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John Porch, un ancien septiste australien en renfort à Vannes

John Porch de Connacht lors du match du United Rugby Championship entre Connacht et Zebre Parma au Dexcom Stadium de Galway, en 2024. (Photo de Sam Barnes/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

À la recherche de renforts pour sécuriser son maintien en Top 14, le RC Vannes teste actuellement l’Australien John Porch, ancien international de rugby à 7 (2015-2019) et joueur du Connacht depuis 2019.

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À 30 ans, cet arrière polyvalent, capable d’évoluer à l’arrière et à l’aile, n’a pas encore joué cette saison, mais son expérience – 87 matchs avec la province irlandaise pour 20 essais – en fait un atout potentiel.

Porch arrive à un moment charnière, aussi bien pour lui que pour Vannes. Alors que le club breton lutte pour sa survie en Top 14, l’Australien peut apporter sa vitesse et son sens du jeu pour dynamiser l’attaque vannetaise et pallier les blessures. Il pourrait débuter contre Toulouse le 1er mars au plus tard, à quelques jours de son 31e anniversaire.

« La tendance, c’est qu’il nous rejoigne pour finir la saison. C’est la tendance et ça va être en négo. Mais c’est un joueur qui est disponible, qui s’entraîne dans un environnement professionnel », a confirmé l’entraîneur Jean-Noël Spitzer en conférence de presse mardi 11 février.

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Réputé pour sa vitesse et son sens du contre, il brille autant dans les phases de jeu où les turnovers ou les coups de pied peuvent être exploités avec rapidité et efficacité que dans ses qualités de finisseur.

Cependant, un engagement prolongé avec Vannes n’est pas garanti. Porch reste un joueur convoité, et un retour au Super Rugby demeure une option. Pour l’instant, sa priorité est de prouver qu’il peut encore évoluer au haut niveau et d’aider Vannes à décrocher les victoires nécessaires pour s’éloigner de la zone rouge.

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BleedRed&Black 1 hour ago
URC teams aren't proving Stephen Donald wrong

Ok, one valid point in three.


Comparing CC, with its third tier players, to SRP, dominated by NZ or England's EPL or France's Top 14, is just silly from a competitive and fan engagement POV. Fan base is determined by Pay TV subscriptions/viewing, not bums on seats. Has been for decades.


Financial issues in general is irrelevant to the article, and my comment on the article. Dragging in this issue demonstrates how weak your argument is.


I am however happy to admit that SA domestic rugby is in a radically better place now in the URC from a financial POV than it was in SR, and also from a fan POV. This is because it's 4 teams are playing and winning more games and getting in finals as well. Playing in a weaker comp has certainly given the SA teams a boost in money and popularity. The improved financial position is almost purely because going into URC has given all four ex SR/URC teams 18 scheduled games a year, plus the 4 scheduled games with European rugby, a more than 50% increase in exposure over SR's 14 games schedule, which has made the TV/Sponsorship rights much more valuable in SA. The secondary issue is the increased market size for sponsors when SA teams are playing in Europe, though that sort of thing tends to be overrated. NZ rugby is going through the process of establishing a proper structure for domestic rugby, with the provinces clinging mindlessly to the past, while the SR teams are trying to go full season. Interesting times for us.


The thing for SA is the competitive side of all this, and therefore the politics. When SA stop winning world cups and the Springboks fall down the world rankings the URC will be blamed for being a distinctly lower quality comp than SR, as will playing 12 months a year in two hemispheres. Erasmus has done a brilliant job managing SA's impossible situation, but it will all eventually turn to crap because SA cant go full Northern Hemisphere and can't get into a quality comp at the 2nd tier. As the saying goes, people always overestimate the impact of change in the short term, underestimate it in the long term.


NZ rugby will, in its stumbling, bumbling way, eventually give its SR teams a full season of games, subordinate the NPC in the process, just like SA has done, finally maximising SR’s financials and fan appeal. NZ will then have a proper structure and a high-quality 2nd tier comp, one that doesn't shred the players, unlike the TOP 14. When the Springboks start falling over, particularly at the RWC, comparisons will be made in SA, fingers will be pointed, and the consequences will flow.

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