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Discipline : six semaines de suspension pour Fakatika, quatre pour van der Mescht

JJ van der Mescht (Stade Français) contre Montpellier (Photo ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP via Getty Images)

La commission de discipline de la LNR s’est réunie mercredi 4 décembre pour étudier le cas des joueurs expulsés lors de la 10e journée de Top 14.

Réunie mercredi 4 décembre à Paris, la commission de discipline et des règlements de la Ligue nationale de rugby (LNR) a étudié le cas de trois joueurs expulsés lors de la 10e journée de Top 14 : Akato Fakatika, Alexandre Kuntelia et Juan John van der Mescht.

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Le pilier de l’USAP est celui qui a écopé de la peine la plus lourde : six semaines de suspension pour son déblayage tête contre tête sur le joueur du Stade Toulousain Léo Banos.

La commission a retenu un « degré moyen prévu par l’échelle de gravité », correspondant à une suspension de huit semaines. Mais la peine a été réduite à six semaines après prise en compte de circonstances atténuantes, ce qui le privera des terrains jusqu’au 6 janvier 2025.

Fakatika a fait la demande, par l’intermédiaire de son club, de participer au programme « Head contact process » établi par World Rugby, qui pourrait lui permettre de retrancher une semaine de suspension supplémentaire.

Van der Mescht, expulsé face au Racing 92 pour un plaquage dangereux, a été « reconnu coupable de jeu dangereux », exprime la LNR dans son communiqué.

Le 2e ligne du Stade Français a écopé dans un premier temps de six semaines de suspension, réduites à trois en raison de circonstances atténuantes (remords, reconnaissance de culpabilité), puis rehaussées à quatre en raison du casier disciplinaire du joueur. Il sera requalifié le 22 décembre.

Même faute, même sanction pour Kuntelia : pour son plaquage dangereux sur le Castrais Louis Le Brun, il a écopé de six semaines de suspension ramenée à trois après prise en compte des circonstances atténuantes. Il ne pourra pas être aligné avant le 15 décembre.

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Comme Fakatika, van der Mescht et Kuntelia ont demandé à participer au programme « Head Contact Process » et devraient donc pouvoir revenir sur les terrains une semaine plus tôt que prévu.

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




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J
JW 3 hours ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

Wow, the case of Australian Rugby. It doesn't really need or want divisive articles like this, that's for sure!

At the same time, according to Melbourne-based Kiwi journalist Geoff Parkes writing on The Roar: “At a pre-season Rebels sponsor evening on November 24 last year, Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh told the local audience how Victoria was ‘leading the way’ with regard to connecting the amateur and professional game, using the catch-cry, One team from club to country. Yet within a fortnight, Rugby Australia had switched paths. As their actions would increasingly show, they had determined that the Rebels were no longer ‘family’.”

Lets just start with the elephant in the room. Everybody had the same problem with that neighbour, Australia were still the second best rugby nation in the world for large periods of the 'present' window. There was still the other 2/3s of the competition to win against.

The outcome of its first attempt to axe the Force, by force, was disastrous.

The outcome was great. As has been shown recently (with money not becoming a problem), the Force just want to be a rep team. They belong in a competition like the Bunnings NPC, not an elite competition like Super Rugby. Their hearts not in it. The game would have been so much better off if Twiggy had been able to setup rapid rugby.


As it was COVID delivered the Force a great opportunity to step up to the SR plate by bringing in a heavy overseas contingent, both players wanting to return home, and in the case of Argentinians, wanting to remain in SR. Their hands remained in their pockets. That was a golden opportunity to snap up some of the Rugby Championships best talent and keep a heavy Argentinian flavour to the competition, and who knows, perhaps even pathing the way for an easy return of jaguares a couple of years after COVID. Perhaps even by hosting a lot of games in the same region!

Rugby Australia CEO Phil Waugh told the local audience how Victoria was ‘leading the way’ with regard to connecting the amateur and professional game, using the catch-cry, One team from club to country. Yet within a fortnight, Rugby Australia had switched paths.

These are some pretty poor quality views to share. The financial state of Rebels is no reason not to acknowledge success. This just sounds like a bitter local, or someone making up stories along the same lines of the clubs own skullduggery.

It is certain there will be far more chance of sustaining a winning Wallaby culture with more intense competition for squad places at Super Rugby level.

The two biggest beneficiaries from the demise of the Rebels will be the traditional twin powerhouses of Queensland and New South Wales, and they have made strides in recruitment where it really matters, in the front five forwards.

From an outsiders view it seems to be helping the English game nicely, and is just the right timing for a similar short term boost to the Aus game. There is a surprising, and shocking, amount of depth needed for such a short competition.


It's good to see a way forward. The Australian story is definitely a case of missed opportunities, and it is that which needs to be told as theres far too much doom and gloom coming from their fans as it is.

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