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La Rochelle : quatre à six mois d'absence pour Bougarit

Le talonneur international de La Rochelle Pierre Bourgarit vient de subir sa deuxième grave blessure en moins d'un an et pourrait rater six mois de compétition. (Photo by XAVIER LEOTY/AFP via Getty Images)

Avec AFP

Le talonneur international de La Rochelle Pierre Bourgarit, victime d’une fracture du tibia samedi contre Pau et opéré dans la foulée, sera éloigné des terrains entre quatre et six mois, a annoncé jeudi Sébastien Boboul, l’entraîneur des arrières.

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Bourgarit, qui a reçu la visite de ses coéquipiers et du staff dimanche à l’hôpital, « va très bien, il est sorti lundi en fin de matinée, et depuis lundi il est avec nous », a déclaré Sébastien Boboul en conférence de presse.

« Pour son indisponibilité, ça va dépendre de la cicatrisation, mais il faut compter quatre à six mois ».

Bourgarit s’est gravement blessé au tibia après un plaquage régulier de son ancien coéquipier aujourd’hui à Pau Rémi Picquette juste avant la mi-temps. C’est sa deuxième grosse blessure cette année après celle contractée à l’épaule en janvier qui l’avait contraint à six mois de repos.

Bourgarit, « deux ans qu’il a la poisse »

« Ça fait deux ans qu’il a la poisse », a résumé Boboul. « Ça fait partie d’une carrière d’avoir des bas comme celui-là (…) On va lui donner deux ou trois choses à faire pour continuer à le concerner ».

La Rochelle n’envisage pas de recruter de joker médical pour le suppléer et devrait faire confiance à ses jeunes.

Par rapport aux vainqueurs de la Section paloise (49-25), le club à la caravelle n’enregistre qu’un retour, celui du centre samoan UJ Seuteni pour le déplacement samedi à Créteil où il affrontera le Racing 92.

Le demi de mêlée néo-zélandais Tawera Kerr-Barlow, qui se remet d’une blessure au mollet, a été jugé trop court et le flanker fidjien Levani Botia, absent depuis mai et une fracture à un avant-bras, n’a pas encore reçu le feu vert pour reprendre le rugby avec contact.

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J
JW 20 minutes ago
Let's be real about these All Blacks

I didn't really get the should tone from it, but maybe because I was just reading it as my own thoughts.


What I read it as was examples of how they played well enough in every game to be able to win it.


Yeah I dunno if Ben wouldn't see it that way (someone else would for sure need to point it out to him though), I'm more in the Ben not appreciating that those close losses werent one off scenarios camp. Sure you can look at dubious decisions causing them to have to play with 14 or 13 men at the death as viable reasons but even in the games they won without such difficulties they made a real struggle of it (compared to how good some of their first half play was). This kind of article where you trying to point out the 3 losses really would most likely have been wins only really makes sense/works when your other performances make those 3 games (or endings) stand out.


There might have been a sentence here and there to ensure some good comment numbers but when he's signing off the article by saying things like ..

Whilst these All Blacks aren’t blowing teams off the park like during the 2010s, they are nuggety and resourceful and don’t wilt. They are prepared to win the hard way, accumulating points by any means necessary.

and..

The other top sides in the world struggled to put them away. France and South Africa both could have well been defeated on home soil.

I don't really see it. Always making sure people are upto date with the SH standing/perspective! NZ went through some tough times with so many different perspectives and reasons why, but then it was.. amusing how.. behind everyone was once they turned a corner. More of these 'unfortunate' results returned against SA and France at the start of the RWC which made it extra tasty to catch other teams out when they did bring it. So that created some 'conscious' perspective that I just kept going and sharing re thoughts on similar predicaments of other teams, I had been really confident that Wallabies displays vs NZ were real, that the Argentines can backup their thing against Aus and SA (and so obviously the rest), and current one is that England are actually consistent and improving with their attack (which everyone should get onboard with), and I'm expecting a more dominant display against Japan (even though they should have more of their experienced internationals for this one) that highlights further growth from July. 👍

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