Édition du Nord

Select Edition

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

Cape Town SVNS : les Bleues encore bronzées

Les joueuses de l'équipe de France célèbrent leur victoire lors du match pour la troisième place du HSBC World Rugby Sevens du Cap entre la France et l'Australie, le 8 décembre 2024. (Photo by Rodger Bosch / AFP) (Photo by RODGER BOSCH/AFP via Getty Images)

Comme la semaine dernière à Dubaï, l’équipe de France féminine décroche au Cap la 3e place du tournoi, aux dépens de l’Australie (17-14).

Inexistantes en demi-finale contre la Nouvelle-Zélande, les Bleues ont réussi à se remotiver pour aller chercher une belle médaille de bronze au détriment de l’Australie.

ADVERTISEMENT

L’équipe de France a résisté au retour des Australiennes pour remporter ce match de classement 17-14.

Auteures d’un départ tonitruant, les Françaises menaient 17-0 au bout de trois minutes grâce à des réalisations de Alycia Chrystiaens, Hawa Tounkara et Ian Jason. Signe que la demi-finale était bien évacuée.

Mais on le sait, l’Australie compte dans ses rangs une certain Maddison Levi capable de retourner un match à elle toute seule. La gagnante du trophée de Joueuse de l’année a bien failli réussir son coup en marquant deux essais, un par mi-temps.

Réduites à six (rouge à Lili Dezou) et sous la menace d’un essai qui les aurait privées d’une breloque, les Bleues ont dû faire preuve d’un sacré caractère en fin de match pour résister, s’échiner à défendre et à compenser les espaces. Le temps réglementaire était dépassé depuis trente secondes, l’Australie avait la balle, mais Anne-Cécile Ciofani et Kelly Arbey poussait un dernier énorme contre-ruck pour provoquer l’en-avant des Australiennes.

Cela valait bien un cri libérateur.

ADVERTISEMENT

 

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




ADVERTISEMENT

Kubota Spears vs Saitama Wild Knights | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

The gruelling reality behind one of the fastest sports in the world | The Report

Boks Office | Episode 40 | The Steven Kitshoff Special

Perry Baker in the house | HSBC Life on Tour | Los Angeles

O2 Inside Line: All In | Episode 6 | Le Crunch

The Unexpected Journey to USA 7s Glory | Aaron Cummings | Sevens Wonders

USA vs Japan | Full Match Replay

Yokohama Canon Eagles vs Shizuoka BlueRevs | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

Confidence knocks and finding your people | Flo Williams | Rugby Rising Locker Room

Tackling reasons for drop-out in sport | Zainab Alema | Rugby Rising Locker Room

Jet Lag: The biggest challenge facing international sports? | The Report

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

B
BigGabe 8 minutes ago
'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'

Well, I would disagree with your take that you don’t take the piss out of the opposition. Sledging is very much a part of the game - “four more years”/"just a shit richie mccaw”/any swan dive celebration/wit kant commentry/English yelling when they win minor penalties/etc etc. It’s really a part of any sport. Cricket has much the same when a wicket keeper chats shit in a batsman’s ears, but no one complains about it. Just because we can’t hear what goes on a ruck or maul, or see what goes on, doesn’t mean it doesn’t go on.


The talk of ‘the spirit’ of rugby is also a difficult one. I am also a very keen cyclist and with the new code that has popped up, gravel racing, there is constant talk about the ‘spirit of gravel’. Ultimately, it’s a useful phrase that means everything and nothing at the same time - it can be used for both sides of the fence as well as for fence sitters. Rassie’s 6-2/7-1 was considered against the spirit of rugby, but now it’s taken up regularly by clubs and countries. Does that mean the spirit of rugby is an unfixed entity that can actually change with the times? Look back at the Lions tour of 1974 and the infamous call 99. Was that the spirit of rugby? When does tradition for tradition’s sake become a barrier to the current day? What IS the spirit of rugby and why is Pollock not adhering to it? In another sense, why does it bother all and sundry so much? Are players complaining about it, or are armchair critics and keyboard warriors complaining? I think we all know it’s the latter.


Another question - do you think if fan’s didn’t get so wound up, would he still do it? Give a self-described wind up merchant ammunition and of course he will use it. Is it not the place of the youth to wind up the old-timers? I find it so disappointing how so many 'fans’ in rugby are so quick to pull down anyone with a sense of character, a maverick. Maybe Pollock isn’t the problem here.

3 Go to comments
N
Nickers 16 minutes ago
USA team in Super Rugby Pacific is not the answer right now, but this is

The question for any expansion is - what is the point?


On one hand talking about expanding for commercial reasons, but then saying younger squad members would play giving big names a rest making it more for development purposes?


The problem with SRP is it serves two masters - fans who want a good competition to watch, but also the national teams in developing players so they can go on to become international players.


The case for maximising young player development:


A major problem NZ and Australia have is at U20s. AR and NZR would be best served by investing in proper U20 super rugby competition that runs in conjunction with Super Rugby, rather than the one-off carnival style thing that happens at the moment. 20 year olds coming out of France and England in particular, but also France are noticeably more developed than the equivalent players from NZ, Australia and even SA.


NZ and Australia probably both have one too many teams in SR. If you’re taking a long term view they are best served by cutting teams from the comp now and improving the quality even more. Although MP have been good this year there is also an argument for cutting them too, and reducing to 8 teams that all play each other home and away in a round robin. It would be a ridiculously strong competition with a lot of depth if all the best players are redistributed.


This in conjunction with a full U20s competition (possibly playing just one round rather than 2) would make NZ and Australia international teams much stronger with a lot more depth.


But that solution would make less money and cost more.


NPC would need to be fully amateur or semi-pro at best in this model. If you cross reference the losses NZR posted today with the costs they have previously published about operating the NPC, you can attribute a huge amount, if not all of the losses, to the NPC. At the moment this is putting way too much money into a failing high performance competition at the expense of development.

12 Go to comments
N
Nik 2 hours ago
Brendan Fanning: 'Leinster have the best-resourced squad in these islands but can’t make it pay.'

With the clock at 75:15 Jack Conan looks towards the coaches’ box in Lansdowne Road’s West Stand, cups his hands behind his ears, and asks: “What do we want?”


And therein lies the problem, a complete lack of leadership. A lack of confidence in one’s own ability and an over reliance on the coaches. All that talent acting like headless chickens, are they England in disguise?

13 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ 'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.' 'Love him or hate him, Henry Pollock has got the rugby world talking.'
Search