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France player ratings vs All Blacks | Autumn Nations Series

By Jack Tunney at Stade de France, Paris
PARIS, FRANCE - NOVEMBER 16: Antoine Dupont of France looks on as a scrum is contested during the Autumn Nations Series 2024 match between France and New Zealand at the Stade de France on November 16, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Franco Arland/Getty Images)

Just one point separated the mighty All Blacks and France on Saturday evening, as the impressive hosts took a 30-29 victory over their rivals. There was a reason why this match had been billed as the big one this weekend, and the theatricals inside the incredible Stade de France truly lived up to its billing.

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Here’s how we rated the French players:

1 Jean-Baptiste Gros – 9

Gros was a vital part of an early penalty scrum win and pushed on from there. The prop put in the performance of a lifetime, continually battering the opposition’s defence with and without the ball. He was not only a brick wall in the tackle area today, he was a brick wall that hit back. A terrific display.

2 Peato Mauvaka – 6

His relationship with the lineout was a shaky one throughout, but otherwise, his general gameplay did the job. He carried well when asked to and put his body on the line in defence. Off at 48.

3 Tevita Tatafu – N/A

Removed from the field after 9 minutes with an injury.

4 Thibaud Flament 8

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The tall lock didn’t feature too much in the first half, other than to make the tackles when needed. In the second half he came alive, however, providing a vital defensive performance to halt the threatening All Black attack.

5 Emmanuel Meafou – 8.5

His match started with a huge hit to disrupt the All Black play, and from then on he tackled everything. In attack, the giant lock was unfathomable, as he charged towards the visitor’s line on multiple occasions dragging players with him. Off at 48 after he appeared to be struggling with a niggle.

6 Paul Boudehent – 8

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Powerful tackling throughout and regularly had his hands on the ball. A well-taken try concluded a solid performance. Off at 69.

7 Alexandre Roumat – 8.5

It took a while for him to get into the game, notably when a heavy pass of his gave the ball back into All Black hands before giving away a silly penalty at the breakdown all within roughly 10 seconds. He sorted himself out shortly afterwards, however, and went on to top the French tackle count with 18 important crunches.

8 Gregory Alldritt – 9.5

He was constantly threatening the breakdown, coming away with two vital turnovers for his efforts. His work with ball in hand was vital to the French getting front-foot possession and delivering a base for Dupont to feed off. Despite leaving the field in the 48th minute, he led his team in carries and made 16 tackles.

9 Antoine Dupont – 8.5

He controlled proceedings in his typical Dupont manner, appearing to have more time and space than any other player on the field. His evening started with the cheekiest of chips over to Bielle-Biarrey on the wing and continued with a playmaking masterpiece which ended at fly-half for the final 10.

10 Thomas Ramos – 8.5

A huge kick to take the first points of the match would prove a trend as the match continued. Knocking over each kick that was required of him, Ramos proved once again that he was the man for the tight occasion. He did butcher a try down the left hand late into the match when he elected to dart down the centre, but he did help set up the opportunity in the first place so we’ll let him off a little. Terrific from the boot all evening, and can claim the assist for Bielle-Biarrey’s try with a wonderful kick behind the All Black defence.

11 Louis Bielle-Biarrey – 8

Took Ramos’ early kick well, popping the ball back inside to keep the attack alive. Wonderfully cleared up at the back whenever asked, and gassed Sevu Reece on the Ramos kick chase in footage that will surely haunt the All Black winger for years to come.

12 Yoram Moefana – 6

Had some impressive moments, but overall a relatively quiet match in the midfield. Off at 59.

13 Gael Fickou – 6

Always the act of reason, tidied things up when it needed to, but otherwise nothing to write home about. Very quiet as he did his job in the background.

14 Gabin Villiere – 4.5

Flew in for an interception early on, which he missed, allowing Ardie Savea to break through down the wing. He missed a tackle on the same player just moments later, allowing the former All Black captain to offload to Peter Lakai to score. His fortunes weren’t looking likely to improve when he was ripped in the tackle by Beauden Barrett as his side tried to escape their 22. He did help to redeem himself early in the second half when he launched Caleb Clark into touch, and even later when he made an all-important try-saving interception from Will Jordan’s breakaway.

15 Romain Buros – 8

His rangy running style resembled that of Toulouse player Blair Kinghorne, and like Blair he looked dangerous on the counter. A well-taken try from close range proved his gas on the kick chase and made a notable cover tackle on Sevu Reece to cancel out a dangerous All Black attack. Off with injury at 67 minutes.

Substitutes – 8.5

Georges-Henri Colombe came on after 9 minutes as an injury replacement. Held the scrum well and made the tackles when needed. Huge hit on Will Jordan at the start of the second half. The forward replacements added an extra layer when they arrived on the field, adding to an already impressive performance. Nolann Le Garrec’s arrival at scrum half gave Dupont the freedom to move out to outside half.

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Comments

21 Comments
T
TI 23 days ago

Just insanely inflated ratings.

At this time we have to assume, that this is a pure troll.

They just want traction under the article, so they provoke. The whole RugbyPass is turning into Ben Smith. Tabloid clickbait, biased nonsense.

Aldritt with the best performance ever?

Dude handed Roigaard an intercept try on a silver plate.

B
Bull Shark 23 days ago

This is probably the first time I’ve seen less than a 9 for Dupont.


Are we sure France won?

j
jb 23 days ago

Best team won, who cares about the ratings?

B
BB 23 days ago

These ratings are embarrassing!...absolutely no idea by the writer...its like they dominated All Blacks!...France were incredibly lucky!

j
jb 23 days ago

Best teams do get lucky.

T
Thomas K 23 days ago

These ratings have become a joke

G
GH 23 days ago

we are discovering an aspect of new-zealanders we didn't know : they are sad losers :D The notes are clearly over the roof (as usual) but in the end they are a reflect of the offensive resistance of the french side that the NZ team have not been able to manage. It's both a mental and tactical defeat for the All Blacks

D
DC000 23 days ago

The only thing Kiwis do at a world class level is moan & whinge.


It clearly isn't play rugby well.

N
Nope 23 days ago

This is an entirely incorrect statement, NZer’s are generally very humble in defeat, as is the case in this instance from what I’ve seen. As far as offensive resistance goes, there was a clear passage of the game that lead to the French victory and that is the “neck roll” penalty that everyone agrees, regardless of allegiance, knows was the wrong call. There’s no “victory” for you saying NZ are sore losers because you know it’s simply not true, they will look at their own performance and find reasons for their own lacking to “manage” the next game. To say this was a clear and concise victory from the French, who have mostly dominated the past 4 year RWC cycle before 23 is a pretty poor reflection of your own standards.


When DuPont finally decides to leave the country and play elsewhere and win, then you can say the French are a good side.

J
JWH 24 days ago

So the French pack gets an average of 8.5 for getting bullied the entire night and beating an All Blacks team who only lost due to poor calls for shots at goal? Geez, these guys would watch the Tyson v Paul fight and call it the duel of the century.


Alldritt getting a 9.5 for doing what? Getting stripped of the ball 10m for his own tryline for a soft try for Roigard?


Is a 10/10 performance just having an okay game now?


Should be some serious reflection from these writers.

K
Kia koe 23 days ago

Completely agree.... Theses earrings don't make sense... Lazy reviewing is what this article is

0
007 24 days ago

Agree 100%! Alldritt's ranking had me completely baffled. Like seriously - 9.5?!

S
SadersMan 24 days ago

Too generous? Du Pont was mostly Mr Invisible & the French pack was dominated by the ABs at set piece.

J
JWH 24 days ago

Disgusting behaviour from RP here. ABs only lost for not taking oppurtunities. That French pack got bullied all over.

H
HU 24 days ago

DuPont is entitled to get an 8 the moment he puts his boots on the turf ... if he plays good (which he does a lot of times, no doubt) the scale is to be expanded to 11 or 12 ....

0
007 24 days ago

The author of this article is writing under a pseudonym - his real name is either Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder or Andrea Bocelli.

What game was he watching?

J
JS 24 days ago

Just as bad, but in the opposite direction, as the AB player ratings. Where does RP get these guys?

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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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