Édition du Nord

Select Edition

Nord Nord
Sud Sud
Mondial Mondial
Nouvelle Zélande Nouvelle Zélande
France France

Top 14 : Bordeaux avec un banc en 7-1 à La Rochelle

Par RugbyPass
Yannick Bru (Union Bordeaux Bègles) (Photo de ROMAIN PERROCHEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

Bordeaux-Bègles, qui a procédé à dix changements pour son déplacement à La Rochelle dimanche (21h05) en clôture de la 7e journée de Top 14, va innover avec un banc à la sud-africaine comptant sept avants pour un seul arrière.

ADVERTISEMENT
Rencontre
Top 14
La Rochelle
32 - 22
Temps complet
Bordeaux
Toutes les stats et les données

Le manager Yannick Bru avait prévenu après la victoire contre Perpignan : « On donnera du repos à certains comme on l’a toujours fait et pour ceux qui seront présents à La Rochelle, il s’agira d’avoir le mental bien accroché pour aller bagarrer. On va sortir le casque à pointe car ça va piquer. »

Premier changement notable, la charnière internationale Maxime Lucu-Matthieu Jalibert est remplacée par le demi de mêlée Yann Lesgourgues et l’ouvreur Matéo Garcia, qui n’avaient plus été associés d’entrée depuis le mois de mars.

Au centre, en l’absence de Nicolas Depoortere, opéré cette semaine d’une fracture du plancher orbital avec pause d’une plaque et absent des terrains pendant six semaines (il manquera la Tournée d’automne avec le XV de France), c’est le duo composé de Yoram Moefana et Pablo Uberti qui officiera.

Related

En plus de Damian Penaud et Moefana qui conservent leurs places derrière, seuls les avants Bastien Vergnes, l’Argentin Guido Petti et le Sud-Africain Carlü Sadie vont enchaîner.

Comme lors de la victoire girondine à Toulouse, Louis Bielle-Biarrey occupera le poste d’arrière. Titulaire habituelle, Romain Buros sera le seul arrière présent sur le banc des remplaçants.

Car Bru, passé par l’encadrement des Sharks de Durban et inspiré par la philosophie des Springboks, a misé pour ce match contre La Rochelle sur un groupe de remplaçants à sept avants, dont trois 3e ligne : l’Australien Pete Samu, le Japonais Tevita Tatafu et Temo Matiu.

ADVERTISEMENT

Suivez le tirage au sort des poules de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby féminine 2025 en direct sur RugbyPass TV (dans le monde entier) à partir de 20 h 19 (heure français), ce jeudi 17 octobre.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Commentaires

0 Comments
Soyez le premier à commenter...

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez vraiment !

Inscription gratuite
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

M
MA 24 minutes ago
Rugby Australia urged to have ‘a crack’ at signing NRL star Nathan Cleary

In a Marvel superhero world, it's tempting to follow the "one man can save the world/code" narrative.


But trying to graft a champion pear tree onto an apple tree and expecting a massive harvest may not necessarily bear fruit .


My suggestion- instead, refertilise and invigorate the roots of the apple tree, turning green shoots and young branches into a stronger apple tree.


How?


Create a number of rugby scholarships, say 50 of $10,000 each for promising young rugby players.


This would be used to cover the expenses of playing overseas in the French, English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh, NZ or South African premierships after next year's Lion's tour, or for time off work for high performance placements or special skills training.


The British and Irish Lions tour will see RA with available cash, and rather than invest in just a few players like Nathan Cleary, I suggest we develop our current Super Rugby, Australian U 20s, U 19s players where we have seen very promising results.


I would also suggest targeting established combinations, such as Teddy Wilson and Jack Bowen, who played together at U 20s, Easts Shute Shield and are in the Waratahs squad, to be playing at the same club and look to build future Gregan/ Markham combos.


The Wallabies need also to increase their front row depth and quality as Taniella Tupou body has it's own issues.


As we've seen on Dave Rennie's last Spring Tour, and in the recent Rugby Championship game against South Africa, without a highly functioning scrum, a team is pushing it uphill.


And where better for props and forwards to refine their craft than the Northern Hemisphere or South Africa.


Will Skelton, the Arnold brothers, Scott Sio, Angus Scott Young, and Lukhan are someexamples of forwards who have stepped up and thrived O/S.


Cricketers do it(Mike Hussey), actors do it(Guy Pearce, Mel Gibson, the Hemsworths, Margo Robbie etc), why not rugby players.


Travel broadens the mind, you leave your past identity behind, and start life with a blank slate. And get exposure to new players, coaches and systems that advance maturity.


And if the BIL beat us convincingly, a stint O/S would be a great thing to wipe the mental slate clean.


Having said that, Joseph Sualli has got rugby back into the headlines, so we'll take that, but some good on field wins and signs of further growth such as Joe Scmidt has producedwill certainly aid our rugby game.

3 Go to comments
J
JW 58 minutes ago
Cautious Robertson 'has to produce wins more than next generation players'

I can't understand your point sorry. People aren't considering those NZ sides to be developmental, they're saying "that if we're going to lose it could at least be when developing new players".


You have to really understand New Zealand rugby to know the difference. Consider SA's selection approach, Rassie wants to identify a bunch of players to continue to 2027 with. NZ only has the bunch of players it has, so Razor is treating it like we need to give these players that have come in (with only a third or maybe half the numbers of other top nations theres a smaller pool) the best possible chance to succeed in the short and long term.


Take idea of abandoning the only experience the group has, and they come up with a loss, that young group is going to need to identify where they need to improve. Where as if they have a bunch of leaders still on the park and still lose, at least Cane can tell them things like "our effort wasn't there", or in the case of Sam Whitelocks books, "we weren't making the right steps week to week in improving our weakness".


If you're suggesting other teams don't call it a "copout" so it's pretentious of NZ to do so, that's going to have to be a wait and see. Certainly holding onto practices and methods only the highest can achieve may be deterimental (there's no point having feedback from Cane or TJ if those guys weren't of the highest standard in the first place) but you'll soon understand that it is a requirement for any nation trying to punch above their weight like NZ does. You absolutely need to make the most out of any situation you can, that's where it's a copout to accept mediocracy (two things France and SA are notorious for).

74 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ How history guru Scott Mathie is sharpening Edinburgh's swords How history guru Scott Mathie is sharpening Edinburgh's swords
Search