A quelle heure la France va-t-elle jouer au HSBC SNVS Cape Town ?

Par Willy Billiard
cape_town

La deuxième étape du HSBC SVNS Series 2024 se tiendra le week-end des 9 et 10 décembre au Cap, en Afrique du Sud.

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Au Cap l’an passé, les Français avaient terminé à la 9e place, soit l’une des pires de la saison, précisément celle qu’ils ont occupé au tournoi de Dubaï le week-end dernier. Dans la poule A avec l’Afrique du Sud, les Fidji et le Canada, ils n’avaient enregistré qu’une seule victoire.

De leur côté, les filles avaient terminé à la 5e place et Camille Grassineau avait été sacrée Impact Player du tournoi avec 81 points au compteur, soit le deuxième meilleur score de toute la saison avec les 86 points de Séraphine Okemba à Hongkong (ex-aequo avec la Fidjienne Reapi Ulunisau à Vancouver).

Cette année au Cap, France 7 masculin retrouvera les Fidji dans la poule B ainsi que l’Argentine et l’Espagne pour la première journée.

Quant à France 7 féminin, médaillée de bronze à Dubaï le week-end précédent, les filles joueront dans la poule C face au Canada, aux Etats-Unis et à l’Afrique du Sud.

Les rencontres seront à suivre sur RugbyPass TV

Première journée du HSBC SVNS Cape Town samedi 9 décembre

Tournoi féminin

  • France v Afrique du Sud à 9h44 (8h44, heure française)
  • France v Etats-Unis à 11h56 (10h56, heure française)
  • France v Canada à 17h (16h, heure française)

Tournoi masculin

  • Fidji v France à 10h28 (9h28, heure française)
  • Argentine v France à 13h28 (12h28, heure française)
  • France v Espagne à 18h28 (17h28, heure française)
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johnz 1 hours ago
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I was excited about the Razor error, but a few things are bothering me about this team. It’s looking less like a bright new dawn, and more like a conservative look to the past. We’ll never know how much pressure comes from above to select established players, but imagine if Razor wiped the slate clean and created the new baby blacks, the financial hit to NZR would be huge. Not that such drastic measures are needed, but a few selections still puzzle. TJ and Christie. Neither look like bright picks for the future, both are experienced but with limitations. I understand why you would pick one as a safe pair of hands, but why both? Jacobson is no impact player, and it makes no sense to me why you would pick both Blackadder and Jacobson in the same squad. They cover pretty much the same positions, and Jacobson has never demanded a start. Blackadder has struggled to stay on the field, but if he is picked, play him. Let’s see what he can do, we know enough about Jacobson, and Blackadder has far more mongrel. I would have preferred to see Lakai in the squad, he offers a point of difference and the energy of youth. Plus he would have kept Papali’i honest and created tasty competition for the 7 jersey. Ioane. The experiment goes on. The bloke is a fantastic winger but still fails to convince as a centre. Has NZR invested so much money in him that there’s pressure to play him? Proctor was by far the better player all season and played next to Barrett. Play him; a specialised centre, in form. Crazy I know. Our two wingers are very good, but we still miss a power runner in the backline. Faiga’anuki was a big loss and could have filled that role at wing or 13. More money on young players like him and less on aging stars would not go amiss in NZ rugby. Perofeta had a decent game, but the jury is still out. The lack of a specialist fullback in the squad is another head scratcher. Admittedly it’s early days and a win is a win, but hopefully some more innovation is in the plan otherwise I see this squad struggling sooner or later.

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