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SVNS Dubai : Les Bleues s’inclinent pour leur deuxième match

Marie Dupouy, France. (Photo par Oscar J. Barroso/Europa Press via Getty Images)

France 7 féminine a encaissé sa deuxième défaite en deux matchs contre la Grande-Bretagne 12-14 pour le premier tournoi de la saison à Dubaï, samedi 30 novembre.

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Après le choc du premier match de l’équipe de France féminine de rugby à 7 (défaite 12-24 contre l’Espagne), les Bleues avaient l’obligation de se racheter face à la Grande-Bretagne, une équipe qu’elles avaient dominé la saison dernière, remportant leurs deux affrontements avec une marge moyenne de 24 points, tout en n’encaissant que trois essais au total.

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Face à cette équipe, les Bleus avaient toujours été en tête ou à égalité à la pause lors de leurs sept précédentes confrontations et cette énième rencontre à Dubaï n’a pas échappé à la règle. Le score a été ouvert par Kelly Arbey, rattrapant une passe un peu juste d’Anne-Cécile Ciofani pour terminer un mouvement engagé par Lili Dezou.

Marie Dupouy creusait l’écart en déposant en bout de ligne à quelques secondes de la pause, mais il restait encore juste assez de temps pour que les Britanniques se relèvent, grâce à Ellie Boatman suite à deux plaquages manqués (12-7).

Sentant ses chances, la Grande-Bretagne ne relâchait pas sa pression constante, mais deux passes un peu trop en avant les ont empêchées de s’envoler au score. Malgré tout, les Françaises se sont efforcées de cantonner le jeu dans le camp adverse, défendant sans relâche et empêchant au maximum les Britanniques de passer leur propre ligne des 22.

Ellia Boatman a cependant trouvé la faille à dix secondes de la fin de la rencontre pour marquer son deuxième essai sous les poteaux. La transformation passée sans problème a suffi à remporter la victoire, synonyme de deuxième défaite pour les Françaises (12-14).

La demande de billets pour la Coupe du Monde de Rugby Féminin 2025 en Angleterre sera ouverte à partir du 5 novembre (dès le 22 octobre pour les titulaires de cartes Mastercard). Inscrivez-vous dès maintenant !

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Rob 35 minutes ago
'Welsh regional rugby has failed conclusively and there is no way back'

It’s a tough one to call with regards to the play style JW, the only major issue Crowley has is that he doesn’t appear to be as demanding and bossy a ten as sexton was so whenever he played this year with Gibson Park at nine we saw a ton of attack done off nine. At the start it looked like an effort to ease Crowley in but as time went on he still doesn’t look to be taking control, word out of camp is that Prendergast is very good at taking control during match week prep and that’s partly why he’s been given a go and that Farrell wants Crowley to learn to be a bit more demanding.


With regards to play style there are a few different theories but I subscribe to the idea that enough teams have just figured out a defensive system to shut us down, and that system works much better when we play off nine. There are a few other considerations but the main one that has me excited actually is that for the first time that I know of it would seem we are fully taking World Cup cycle planning seriously, in the past we treated the year before and the year of the only necessary planning years but now all the talk from the coaches is on the four year cycle. Farrell for all his pros is also apparently a teeny bit paranoid, allegedly the main reason Ireland didn’t feature much in the six nations documentary until the end was because he didn’t want cameras at their training and was similarly paranoid during the World Cup training. It wouldn’t surprise me if he’s working on a new style or an evolution to bring that next level edge to be unveiled in a few years time.


On the 2022 summer tour he made a slight tweak to the attack in that we would continuously attack the blindside or the side where we were two phases ago to reduce the amount of work the forwards had to do but because the Irish forwards are selected mainly on athleticism and the ruck speed is so quick this regularly caught opposition forwards napping and gave us easy gainline while the backs set into shape. Just a tiny tweak like that took us from six nations runner ups unable to mix it physically with big teams to winning a series in NZ beating SA and a grand slam, it’s obviously not the only change but it’s something I’ve noticed we’ve stopped going to as much. Everything looks much less drilled and precise the rugby is much more off the cuff.


I think Prendergast can organise much better than Crowley and that could be the key today or it might not hoping for a good game either way.

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Icefarrow 1 hour ago
All Blacks report card: Are Razor's troops heading in the right direction?

It's time for Razor to get over his Mounga obsession, and start investing in the next generation. Mounga is 30, BB 33, McKenzie 29. All three will have retired, or be close to retirement next WC cycle. We have had three, younger additional First-Five Eights in the squad this year (Plummer (26), Perofeta (27), Love (23)), yet not once has he bothered to trial any of them in the position. It's no surprise Plummer left for France when the head honcho would rather use some "oldies" as a stopgap measure, than take some risks on someone new. Not even the worst example of this either... 60% of the 2024 AB XV squad backline play Centre, yet not a single one of them were given a shot despite Reiko and Jordie underperforming.


Hell, I wouldn't even say the Halfback position has been nailed down by anyone yet either. Despite being first choice, Roigard is ultimately being held back by Ratima, who works better as a starter instead of a bench player. Roigard on the other hand can do both. Hotham works well off the bench, but is guilty of slightly overplaying his hand at points, costing his teams guaranteed tries. So which path do you go down? One who's reliable but completely inefficient at points, or one who can work miracles but cost you points all the same?


Robertson always goes on about combinations, a big part of why he pairs Ratima up with Chiefs teammate McKenzie, but I'm not so sure this Roigard/ Barrett pairing is clicking. A shame the Hurricanes brought in a few new Five-Eights for next year instead of giving Love a chance. Would've made for a good combination given they play together. But alas, it's not all that surprising given Razor wouldn't pair Jordie with Proctor in the ABs, despite it being a combination that has worked wonders for the Canes over the years.

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