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Mario Ledesma expresses player welfare concerns after Argentina's loss to Ireland

By PA
Press Association

Argentina head coach Mario Ledesma has expressed concerns about his players’ mental health after a gruelling 2021 schedule ended with a comprehensive defeat to Ireland.

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Los Pumas have not played on home soil since before the 2019 World Cup and have been forced to enter a series of bubbles due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Following a narrow defeat to France and victory in Italy, Ledesma’s men finished their autumn European tour with Sunday’s resounding 53-7 defeat in Dublin – an eighth loss from 12 Tests this calendar year.

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Max Whitlock

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Max Whitlock

“Obviously not playing at home for two years has been tough because we’ve been in a bubble everywhere we went,” said Ledesma.

“Sometimes we have a day off, where we can go sightseeing, but it’s been really hard for the players.

“We don’t have the budget to bring the families like some other teams do, so it’s been tough and they’ve been grinding the whole year. It’s a big ask for players.

“We’re always talking about player welfare, mental health and then you go two years without playing at home and being in a bubble.

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“I challenge any team to do that. It would be a struggle.”

Argentina have upset Ireland at World Cups on three occasions, most recently in the quarter-finals of the 2015 tournament.

But the error-strewn Pumas faded fast from a promising start at the Aviva Stadium.

An early try from Mateo Carreras put them ahead before he later fumbled when appearing certain for a second score, while full-back Emiliano Boffelli was responsible for two wayward penalty attempts.

Any hopes of a second-half fightback were extinguished by lock Tomas Lavanini being dismissed for a dangerous challenge on Ryan Baird, which came moments after Pablo Matera returned from the sin bin.

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Ledesma continued: “At the same time, it (the fixture list) is not an excuse.

“These are the conditions we’re playing in and we’re not getting the results.

“Obviously we expected a different result (on Sunday) and we had a pretty good tour, a very good game against France, winning convincingly against Italy.

“Coming into this game after a good three weeks of work, we expected different.”

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Sam T 33 minutes ago
Jake White: Let me clear up some things

I remember towards the end of the original broadcasting deal for Super rugby with Newscorp that there was talk about the competition expanding to improve negotiations for more money - more content, more cash. Professional rugby was still in its infancy then and I held an opposing view that if Super rugby was a truly valuable competition then it should attract more broadcasters to bid for the rights, thereby increasing the value without needing to add more teams and games. Unfortunately since the game turned professional, the tension between club, talent and country has only grown further. I would argue we’re already at a point in time where the present is the future. The only international competitions that matter are 6N, RC and RWC. The inter-hemisphere tours are only developmental for those competitions. The games that increasingly matter more to fans, sponsors and broadcasters are between the clubs. Particularly for European fans, there are multiple competitions to follow your teams fortunes every week. SA is not Europe but competes in a single continental competition, so the travel component will always be an impediment. It was worse in the bloated days of Super rugby when teams traversed between four continents - Africa, America, Asia and Australia. The percentage of players who represent their country is less than 5% of the professional player base, so the sense of sacrifice isn’t as strong a motivation for the rest who are more focused on playing professional rugby and earning as much from their body as they can. Rugby like cricket created the conundrum it’s constantly fighting a losing battle with.

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Ed the Duck 7 hours ago
How Leinster neutralised 'long-in-the-tooth' La Rochelle

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