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Joris Segonds forfait, Léo Barré réintègre le XV de France

L'heure du repos n'a pas encore sonné pour Léo Barré et les Bleus, soumis au rythme effréné des internationaux qui évoluent dans le Top 14. (Photo by Franco Arland/Getty Images)

L’arrière parisien Léo Barré remplace l’ouvreur bayonnais Joris Segonds, « forfait », dans le groupe des 42 joueurs retenus par Fabien Galthié pour préparer les retrouvailles avec les Springboks sud-africains samedi 8 novembre au Stade de France, a annoncé la Fédération dimanche dans un communiqué.

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Sélectionné à neuf reprises sous le maillot bleu, l’arrière du Stade Français, 23 ans, remplace son ancien partenaire de 28 ans, qui évolue à l’Aviron bayonnais depuis la saison 2024-2025. Le communiqué ne précise pas la raison de l’absence de l’ouvreur basque.

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Segonds était sorti touché lors du match de Top 14 samedi à Montauban, largement dominé par l’Aviron bayonnais (49-7), après avoir réussi six transformations. Léo Barré, lui, n’avait pas été conservé dans le deuxième groupe de préparation alors qu’il venait de passer la première semaine à Marcoussis.

Après les doubles champions du monde en titre samedi, pour des retrouvailles après le quart de finale du Mondial 2023 perdu d’un point par les Tricolores (29-28) sur cette même pelouse de Saint-Denis, les Bleus affronteront les Fidji le 15 novembre à Bordeaux puis l’Australie à nouveau au Stade de France une semaine plus tard.

Liste des 42 joueurs appelés pour affronter l’Afrique du Sud

Les avants (23 joueurs)
Dorian Aldegheri (Stade Toulousain, 32 ans, 22 sél.)
Grégory Alldritt (Stade Rochelais, 28 ans, 56 sél.)
Hugo Auradou (Section Paloise, 22 ans, 7 sél.)
Paul Boudehent (Stade Rochelais, 25 ans, 19 sél.)
Esteban Capilla (Aviron Bayonnais, 22 ans, 0 sél.)
Guillaume Cramont (Stade Toulousain, 24 ans, 0 sél.)
Baptiste Erdocio (Montpellier HR, 25 ans, 2 sél.)
Thibaud Flament (Stade Toulousain, 28 ans, 32 sél.)
Jean-Baptiste Gros (RC Toulon, 26 ans, 37 sél.)
Mickaël Guillard (LOU Rugby, 24 ans, 11 sél.)
Oscar Jegou (Stade Rochelais, 22 ans, 6 sél.)
Anthony Jelonch (Stade Toulousain, 29 ans, 32 sél.)
Thomas Laclayat (Section Paloise, 28 ans, 1 sél.)
Maxime Lamothe (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 27 ans, 0 sél.)
Julien Marchand (Stade Toulousain, 30 ans, 45 sél.)
Jimi Maximin (Section Paloise, 26 ans, 0 sél.)
Emmanuel Meafou (Stade Toulousain, 27 ans, 9 sél.)
Régis Montagne (ASM Clermont, 25 ans, 2 sél.)
Rodrigue Neti (Stade Toulousain, 30 ans, 2 sél.)
Charles Ollivon (RC Toulon, 32 ans, 46 sél.)
Emerick Setiano (Aviron Bayonnais, 29 ans, 6 sél.)
Romain Taofifenua (Racing 92, 35 ans, 57 sél.)
Cameron Woki (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 26 ans, 32 sél.)

Les arrières (19 joueurs)
Pierre-Louis Barassi (Stade Toulousain, 27 ans, 8 sél.)
Léo Barré (Stade Français, 23 ans, 9 sél.)
Louis Bielle-Biarrey (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 22 ans, 19 sél.)
Fabien Brau-Boirie (Section Paloise, 19 ans, 0 sél.)
Théo Chabouni (Castres Olympique, 21 ans, 0 sél.)
Nicolas Depoortere (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 22 ans, 4 sél.)
Gaël Drean (RC Toulon, 25 ans, 0 sél.)
Gaël Fickou (Racing 92, 31 ans, 96 sél.)
Émilien Gailleton (Section Paloise, 22 ans, 10 sél.)
Kalvin Gourgues (Stade Toulousain, 20 ans, 0 sél.)
Aaron Grandidier Nkanang (Section Paloise, 25 ans, 0 sél.)
Baptiste Jauneau (ASM Clermont, 21 ans, 2 sél.)
Nolann Le Garrec (Stade Rochelais, 23 ans, 13 sél.)
Maxime Lucu (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 32 ans, 27 sél.)
Romain Ntamack (Stade Toulousain, 26 ans, 40 sél.)
Damian Penaud (Union Bordeaux-Bègles, 29 ans, 56 sél.)
Thomas Ramos (Stade Toulousain, 30 ans, 44 sél.)


Ugo Seunes (Racing 92, 24 ans, 0 sél.)
Cheick Tiberghien (Aviron Bayonnais, 25 ans, 0 sél.)

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Utiku Old Boy 1 hour ago
It'll take a brave individual to coach these All Blacks

This is an over-dramatization of the AB HC role IMO. I agree something has been “off” since before the 2019 RWC - even the last Lion’s series and it has not all been down to “improvements” by other teams (although that is definitely a reality). I think Rassie (again) shows how a strong coach manages both the locker room and the public perceptions by earning public and team trust through his strength of character, team innovations and improvement, decisiveness, fairness and owning mistakes. A strong NZ coach should have nothing to fear coming in to this environment. Much as I had hopes for Razor after Hanson II and Foster, I think Kirk’s decision is the right one as it was obvious to many of us, the “trajectory” was not there. Same mistakes, confusion under pressure, lack of progress and worst, capitulation. The key is not who will take on the role, but who is selected for the role. I think the leading candidates are JJ, Rennie, Mitchell and somewhere a role for Schmidt and/or Wayne Smith. Razor’s biggest “failure” was his hesitancy, persisting with failing selections, being positive at the cost of being real and the aura he gave off of not knowing where the “fixes” were. The job came too soon for him but he can learn from it and grow. Hopefully, the new guy is bold and strong and has a good team around him because the other big failure of Razor’s tenure was his coaching team was also not ready for the big leagues.

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Hellhound 2 hours ago
It'll take a brave individual to coach these All Blacks

This reminds of the Wallabies and the road down for them. This firing was harsh, rash and not thought through. Just like NZRU jumped the gun with Foster, even announcing his replacement before the biggest tournament in rugby, the World Cup. There is a lot of speculation as to why he was fired or let go, none substantiated facts. For those who go through life with open eyes and follow the logical path, it will be clear from where the rot comes from. The NZRU board itself. The Union itself. Players and coaches change, but results don't. From the man in charge down is rotten. The AB's is still 2nd in the rankings list, still manage to beat the best teams. Maybe not as flashy as in the past, but definitely trending upwards. All of that momentum is now lost…AGAIN. Same mistakes from the board. The NZRU is busy making the AB's a joke now. The fans follow like blind bats and gobble up all the excuses for a decade now. The media report what the board wants people to know, not the facts. They are not very transparent. After Super Rugby, the Wallabies crashed and became almost none existent, a shadow of its former self, running through coaches and players. The same is starting to happen to the AB's. NZRU destroy everything they touch. When will the public address the real problem at hand? When the AB's are as bad as Wales and the Wallabies? Just when the AB's start to trend upwards, they shoot themselves in the foot once again. Firing a coach, before the biggest series NZ have had in many many years, the biggest rivalry. Before the Nation's Cup and the WC. 3 of arguably the biggest competitions in world rugby right now for 2026 and 2027. Fans can drop all expectations for winning any of the 3 competitions. New coach, new strategies, new everything. It takes time to settle a group of players. Even if the same crop of players gets used(which aren't good enough), it won't amount to sudden magical success. Winning percentages isn't everything, but filling the trophy cabinet is. Sack the board, not the coaches. The players and fans also need to realise that.

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