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L’Argentine avec Mallia face à la France

Par AFP
Juan Cruz Mallia (Photo de PAUL FAITH/AFP via Getty Images)

L’Argentine pourra compter sur quasiment tous ses cadres pour affronter la France vendredi 22 novembre (21h10), dont l’arrière polyvalent de Toulouse Juan Cruz Mallia, ou son talonneur et capitaine Julian Montoya.

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Internationals
France
15:10
22 Nov 24
Argentina
Toutes les stats et les données

Le sélectionneur Felipe Contepomi a procédé à un seul changement par rapport à l’équipe qui a échoué de peu à battre l’Irlande (22-19) la semaine dernière à Dublin : le demi de mêlée Gonzalo Bertranou glisse sur le banc et laisse sa place à Gonzalo Garcia. L’ouvreur Tomas Albornoz est lui reconduit.

Les Bleus retrouveront plusieurs têtes connues, avec des joueurs qui évoluent en Top 14.

C’est le cas du pilier droit Joel Sclavi, qui pourrait se retrouver face à son partenaire de la Rochelle Reda Wardi, remplaçant en équipe de France, de l’ailier de Clermont Bautista Delguy ou encore du deuxième ligne de l’UBB Guido Petti.

Privé du centre toulousain Santiago Chocobares, blessé en septembre, les Pumas ont récupéré le troisième ligne de Clermont Marcos Kremer et l’ailier bayonnais Mateo Carreras, de retour dans le groupe cette semaine et qui prennent place sur le banc.

Related

La composition de l’Argentine face à la France

Titulaires

Mallia – Isgro, Cinti, Moroni, Delguy – (o) Albornoz, (m) Garcia – Gonzalez, Oviedo, Matera – Rubiolo, Petti – Sclavi, Gallo

Finisseurs

Ruiz, Calles, Gomez Kodela, Molina, Kremer, Bazan Velez, S. Carreras, M. Carreras

Découvrez les coulisses des deux camps lors de la tournée des Lions britanniques et irlandais en Afrique du Sud en 2021. A voir en exclusivité sur RugbyPass TV dès maintenant.

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B
Bob Salad II 1 hour ago
'England's blanket of despair feels overdone - they are not a team in freefall'

1. RFU must scrape the eligibility rules, England's coach must be able to pick all players regardless of where they play.


I don't think this is going to happen and personally, I don't believe it should. The whole new Enhanced Player Squad (EPS) contracts can only be awarded to EQPs signed to Premiership teams (not sure about Championship sides). The Prem clubs are not going to be agreeable to any changes that see their best players heading off to France/Japan etc. Personally, I believe the Prem should be ring-fenced further with even tighter restrictions on the number of foreign players clubs can have on their books. If the RFU are serious about development pathways, then the Prem and Championship should be establish as the best nurseries for developing emerging EQP.


2. SB and coaching team must improve their coaching, selection and impact/substitutions.


Completely agree. Really disappointed that we're unlikely to see more of the England A/U20 cohort against Japan this week. Seems a perfect opportunity to get some of them on off the bench for 20-mins or so. The disparity between the starting 15 and the bench has been one of the biggest issues this Autumn.


3. England need to change their captain, young props to be given game time, inside centre to be introduced along with a younger fast fullback.


Another hot topic atm., though I'm not sure who you'd replace him with. Someone, somewhere mentioned making George Ford captain, but that creates a whole other set of issues regarding you-know-who. Agree about looking at some alternative 12/13 options. Can't see Borthwick drifting too far from Furbank at FB with Steward covering for high-kicking opposition.

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F
Flankly 3 hours ago
'England's blanket of despair feels overdone - they are not a team in freefall'

England have all the makings of a good team. We know that, and we have known that for years (including when Eddie was delivering disappointing results). But sometimes the positive comments about under-performing teams sound like describing a darts player as "fantastic, aside from their accuracy".


Its a trivial observation to say that scoring more points and preventing more points against you would result in better outcomes. And points difference does not mean much either, as it is generally less than 5 points with top teams. Usain Bolt would win the 100m sprint by 200 milliseconds (approximately two blinks of an eye), but that doesn't mean the others could easily beat him.


Also, these kinds of analyses tend to talk about how the team in question would just need to do X, Y and Z to win, but assume that opponents don't make any changes themselves. This is nonsense, as it is always the case that both teams go away with a list of work-ons. If we're going to think about what would have happened if team A had made that tackle, kicked that goal or avoided that penalty, the n let's think about what would have happened if team B had passed to that overlap, avoided that card, or executed that lineout maul.


There are lots of things that England can focus on for improvement, but for me the main observation is that they have not been able to raise their game when it matters. Playing your best game when it counts is what makes champions, and England have not shown that. And, for me, that's a coaching thing.


I expected Borthwick to build a basics-first, conservative culture, minimizing mistakes, staying in the game, and squeezing out wins against fancier opponents and game plans. It's not that he isn't building something, but it has taken disappointingly long, not least if you compare it to Australia since Schmidt took over, or SA after Rassie took over.

6 Go to comments
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