybe next but Schmidt might go for a more physical lock who does their core work better like Ryan or LSL. Swain is no chance unless there’s a load of injuries. Pollard hasn’t got the scrum ability yet to be considered. Nasser dominated him when they went toe to toe and really showed him up. Picking Skelton effects who can play 6 and 8. Ideally Valetini would play 6 as that’s his best position and Wilson at 8 but that’s not ideal for lineout success. Cale isn’t physical enough yet in contact and defence but is the best backrow lineout jumper followed by Wright, Hanigan and Swinton so unfortunately Valetini probably will start at 8 with Wright or Hanigan at 6. Wilson on the bench, he’s got too much quality not to be in the squad. Paisami is leading the way at 12 but Hamish Stewart is playing extremely well also and his ball carrying has improved significantly. Beale is also another option based on the weekend. Beale is class but he’s also the best communicator of any Australian backline player and that can’t be underestimated, he’ll be in the mix.

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