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Racing 92 : Stuart Lancaster parti pour rester

Racing 92 head coach Stuart Lancaster before the Investec Champions Cup Pool 2 Round 2 match between Ulster and Racing 92 at Kingspan Stadium in Belfast. (Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Les rumeurs qui disaient Stuart Lancaster insatisfait et sur le départ du Racing 92 sont infondées, a appris RugbyPass ce jeudi soir.

L’entraîneur en chef du Racing 92 Stuart Lancaster va rester en place à la tête du club francilien en dépit des rumeurs de départ, selon les informations recueillies par RugbyPass.

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Les médias ont évoqué cette semaine l’insatisfaction de l’ancien sélectionneur de l’Angleterre vis-à-vis de sa situation actuelle au sein du club de Top 14, et le fait qu’il convoitait le poste d’entraîneur principal du Munster. Mais selon des sources bien placées au Racing, cela semble totalement faux.

De plus, la réunion de ce jeudi qui aurait eu lieu était en réalité un repas de Noël, et les réunions de dirigeants ne concernaient pas l’avenir du coach.

Lancaster a quitté le Leinster en 2023 après un septennat de succès à Dublin, et il lui reste deux ans et demi de contrat sur les quatre ans de l’engagement paraphé avec les ‘ciel et blanc’. Il a bien l’intention d’aller au terme de ce contrat.

La question de Dan, le fils de Stuart Lancaster

Sans oublier qu’une arrivée du technicien au Munster aurait été surprenante, vu son histoire au Leinster.

Certaines rumeurs laissaient entendre que les joueurs du Racing n’étaient pas contents que Lancaster aligne son fils, Dan, ancien international anglais U20. Mais il ne faut pas oublier que le club est bien sûr privé d’Owen Farrell, qui serait le premier choix en N.10 dans des circonstances normales.

Après deux week-ends consacrés à l’Investec Champions Cup, au cours desquels le Racing a remporté une victoire contre les Harlequins et s’est incliné contre les Sale Sharks, le club se tourne désormais à nouveau vers le Top 14 pour les trois semaines à venir, avec un déplacement à Montpellier samedi et la réception de Lyon à La Défense Arena une semaine plus tard.

Rencontre
Top 14
Montpellier
10:30
21 Déc 24
Racing 92
Toutes les stats et les données

Les joueurs de Lancaster se situent actuellement à la 8e place du Top 14, avec seulement cinq victoires en 11 matchs.

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Pendant ce temps, Le Munster est toujours à la recherche d’un successeur à Graham Rowntree, licencié en octobre. Ian Costello assure l’intérim depuis, tandis que l’ancien entraîneur des Northampton Saints, Chris Boyd, a rejoint le club dans un rôle de consultant. Ce qui semble certain, c’est que Lancaster ne déménagera pas à Thomond Park.

Cet article a été publié initialement sur RugbyPass.com et adapté en français par Jérémy Fahner.


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S
SK 53 minutes ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

What is clear is that the current situation is not sustainable


-SA sides travelling back and forth In Europe on successive weekends before playing big URC matches means they have to rest players somewhere or lose them for big matches in either comp

-European sides traveling to SA one week and playing in Europe the next is a huge disadvantage for them as well compared to those sides who just stay in Europe and they have to manage player loads as well

-Springbok players currently play the year round and must be rested during the regular season according to player welfare regulations and the national teams mandated rest periods. This means the franchises have to choose when and where they will rest players which puts them on the back foot and leads to them prioritising either the URC or European comps

-The Currie Cup is essential because it provides a pathway for provincial teams and young players but it means anyone who plays in Currie Cup and in URC plays the year round and wears out players

-The Rugby Championship means that while Europeans players are resting the Springboks are playing and with injuries occurring many SA teams lose their best and brightest.


The Sharks showed what you can do when you go full tilt in Europe when they won the Challenge Cup by keeping players fresh and fit for the whole comp. SA sides can do well in Europe but they must start prioritising it. Something has to be done to get players to the levels they need to be. Perhaps SA derbies in December and January is not the best idea, perhaps have European fixtures stand alone in the Calendar during December and Jan is what SA sides need to put their best players in and try to win those games and get the best seeding for the knockouts. SA derbies can be played during the Six Nations or some other window which takes some pressure off the season but this can only happen if the URC allows it. What is clear is that Europe does not need to change for SA and if they do it has to be on their terms. SA must find a way to adapt and address this latest problem or they must opt out of European comps altogether. They have earned their keep in the URC. That is their bread and butter. Now they need to earn their keep in Europe or just stick with the URC. The choice is theirs.

25 Go to comments
J
JW 4 hours ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

Well some smart scheduling will have to be done, but I'm not sure how we can avoid teams to send a B team in any format. I genuinely just don't like the luck of the draw for who's home or not

That dilemma has been one of the strongest drives of my ideas, where my hope would be for clubs (and more importanltly their fans) to switch focus and allow the leagues to come up with leagues with better player welfare (ie shorter). I get Finn's ideas but I just don't think they are actually going to work, they are kinda like fake incentives. Rugby as a whole needs to improve for this problem to get resolved.


Nick Bishop has come out with an article where he suggests it is just a South African problem, but I think this earlier reply of mine to Finn is pertinent to your question (and that article) so I'll include it here a well.

the appeal of pools of 4, but 6 pool games might not go down well with the French or the South Africans given already cramped schedules.

This is more of a suggestion for NBs new article on SA but I'd argue more pool games mean its easier to have a structure based on region system where say all of the SA teams that qualified are in the same pool, and you can play all those away games against them consecutively. Then return home and they come to you etc.

I don't think its necessarily needed as I think it would be quite easy for EPCR to take into account/do in conjunction with each leagues fixture list.


(I also go on to say I don't like that pool idea in the perfect world but you can ignore this)

To me, pool play should be sort to just acheive a ranking system. The bottom team of each pool is kicked out or 'culled' (perhaps to Challenge Cup, I'm fond of that exchange), but the fixtures then go into consecutive knockouts of home/away fixtures, say 1 v 16, then go thru to 1 v 8(or worst seed of the other winners etc) home/away, 1v4, etc etc. Maybe the Semi's onwards are 'neutral' fixtures and those last three games are just do or die fixtures?

125 Go to comments
J
JW 5 hours ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

ould really devalue the competition unless there is a way to incentivise performance, e.g. by allowing teams that do well one year to directly qualify for the next year's competition.

So your intention is that teams prioritize those games because it's going to be more reliable way to remain in Champions than league performance. Say in your predicted case where England has 8 strong teams, only four are going to gain automatic entry, so the other four are going to stay up by doing well enough in Champions Cup pool games.


I would be interested on just how many teams would have gone out of contention in the last few years using your system, my thought is that it would not be a lot. Winning a quarter of your games might be enough to remain in it each year. It greatly depends one how much the leagues fluctuate, and I see that becoming less and less.

the appeal of pools of 4, but 6 pool games might not go down well with the French or the South Africans given already cramped schedules.

This is more of a suggestion for NBs new article on SA but I'd argue more pool games mean its easier to have a structure based on region system where say all of the SA teams that qualified are in the same pool, and you can play all those away games against them consecutively. Then return home and they come to you etc.


I don't think its necessarily needed as I think it would be quite easy for EPCR to take into account/do in conjunction with each leagues fixture list. To me, pool play should be sort to just acheive a ranking system. The bottom team of each pool is kicked out or 'culled' (perhaps to Challenge Cup, I'm fond of that exchange), but the fixtures then go into consecutive knockouts of home/away fixtures, say 1 v 16, then go thru to 1 v 8(or worst seed of the other winners etc) home/away, 1v4, etc etc. Maybe the Semi's onwards are 'neutral' fixtures and those last three games are just do or die fixtures?

125 Go to comments
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