Édition du Nord

Select Edition

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

Australie et Afrique du Sud font tourner leur effectif

Par RugbyPass
PERTH, AUSTRALIE - 15 AOÛT : Les joueurs s'échauffent lors d'une séance d'entraînement des Wallabies à la Hale School le 15 août 2024 à Perth, Australie. (Photo par Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Le sélectionneur australien Joe Schmidt a effectué cinq changements pour le deuxième match contre les champions du monde sud-africains dans le cadre du Rugby Championship samedi 17 août, dont le retour du puissant ailier Marika Koroibete.

ADVERTISEMENT

Koroibete, 32 ans, fera son retour international samedi à Perth après une absence depuis la Coupe du monde de l’année dernière, remplaçant Filipo Daugunu, blessé lors de la défaite 33-7 infligée par les Springboks aux Wallabies la semaine dernière à Brisbane.

« Les joueurs ont retroussé leurs manches et travaillé dur cette semaine », a déclaré Schmidt dans un communiqué. « Nous devons être plus combatifs et plus précis ce samedi », a-t-il averti.

Video Spacer

Lukhan Salakaia-Loto Wallabies pre-match Perth

Video Spacer

Lukhan Salakaia-Loto Wallabies pre-match Perth

Le sélectionneur a également titularisé l’expérimenté demi de mêlée Nic White à la place de Jake Gordon, qui est sorti du groupe au profit de Tate McDermott. Angus Bell fait son retour de blessure, tout comme son ancien coéquipier international junior Josh Nasser, qui obtient sa première titularisation au poste de talonneur, tandis que le pilier Allan Alaalatoa sera le capitaine.

Angus Blyth remplace Nick Frost en deuxième ligne, aux côtés de Lukhan Salakaia-Loto. L’arrière Max Jorgensen et le deuxième ligne aile Seru Uru, qui seront sur le banc, pourraient faire leurs débuts internationaux. Le pilier vétéran James Slipper, également sur le banc, pourrait obtenir sa 138e sélection, se rapprochant ainsi du record de George Gregan pour l’Australie (139).

Rencontre
Rugby Championship
South Africa
31 - 27
Temps complet
New Zealand
Toutes les stats et les données

De son côté, l’Afrique du Sud a effectué dix changements, avec les titularisations pour la première fois sous le maillot des Springboks de Morne van den Berg au poste de demi de mêlée et de Ruan Nortje en deuxième ligne.

Composition de l’Australie face à l’Afrique du Sud :

15-Wright – 14-Kellaway, 13-Ikitau, 12-Paisami, 11-Koroibete – 10-Lolesio, 9-White – 8-Wilson, 7-Tizzano, 6-Valetini – 5-Salakaia-Loto, 4-Blyth – 3-Alaalatoa (cap.), 2-Nasser, 1-Bell

ADVERTISEMENT

Remplaçants : 16-B. Pollard, 17-Slipper, 18-Nonggorr, 19-T. Hooper, 20-Uru, 21-McDermott, 22-Donaldson, 23-Jorgensen

Composition de l’Afrique du Sud de l’Australie :

15-Fassi – 14-Kolbe, 13-Kriel, 12-Am, 11-Mapimpi – 10-Feinberg-Mngomezulu, 9-Van den Berg – 8-Louw, 7-P-S du Toit, 6-Van Staden – 5-Nortje, 4-Moerat (cap.) – 3-T. du Toit, 2-Grobbelaar, 1-Wessels

Remplaçants : 16-Marx, 17-Nche, 18-Koch, 19-Etzebeth, 20-K. Smith, 21-Williams, 22-Libbok, 23-H. Pollard

Related

ADVERTISEMENT
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

A
AD 10 minutes ago
'Turnaround Tyrel' epitomises the foggy state of the Bledisloe Cup

Well Nick, you're on the money again.


As a player of league and union and follower and occasional coach at basic levels I can say it is if anything worse.


My take is that somehow or other once we had gone pro, and become a top 2 or 3 team (early naughties) the hubris took over.


At high levels (NSW and Sydney RU in my experience), the money that had previously trickled to things like coach the coaches and special days was redirected to "elite" players and (worst of all) previously unpaid board directors.


We were left with "I want to be a Wallaby" stickers!


There was an actual belief that we had become good because of some inate natural skill we had.


No acknowledgement of coaches or hard work or any activity at all outside of Private Schools.


The ant-league sentiment was palpable, and that alone drove kids playing in my son's West Habour Pirates team away from the game. They were told that they couldn't play League on Sundays and Union on Saturdays by the SRU.


Coaches (including assistant coaches like me) were told to force kids to go to Waratah games after their game. Coach the coaches was replaced by a SRU chap talking over us at training and telling the boys not to tackle low like "mungos", throw the lightest kid up in lineouts, not the tallest. There were many ridiculous things that the kids just laughed at.


The inability to pick out a good player or teach basic skills to anyone went with handing coaching responsibility at representative levels to chaps based on the school they went to, irrespective of whether they had ever played or ever coached.


The money with professionalism had the completely opposite effect to what it should have had when it came to trivial things like skills, coaching and selection.


Rave over...

1 Go to comments
b
by George! 37 minutes ago
Bundee Aki sends new reminder to All Blacks he's the one that got away

Shut your trap boy. Irish rugby finally earns what has historically been an unmerited seat at the head table but dickheads like you want to be all "bolshy" about what!? you've only warmed the seat for five minutes and you want to boast of a win in Durban and make wild insinuations about AB players and their NZ citizenry and ancestral heritage, STFU!

The whole rugby restructuring in Ireland has taken place with foreign input. If as you say the Durban victory against the Boks was with one overseas player it's because the the whole team has benefited from foreign input in setting up your structures.

Our NZ structures at the grass roots level is long established and continues to be really healthy. Foreign players who wander over into our systems become developed we do not seek overseas. Samoan and other people of pacific islands heritage are well into the fifth and sixth generation in NZ and are not only represented on the rugby field but in government, academia, judiciary, industry, commerce, business, agriculture etc, you think somehow NZ rugby fills our teams with Samoans and Tongans, FFS! we live here.

Don't get up on your high horse because we lost by a few points to the Boks, we don't need to here from a wanker like you. The Boks know we are transitioning from ten major players leaving from the WC 2023 and a new coach in his first season, we are just beginning and I can't wait to meet you wankers in Dublin on November.

Damn your filthy eyes! Rat bastard!

35 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Paul Hill: 'I've had deep-fried Mars bar three times since joining Edinburgh' Paul Hill: 'I've had deep-fried Mars bar three times since joining Edinburgh'
Search