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France player ratings vs Italy | 2025 Six Nations

By Liam Heagney at Stadio Olimpico, Rome
The France players show appreciation to their fans after their win in Italy (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

France player ratings live from Stadio Olimpico: Fabien Galthie’s France rejuvenated their Guinness Six Nations title bid with a record-smashing 73-24 win over Italy to set up a tantalising March 8 showdown against defending champions Ireland in Dublin.

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Embracing the dry and sunny Sunday afternoon conditions in Rome, the invite to create was eagerly snapped up by two sides who frequently moved the ball, and six tries in a compelling opening half-hour – four to the bonus-point earning French – materialised.

Come the break, the French were 35-17 up and they handsomely built on this advantage in the second half to run out deserved 11 tries to three winners.

Aside from some leaky first-half defending in the centre on the pitch, this was the type of swashbuckling round-three performance Galthie would have wanted after the frustrating 25-26 February 8 loss to England had again highlighted how this star-studded French squad continues to at times produce less than the sum of its parts.

The axing of winger Damian Penaud and out-half Mathieu Jalibert was evidence that the head coach’s patience had snapped and a very satisfying response came against an in-form Italy, who were attempting to win three successive Six Nations home games for the first time.

Attack

125
Passes
247
87
Ball Carries
168
253m
Post Contact Metres
443m
9
Line Breaks
15

Two early knock-ons in the Italian 22 followed by a try-cancelling forward pass from Thomas Ramos near the halfway line made for an imperfect French start that was made worse by the concession which put the hosts 0-7 ahead.

However, France then showed their swagger and were excellent value for their five tries to two, 18-point interval advantage. Then when a sixth try was quickly engineered after the resumption, Galthie had the luxury of sending on six of his seven replacements forwards in one fell swoop on 49 minutes.

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There was no let up in their intent despite the wholesale changes and the generous margin of victory was ultimately 49 points, a throwback to the 2023 Rugby World Cup when they hammered Italy 60-7 in Lyon. Here are the France player ratings:

15. Leo Barre – 9/10
The recalled full-back was guilty of the first French handling error but he was generally a class act. Thought he had opened the scoring on 10 minutes but a forward pass denied him. However, got his reward just before the break with a neat finish and then added to that with a 65th-minute finish. There were other lovely moments, such as a smart kick in behind to force a scrum-five and his offload near the sideline in the lead-up to the third French try.

14. Theo Attissogbe – 8.5
The two-try scorer versus the Welsh came back in for the axed Penaud and he quickly looked the part. His excellent decision-making and footwork in the creation of the disallowed Barre try was exquisite. So too his pass out of the tackle to give the scoring Louis Bielle-Biarrey an assist. Stayed tuned in – look at his 72nd-minute chase to snuff out an Italian breakaway and then his finish four minutes later.

13. Pierre-Louis Barassi – 4
This defensive weak link will have the Ireland attack licking its lips if he repeats this performance in Dublin. There were too many missed tackles in a frenetic opening half, an unreliability at its worst when badly exposed by the fast-stepping Tommaso Menoncello, who went all the all from deep to score. Dived in for his team’s final try on 80 minutes, but that can’t mask some flaky tackling.

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12. Yoram Moefana – 8
It was his early first-half break that set the tempo for the all-action French attack and he continued to menace the Italian defence, producing a fine afternoon’s work that enabled others to thrive.

11. Louis Bielle-Biarrey – 7.5
Endured a quiet start but magically announced himself in the game when swapping wings and providing the assist for Antoine Dupont’s first try. Went on to score himself with a sweet finish on 50 minutes in the first play after France made their six forwards substitution.

10. Thomas Ramos – 8
Shifted to out-half from full-back with Jalibert dropped, he was a competent operator whose pass-focused display helped to give the French attack every incentive to strut their stuff. Played 68 minutes.

9. Antoine Dupont – 9.5
Wasn’t fully 100 per cent perfect, as seen in a soft early fumble and a second one that could have ruled out his team’s opening try if the ball had gone forwards and not back. However, he ran a clinic after that, toying with the Italians with various score-making assists and two excellently finished tries of his own with some trademark running. Then played the closing 12 minutes at out-half.

1. Jean-Baptiste Gros – 6
One of the six starting forwards who only played 49 minutes before France pulled the pin on their impression of the Springboks bomb squad tactic. Limited scums and zero handling of the ball meant this was an afternoon where lineout lifting and clearing rucks were his only thing. He did that work with an appetite.

2. Peato Mauvaka – 7
Effective with his throwing, it was his try off a 21st-minute maul that put the French in front for the first time, a lead they were never to lose. Was one of the forwards who linked their attack play well in the traffic.

3. Uini Atonio – 5.5
With scrums at a premium and the French all about putting width on the ball, it was a tricky outing for the tighthead as there was way too much running for his liking to be done. Looked very slow getting around as his team’s movement took its toll. Would have been glad to exit so early.

4. Thibaud Flament – 7.5
One half of the freshened-up second row starting partnership, his defensive effort was important in quelling the early Italian momentum that had got the home Stadio Olimpico fans fired up in the frantic you-score, we-score part of the game. No stranger to working on the ball either.

5. Mickael Guillard – 7.5
We liked the cut of his jib from the opening seconds, racing down the pitch after the kick-off to win a holding-on penalty with just seconds gone. His power caught the eye across his 49 minutes, his 14th-minute try with two Italians hanging off him the highlight.

6. Francois Cros – 7.5
Topped his team’s tackle count, this momentum-sapper was the only member of the starting French pack to play the full 80 minutes which was kudos for the level of consistency in his game.

7. Paul Boudehent – 7
It was his off-the-ball tackle that allowed Italy to go 10-7 in front on 18 minutes, but that error was no sign that a French crisis was in the offing. Just 12 minutes later, he was scoring his team’s bonus-point try in the corner, a perfect riposte to the Italians closing to 17-21 with their second try just two minutes earlier.

8. Gregory Alldritt – 8
Another who gave up an early infringement that encouraged Italy, but he knuckled down. His tackling and healthy ball-carrying was a major reason why the French had galloped clear by the interval. Was then a 45th-minute try scorer before heading for a rest four minutes later. He will be a danger man for the Irish.

Replacements:
16. Julien Marchand – 6.5

One of the half-dozen subs who each got a 31-minute run, he helped to keep the French tempo high throughout the 31-7 part of the game that he played.

17. Cyril Baille – 5.5
As with the starting Gros, this wasn’t the type of match for props to shine but he was still the sub that tackled most for the French.

18. Dorian Aldegheri – 6
Looked more mobile than Atonio and helped to keep the breakdown fluent.

19. Romain Taofifenua – 7.5
Carried well and illustrated how much he likes an offload to keep the ball moving quickly.

20. Oscar Jegou – 7
Given 14 minutes for Flament, his cameo was a busy one.

21. Alexandre Roumat – 6

Less prominent than the starting locks, he still did his small bit to ensure France finished with a flourish.

22. Anthony Jelonch – 6
Was subbed on for Alldritt but didn’t impact the game in the same way as the starting No8.

23. Maxime Lucu – 7
Had 12 minutes at scrum-half with Ramos coming off and Dupont shifting to out-half. Kept up the speedy-like Dupont service away from the ruck.

  • Ratings index: 10/10 – Perfect, 9. Exceptional, 8. Very good, 7. Good, 6. Satisfying, 5. Average, 4. Insufficient, 3. Bad, 2. Very bad, 1. Terrible, 0. Unacceptable.


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CV 22 days ago

Barassi the weak link. Well, Fickou played his first game after injury for Racing last weekend. He’ll be back for Ireland. Class operator.

J
JJ 23 days ago

Dupont was very poor for the first 20 minutes. He didn’t see endless overlaps, while he missed Bielle-Biarrey on the wing, when he had half of Rome to himself. Dupont also conceded three turnovers, the most of any player in the game. Leo Barre should have been MotM, while Bielle-Biarrey was a close second.

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Tom 23 days ago

To be fair when the number 9 has the most carries, defenders beaten and offloads, it's a pretty compelling argument for MOTM.

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JW 58 minutes ago
'France may leave top players at home but will still be serious contenders in New Zealand'

The country turned septic on Foster for losing a series to what was arguably the best Irish side in history and one that may not have been ranked number one in the world when they arrived, but were by the time they left.

Imagine how feral the nation will be if Robertson’s All Blacks lose to what is supposedly going to be a French ‘B’ team?

This author proving he has less of an understanding of rugby than the general population.


The country was septic because of how easily they got beat Paul. The country is smart enough to rate the relative level of performances, and if Razors team goes backwards like Fosters the criticism you suggest might come will be fully deserved. If France B perform as good as France A and win by the same margins then those with the criticism the team should be winning every game will also be deserved. But the inference that the public didn’t give Ireland the credit they deserved couldn’t be further from the truth imo.

France have beaten the All Blacks on the last three occasions the two sides have met, and that the former has used 38 players in the process.

France could leave 40 players at home in July and still be a serious contender

And to the vibe of this article, it provides abosolutely zero reason to believe the next 38 best French are going to be as good as these first 38. Paul got one thing right, it’s no joke that France will be leaving behind 40 players.


France have a 45 man squad for 6N (well using Wiki), the team could be made up of these leftovers from the teams not likely to get close to Toulouse and Bordeaux, given that just the third place team is doing commendably well not to be in negative for and against like the rest.

Uini Atonio ——— Prop

Giorgi Beria ——— Prop

Georges-Henri Colombe ———- Prop

Jean-Baptiste Gros ——— Prop

Dany Priso ——— Prop

Rabah Slimani———- Prop

Hugo Auradou ——— Lock

Mickaël Guillard ——— Lock

Matthias Halagahu ——— Lock

Romain Taofifénua ——— Lock

Esteban Abadie ——- Back row

Grégory Alldritt ———- Back row

Paul Boudehent ———- Back row

Oscar Jégou ——— Back row

Nolann Le Garrec ——— Scrum-half

Gaël Fickou ——— Centre

Antoine Frisch ——— Centre

Émilien Gailleton ——— Centre

Noah Nene ——— Centre

Théo Attissogbé ——— Wing

Gaël Dréan ———- Wing

Gabin Villièren —— Wing

Léo Barré ——— Fullback


One wouldn’t think Atonio is going to come (I’d be surprised if Fickou is still not rested or he and Le Garrec aren’t involved in a relegation playoff game) but a few good players there like Leo Barre, Le Garrec, Taofifénua, and that back row, but also a distinct lack of a spine with the 3 best playmakers playing in the Final at home.


What are the possibilities to fill out these missing spots? looking at Opta’s stats hub Serin and Couilloud provide good back up for Le Garrec by fact of having the highest try involvements in the Top14 (along with Michael Ruru). And Serin’s partner Herve looks the most threatening to carry on the teams style with his elusiveness?

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