Édition du Nord | US
Select Edition
Nord Nord
Sud Sud
Mondial Mondial
Nouvelle Zélande Nouvelle Zélande
France France

Pro D2 (27e journée) : Colomiers pour un pas de plus vers les demies


Colomiers, large vainqueur de Nevers 49 à 6, lors de la 11e journée de Pro D2 le vendredi 14 novembre 2025. Photo : @ColomiersRugby
Comments
Comment

L’US Colomiers, opposée à la lanterne rouge Carcassonne, a l’occasion de faire un grand pas vers une qualification directe en demi-finale et de mettre ses poursuivants Valence-Romans et Provence Rugby à distance lors de la 27e journée de Pro D2 qui débute jeudi.

ADVERTISEMENT

Les Columérins (2es, 81 points), battus à Valence-Romans (32-25) lors de la dernière journée, ont vu les Drômois revenir à six longueurs, mais ils devraient garder un matelas confortable dans la lutte pour la deuxième place, synonyme d’accession directe aux demi-finales.

Les banlieusards toulousains reçoivent Carcassonne, dernier (35 pts) et qui joue une de ses dernières cartes pour sa survie en Pro D2.

Pression sur Béziers et Biarritz

Lors de cette journée qui met les derbies à l’honneur, Béziers, 15e et barragiste avec 43 pts, doit à tout prix réagir contre Provence Rugby (4e, 75 pts) après la gifle monumentale reçue à Vannes (71-0) vendredi dernier. Une victoire permettrait aux Biterrois de mettre la pression sur les deux clubs landais, Mont-de-Marsan (12e, 45 pts) et Dax (13e, 44 pts), opposés vendredi.

VIDEO

Biarritz (14e, 44 pts), également concerné par la lutte pour le maintien, ouvrira le bal jeudi à Agen (21h00), pour qui la victoire est impérative afin de continuer à espérer une qualification en phase finale.

Pour l’heure, Oyonnax, qui ira à Grenoble, et Brive, qui recevra Aurillac, tiennent la corde.

Vannes, plus que jamais leader et qui a déjà son billet pour les demies, continuera sa quête de record sur la pelouse de Soyaux-Angoulême, tandis que Valence-Romans cherchera à confirmer sa bonne forme à Nevers.

Related

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Commentaires

0 Comments
Soyez le premier à commenter...

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez vraiment !

Inscription gratuite
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

N
NH 2 hours ago
Can Australia look to the greats of yesteryear to kickstart the next generation of innovation?

But, Nick what would that identity be for Australia? Everyone keeps harping back to this ‘australian way’ while they wave their hands in lofty notions but very few people seem to be able to articulate a particular style… Is it the free wheeling offload, open style of ella and campese (impossible with modern D), the defensive doggedness of the muggleton era RWC (considered unaustralian), or was it the slick set plays and multi-phase plays of larkham, gregan and eddie jones (this would be my pick if you asked me as someone from the younger gen)? Firstly, id argue that these ‘eras’ are all now long gone and both the world and australia has changed and they aren’t something we can ‘go back to’. The other thing I’d say is that what worked then almost certainly wouldn’t work now given changes in defences etc. I think that Rennie’s attack, when it worked, using powerful ball carriers and overwhelming defenses in short attacking raids in 3-4 phase combos is probably what can work with what is a modern, multicultural australia that heavily relies on pasifika power for any remaining rugby excellence.

I think the more interesting question you touch on is what would innovation look like in the australian space? Where could australia push the frontier? Rassie did it with sheer physicality and rush D at the boks. All blacks did it with electric counter attacking and offloads. Where can Australia find a point of difference and extract advantage from it? Historically this has been to look to league and bring some of that style, or some players from it… Can that work now? Probably not… Whats next? What does aus have naturally in spades more than others? What it looks like I don’t know, but we are in another era where Australia seems to be innovating across sports at the olympics and overperforming given our size/resources. Brumbies and aus tapped into this around 2000, maybe they can again. I think it has to come from this underdog, rag tag type style though that australians love to tap into…



...

287 Go to comments
Close Panel
Close Panel

Edition & Time Zone

{{current.name}}
Set time zone automatically
{{selectedTimezoneTitle}} (auto)
Choose a different time zone
Close Panel

Editions

Close Panel

Change Time Zone