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Large victoire de l'Écosse contre les Fidji

Huw Jones (Écosse) (Photo de Euan Cherry/Getty Images)

L’Écosse s’est largement imposée contre les Fidji (57-17). Si les Écossais ont tremblé en milieu de match, ils ont signé une performance XXL. Il s’agit d’un record pour les Écossais contre les Fidji.

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L’Écosse a d’abord réalisé une première demi-heure exceptionnelle. Comme on dit, ça a envoyé du jeu de partout, un jeu flamboyant qui a permis aux hôtes de mener 26-0 à la 32e minute.

Rencontre
Internationals
Scotland
57 - 17
Temps complet
Fiji
Toutes les stats et les données

Le premier essai a été marqué au bout de dix minutes de jeu, après un premier essai écossais refusé, par Kyle Rowe qui a dansé au milieu des défenseurs avant d’aplatir à la suite d’une combinaison en touche.

Cinq minutes plus tard, en supériorité numérique, les Écossais ont doublé la mise par l’intermédiaire de Darcy Graham sur une beau une-deux avec Ewan Ashman sur l’aile droite.

Darcy Graham a refait des siennes trois minutes après. Après une pénalité rapidement jouée par Adam Hastings qui a cherché la touche mais ne l’a pas trouvée, le ballon est arrivé sur Graham qui semblait avoir laissé tomber le ballon et tenté de le taper.

Mais il a réussi à le reprendre pour foncer dans l’en-but. Le TMO a validé qu’il n’y avait pas en-avant car la tentative de coup de pied manquée a en fait frôlé sa cheville.

À la 21e minute, Huw Jones a ensuite intercepté un ballon pour y aller de son essai.

Alors qu’ils semblaient lancés sur un match à sens unique, les Écossais ont ensuite lâché du lest. Armstrong-Ravula puis Derenalagi ont réussi à marquer deux essais avant la pause pour porter le score à 29-10, avant qu’Ikanivere, à la 50e minute, n’aille aplatir après une belle combinaison en touche des Fidjiens, un essai transformé qui a fait passer le score à 29-17.

Après un long passage à vide, les Écossais se sont remis la tête à l’endroit quand Darcy Graham a inscrit son troisième essai à la sortie d’une succession de passes bien timées de la part d’Adam Hastings, Tom Jordan et Huw Jones.

À la 61e minute, Graham s’est adjugé un quatrième essai pour rejoindre Duhan van der Merwe en tête du classement des meilleurs marqueurs d’essais écossais. Pour la deuxième fois de sa carrière, Graham s’est offert quatre essais en un match. La première fois, c’était contre la Roumanie en Coupe du Monde de Rugby.

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Graphique d'évolution des points

Scotland gagne +40
Temps passé en tête
73
Minutes passées en tête
0
89%
% du match passés en tête
0%
67%
Possession sur les 10 dernières minutes
33%
14
Points sur les 10 dernières minutes
0

Une fois Graham sorti, Duhan van der Merwe a repris son dû en marquant un essai à la 73e minute en bout de ligne.

Si cet essai lui a permis de repasser seul en tête du classement, Darcy Graham a finalement été désigné Homme du Match à l’issue d’une rencontre magnifiquement conclue par un essai de Jones à la réception d’un magnifique service au pied d’Adam Hastings.

Finalement, ce match aura récompensé le panache écossais malgré le petit passage à vide de la fin de première mi-temps et du début de la deuxième.

Visionnez gratuitement le documentaire en cinq épisodes “Chasing the Sun 2” sur RugbyPass TV (*non disponible en Afrique), qui raconte le parcours des Springboks dans leur quête pour défendre avec succès leur titre de Champions du monde de rugby

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J
JW 1 hour ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

In another recent article I tried to argue for a few key concept changes for EPCR which I think could light the game up in the North.


First, I can't remember who pointed out the obvious elephant in the room (a SA'n poster?), it's a terrible time to play rugby in the NH, and especially your pinnacle tournament. It's been terrible watching with seemingly all the games I wanted to watch being in the dark, hardly able to see what was going on. The Aviva was the only stadium I saw that had lights that could handle the miserable rain. If the global appeal is there, they could do a lot better having day games.


They other primary idea I thuoght would benefit EPCR most, was more content. The Prem could do with it and the Top14 could do with something more important than their own league, so they aren't under so much pressure to sell games. The quality over quantity approach.


Trim it down to two 16 team EPCR competitions, and introduce a third for playing amongst the T2 sides, or the bottom clubs in each league should simply be working on being better during the EPCR.


Champions Cup is made up of league best 15 teams, + 1, the Challenge Cup winner. Without a reason not to, I'd distribute it evenly based on each leauge, dividing into thirds and rounded up, 6 URC 5 Top14 4 English. Each winner (all four) is #1 rank and I'd have a seeding round or two for the other 12 to determine their own brackets for 2nd, 3rd, and 4th. I'd then hold a 6 game pool, home and away, with consecutive of each for those games that involve SA'n teams. Preferrably I'd have a regional thing were all SA'n teams were in the same pool but that's a bit complex for this simple idea.


That pool round further finalises the seeding for knockout round of 16. So #1 pool has essentially duked it out for finals seeding already (better venue planning), and to see who they go up against 16, 15,etc etc. Actually I think I might prefer a single pool round for seeding, and introduce the home and away for Ro16, quarters, and semis (stuffs up venue hire). General idea to produce the most competitive matches possible until the random knockout phase, and fix the random lottery of which two teams get ranked higher after pool play, and also keep the system identical for the Challenge Cup so everthing is succinct. Top T2 side promoted from last year to make 16 in Challenge Cup

207 Go to comments
J
JW 6 hours ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

I had a look at the wiki article again, it's all terribly old data (not that I'd see reason for much change in the case of SA).

Number Of Clubs:

1526

Registered+Unregistered Players:

651146

Number of Referees:

3460

Pre-teen Male Players:

320842

Pre-teen Female Player:

4522

Teen Male Player:

199213

Teen Female Player:

4906

Senior Male Player:

113174

Senior Female Player:

8489

Total Male Player:

633229

Total Female Player:

17917


So looking for something new as were more concerned with adults specifically, so I had a look at their EOY Financial Review.

The total number of clubs remains consistent, with a marginal increase of 1% from 1,161 to 1,167. 8.1.

A comparative analysis of verified data for 2022 and 2023 highlights a marginal decline of 1% in the number of female players, declining from 6,801 to 6,723. Additionally, the total number of players demonstrates an 8% decrease, dropping from 96,172 to 88,828.

So 80k+ adult males (down from 113k), but I'm not really sure when youth are involved with SAn clubs, or if that data is for some reason not being referenced/included. 300k male students however (200k in old wiki data).


https://resources.world.rugby/worldrugby/document/2020/07/28/212ed9cf-cd61-4fa3-b9d4-9f0d5fb61116/P56-57-Participation-Map_v3.pdf has France at 250k registered but https://presse-europe1-fr.translate.goog/exclu-europe-1-le-top-10-des-sports-les-plus-pratiques-en-france-en-2022/?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=wapp has them back up at 300k registered.


The French number likely Students + Club, but everyone collects data different I reckon. In that WR pdf for instance a lot of the major nations have a heavily registered setup, were as a nation like England can penetrate into a lot more schools to run camps and include them in the reach of rugby. For instance the SARU release says only 29% of schools are reached by proper rugby programs, where as the 2million English number would be through a much much higer penetration I'd imagine. Which is thanks to schools having the ability to involve themselves in programs more than anything.


In any case, I don't think you need to be concerned with the numbers, whether they are 300 or 88k, there is obviously a big enough following for their pro scenes already to have enough quality players for a 10/12 team competition. They appear ibgger than France but I don't really by the lower English numbers going around.

207 Go to comments
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