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Will Jordan forfait pour le Super Rugby Pacific 2024

Will Jordan (Nouvelle-Zélande) pendant la finale de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby entre la Nouvelle-Zélande et l'Afrique du Sud au Stade de France, le 28 octobre 2023 à Paris, en France. (Photo par Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

L’arrière des All Blacks Will Jordan manquera l’intégralité de la saison 2024 du Super Rugby Pacific, a annoncé l’équipe mardi 20 février.

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L’équipe a révélé qu’il s’agissait d’une blessure déjà présente à l’épaule qui nécessiterait une intervention chirurgicale et que le marqueur d’essais serait donc écarté pendant six mois.

À quelques jours du début de la saison, les Crusaders perdent un candidat sérieux et un deuxième arrière international, après la blessure à la poitrine subie par Leigh Halfpenny quelques minutes seulement après le début de sa carrière chez les Crusaders contre le Munster.

La semaine dernière, des informations estimaient que l’équipe médicale des Crusaders évaluait les options pour leur arrière vedette, et qu’une décision était attendue avant le début de la saison. La confirmation de mardi aura une influence significative sur la campagne de l’équipe.

Jordan a déjà manqué une grande partie de la saison 2023 en raison d’un problème d’oreille interne provoquant des migraines, le demi d’ouverture Fergus Burke assumant le rôle d’arrière en l’absence du All Black.

Cette année cependant, Burke devait hériter des clés de l’attaque des Crusaders après le départ de Richie Mo’unga. Mais il faudra attendre au moins la septième journée, lorsque Burke reviendra de sa propre blessure.

Chay Fihaki reste l’arrière le plus expérimenté de l’équipe – en dehors de David Havili, qui ne sera probablement pas détaché du milieu de terrain – tandis que l’ailier Macca Springer, pourrait endosser le maillot du 15 en l’absence de Jordan.

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Le nouvel entraîneur des Crusaders, Rob Penney, a déjà exprimé sa volonté de faire jouer les joueurs à leur poste habituel, excluant toute possibilité pour Havili ou Halfpenny d’occuper le poste de demi d’ouverture pendant que Burke est sur la touche.

Selon le calendrier de Jordan, il pourrait revenir en pleine forme en août, après les deux séries de tests des All Blacks contre l’Angleterre et le test aux Etats-Unis contre les Fidji.

Le Rugby Championship débutera le 10 août, avec l’entrée en lice de la Nouvelle-Zélande contre l’Argentine à Wellington.

Malheureusement pour les supporters des Crusaders, Jordan n’est pas le seul All Black qui devrait manquer de temps au cours de la prochaine saison. Ethan Blackadder, qui a connu de nombreuses blessures, ne devrait pas participer au moins au premier match de la saison contre les Chiefs, vendredi, car le troisième-ligne s’est de nouveau blessé au mollet.

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J
JW 33 minutes ago
'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne

Cameron Woki picked at the base of a ruck and jumped/dived over. That would clearly now be penalised.

But the Sheehan try is different to my eye. It starts from a tap penalty, he drives forward, the two WB defenders go low for a tackle in the assumption Sheehan will go to ground. He does not, but seeing the hole now left dives through it. In this case surely there is zero danger there.

World Rugby’s terminology/interpretation recently (shared again after this) is that it’s ok to hurdle/dive (that includes over, say a ruck, which we have seen this many times even in this years SR) to score a try, but it’s not (OK) to avoid a tackle. I can’t remember the one you describe (which may have been where their clarification came from) but that would sound OK. Sheehan definitely was playing the rope-a-dope and dived to avoid being tackled (can’t call it tackled really, just blocked/stopped lol), so shouldn’t have been awarded (I wasn’t aware of this last definition so just thought it was a very smart move). Was it premeditated? I’m not sure, but he could definitely have collected someones head if that was the case. And I guess even if he saw the space, I guess it’s not something they can allow as others might try it and get it terribly wrong?


Well summed up Miz. I have been thinking the whole situation of events that lead to this type of sneaky move is the problem, particularly as it relates to the difficulty and effort defenders now go to stop such situations (like say Slippers try), where players go extremely low to drive from meters out (and in most cases plays just trying to dive under). It’s also ugly business seeing attempt after attempt to go in under the tacklers, especially with them not really being able to perform a ‘tackle’ at all. I would simply give the defenders their goal line. All they need is some part of the body on or behind, and this will stop the play (being the fuel to this fire) from being attempted I reckon.

36 Go to comments
M
Mzilikazi 1 hour ago
'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne

I get where you are coming from,Om. And there was a case when that French under strength team came out to Australia. Cameron Woki picked at the base of a ruck and jumped/dived over. That would clearly now be penalised.


But the Sheehan try is different to my eye. It starts from a tap penalty, he drives forward, the two WB defenders go low for a tackle in the assumption Sheehan will go to ground. He does not, but seeing the hole now left dives through it. In this case surely there is zero danger there.


Both WB heads are well clear below. There would have been far more danger had Sheehan also dropped low, as he had done on one, or was it two occasions in the game.


I just can’t see his movement as a jump. There is virtually no vertical element, it is say only 5% upwards. Surely at 95% horizontal, that won’t be penalised, not even seriously looked at ?


“It is different to the sideline touchdown on the wing”. You are the only person in hundreds of posts I have read who brings that up. I have been thinking of that as well, but not commented till now prompted by you. And you are correct, it is in most cases very different, being a side on tackle, not head on. But still, it is often more a jump than a dive. I would not advocate for penalising…..some wonderful tries scored that way, and the danger element is generally not excessive, at least not for head injuries.

36 Go to comments
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LONG READ 'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne 'The Wallabies only have themselves to blame': How the Lions sunk Australia in Melbourne