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Joueur de l'Année 2024 : qui est dans notre Top 100 ?

RugbyPass lance son Top 100 des Joueurs de l'Année 2024

Tout a commencé par une idée simple : classer les 100 meilleurs joueurs de rugby au monde. On pensait que ce serait facile. Onze rédacteurs, des débats intenses et un petit millier de mots plus tard, RugbyPass lance son tout premier Top 100 des Joueurs de l’Année.

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Qui est au-dessus de la mêlée ? Une équipe de journalistes de RugbyPass issus des quatre coins du globe a tenté d’y répondre en se retroussant les manches, en mettant en place une marche à suivre pour finalement établir une liste allant de 100 à 1.

Le processus

Sous la direction d’Owain Jones, rédacteur RugbyPass, nous avons tenté d’établir une liste aussi rigoureuse et juste que possible. Cette liste prend en compte de nombreux facteurs, comme la régularité, le leadership, le talent intrinsèque et même l’impact de chaque joueur en dehors du terrain.

Notre panel d’experts, qu’ils soient rédacteurs réguliers ou contributeurs occasionnels, viennent de pays divers. Ils ont tenté d’apporter leur point de vue et leur connaissance.

Frankie Deges (Argentine), Jon Cardinelli (Afrique du Sud), Gavin Mortimer (France) ou encore Gregor Paul (Nouvelle-Zélande), entre autres, ont tenté de couvrir les deux hémisphères sous tous leurs angles.

Avec 11 auteurs issus de neuf pays différents, cette dynamique véritablement internationale nous a permis d’obtenir une analyse consensuelle basée sur un ensemble d’avis subjectifs afin de lister les meilleurs joueurs du monde, qu’ils soient établis depuis des années ou qu’ils incarnent l’avenir de notre sport.

RugbyPass Top 100 Men's Rugby Players 2024
Voici quelques-uns des joueurs de notre Top 100

C’est l’heure du débat

Ce classement n’est pas fermé. Il s’agit d’une invitation au débat. Le but, c’est de mettre en lumière les joueurs qui font ce sport que nous aimons tant.

Aujourd’hui, nous vous présentons les joueurs qui occupent les places 100 à 81. Au fil de la semaine, nous dévoilerons notre Top 100. Il va certainement diviser, mais on espère que vous l’aimerez quand même !

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Retrouvez la liste, que nous découvrirons au fur et à mesure, par ici : Top 100 des Joueurs de l’Année 2024

À vous de jouer

On a hâte de connaître votre avis. Découvrez notre classement et partagez le vôtre en commentaire au fil de la présentation, qui s’achèvera avec le Top 10, le jeudi 12 décembre.

Nos experts ont classé les meilleurs joueurs de rugby de l’histoire. Retrouvez notre Top 100 et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez !




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T
Tom 54 minutes ago
How group of spoiled Racing 92 players drove Stuart Lancaster 'insane'

It's a culture clash, for some it works for others it doesn't. Lancaster says it himself why he didn't like it there, he says there was a big group of lazy players just content to pick up a fat paycheck. This is pretty evident from the lack of success Racing have had for years in spite of the money they've thrown around. Two hard working, tough nosed lads from the industrial heartland of England were never going to thrive in leadership roles at Racing. Two very different ideologies, all the jouez jouez, joie de vivre, laissez faire wasn't going to work for them. It sounds like the French didn't think much of them either which doesn't surprise me.


A player coming in from Fiji has a huge culture shock too but in rugby terms the French attitude probably suits them quite well and they're earning more money than they've ever dreamed of. It's very different from a couple of hard nosed Englishmen stepping in to leadership roles trying to force a load of Frenchmen at a very challenging Parisian club to adopt an entirely different attitude, they were always going to rub each other up the wrong way. Lancaster obviously signed Farrell because he wanted a lieutenant to enforce discipline, the writing was on the wall at this point. At a club like Toulouse or La Rochelle it might have worked better but at Racing no chance.


.. and don't get me wrong this isn't a criticism of the French, I absolutely love France. They're certainly better at rugby than we are right now. It's just two very disparate styles which don't play nicely together and perhaps a bit of a criticism of Racing, there are some deep seeded issues at the club.

31 Go to comments
S
Soliloquin 1 hour ago
How group of spoiled Racing 92 players drove Stuart Lancaster 'insane'

Indeed, there’s probably many elements lost in translation (or when there’s no translation) when a coach whose language proficiency is not optimal.

But again, there are French assisting coaches who are around to give all the details, while the global idea is delivered by the coach.

And the psychological impact of someone trying to fit in this very local rugby culture cannot be neglected.


In rugby, France is really something else, with Argentina and Italy

But objectively, although not having won the RWC, France had more success than these 2 latin nations and I think French rugby players, coaches and club owners probably feel entitled to be respected. And respect comes by integrating with language.

I don’t have any stats, but I can imagine all foreign players who became legends all learned French to some extent.

And this is what could make the difference between a player that contributed to great successes (Bakkies) and the one who also tried to get closer to the club and country culture (Wilkinson) at RCT.


I do not know how it was going for international coaches in Italy or in Argentina for instance, but there’s probably an element of showing that you take into consideration the expertise and history of a club/country. And if you’re just a guy who feels entitled while simply coming with his own ideas without adapting to the context, French rugby level and Top14’s aura (and chauvinism I guess?) will not help you get adhesion from players and achieve success.


I do not really think it’s an issue of understanding each other with all possible nuances, because if we don’t get the idea, we could always ask for precisions.

It just seems to be differences in perception, linked to social or cultural factors.

I’ll feel way closer intellectually speaking with a guy that shares my ideas while coming from NZ than with a French guy that sees reality with a different lens. And as much as I’ll want to, I won’t be able to communicate with that guy although we share all the linguistic nuances.

31 Go to comments
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