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Pour Antoine Dupont, les All Blacks « ont retrouvé leur rugby »

Par AFP
14 mois après le match d'ouverture de la Coupe du Monde 2023, Bleus et All Blacks vont se retrouver au Stade de France. (Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)

Le capitaine des Bleus Antoine Dupont s’est exprimé à la veille de France – Nouvelle-Zélande, affiche de la tournée d’automne de l’équipe de France.

Le demi de mêlée et capitaine du XV de France Antoine Dupont a expliqué vendredi qu’affronter les All Blacks « est toujours un grand match », à la veille du match contre la Nouvelle-Zélande samedi au Stade de France (21h10).

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« Quand on joue les Blacks c’est toujours un grand match », a estimé en conférence de presse le demi de mêlée du Stade toulousain, le jour de ses 28 ans. « Celui de 2021 (remporté par la France 40-25, NDLR) avait été fondateur pour la suite de notre histoire ».

« C’est une équipe mythique qui a fait rêver des générations et des générations avec des joueurs fantastiques », a ajouté le capitaine des Bleus, qui reste sur deux victoires contre la Nouvelle-Zélande après les succès de 2021 et du Mondial-2023.

« On sait maintenant les efforts que ça demande de pouvoir gagner contre eux », juge Dupont, pour qui « le contexte est différent » des matchs précédents.

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« Je pense qu’ils ont retrouvé leur rugby, et certainement leur meilleur niveau de ces dernières années », note Dupont après les deux victoires des Blacks en Angleterre (24-22) et en Irlande (23-13).

« On sait que l’intensité va être une clé du match », a renchéri l’entraîneur adjoint du XV de France Laurent Sempéré. « C’est une équipe qui sait mettre son adversaire sous pression, qui les étouffe et qui est capable sur le moindre ballon de récupération de créer des belles actions ».

Antoine Dupont avait été préservé en début de semaine, malade. « Rien de méchant », a assuré le joueur, qui a pu « reprendre complètement l’entraînement » dès mercredi.

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H
Hellhound 16 minutes ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

I mean overall talent, not that they will all play 20 years. That is impossible with rugby. The younger players like Elrigh is of course not world class yet. With more experience they will become world class. They are already exceptional players. Not even Eben and the current boys was world class when they started. They were exceptional yes, but not world class. Only experience brings that.


Generational players is very few and far inbetween who is world class from the off. The younger players can only become world class with the proper training and experience isn't something that can be bought. It's something they have to earn through their careers.


As for SRP being a good competition, I disagree. It's slanted in NZ favour and always has been. It's not what it used to be. The URC is now rated as the top club competition in the world next to the top 14 outside of the CC, and I didn't make up that rankings. You feel SRP is better because of our bias towards the NH, but it simply is not.


Yes, I don't know all the young Bucs of NZ coming through, but most of those you named I've seen and they are very good players but not exceptional nor world class. Just as with SA youngsters, that is something that will come with experience and they will become world class and is definitely the future for them.


NZ and Australia don't have the player pool depth that SA have. NZ's are bigger than most, but then most of their stars came from the Island nations like Fiji, Samoa and Tonga. If you count them, then maybe yes, they have as big a pool.


NZ will always be a top 3 team, as will SA. At least for the next 2 decades. That doesn't mean that other countries don't have some world class youngsters coming through either.


I don't claim that SA will win everything for the next 20 years. Nor that they will win the next 5 WC's. A lot depends on players, coaches, law changes and how the game keeps changing. There is too much variables. SA do have a bright future for the next 20 years , players who will hold the flag high. Same with NZ.


Nothing and no one can stop the Rivalry. I know the Irish is trying to replace the Boks with themselves as the main rivals. Everyone tunes in to watch the Boks vs AB's, all over the world. Every year. That is the most anticipated Tests by everyone every year.

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J
JWH 1 hour ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

The teams in the URC are ... meh. Some good, most slightly below average. I have to say that the Irish front row is not really a good benchmark for great scrummagers (Andrew Porter). Still an impressive feat, don't get me wrong, but doesn't have the same meaning it used to.


Calling Elrigh Louw 'world-class' already severely drops the standard of world-class youngsters like Sititi, Roigard, Suaalii, Albornoz, and more that I can't list off the top. Louw has great potential, like a lot of other young players (Prendergast and McDermott), but to say he is world-class is a stretch. Haven't seen Hanekom so I dunno about him.


SFM just hasn't shown me his capabilities yet. He was okay v the ABs, solid 6.5/10, which is great for such a talented young man. If he can adapt a little better and work on his sharpness at test level he could be a quality 10. AF found his feet really well, and I find him most easily identifiable with Nehe Milner-Skudder. What a find for the Bokke. Just needs a better kicking game, but he is proper class. Haven't seen much of Canan Moodie, would like to see more.


20 years of talent? Are you sure? Even I consider Sam Whitelocks career long, and he played for the ABs for 14 years.


On the subject of latent talent, SA and NZ are certainly on par with each other, but the club competitions in New Zealand are just better. The NPC on its own is just such an excellent competitions, which mixes scouting, experience, and competitiveness all into one. SRP is also back on its feet thanks to Schmidt's revival of the Wallabies and RA. So to say that no other country has talent sitting deep in the back pocket, you are sorely mistaken. You haven't even seen Jamie Hannah, Fabian Holland, Kini Naholo, Noah Hotham, Taha Kemara, Rivez Reihana, Naitoa Ah Kuoi, Christian Lio-Willie, or Riley Higgins. And that is just to name a few.


I think SA have somer rougher, emphasis on er, years ahead. Will definitely still be winning games, but I suspect a few frustrating losses are likely imbound, probs in 2026 and 2027. Is there any depth in PSDT's jersey? What about Mbonambi/Marx? Wingers?


Sorry, but those squads played against NZ were certainly not experimental. Almost fully fit Boks after warmups v AUS, bomb squad, regular forwards lineup, half pairing, and outside backs largely the same. 'Experimental' my arse.


Appreciate the bit at the end there about others not understanding the true depth of the NZ talent pool. The ABs make up the top 1% of SRP players, and SRP players make up the top 0.1% of rugby players in NZ. Lots of depth hidden in the NPC and lower club divisions just waiting to surface in 2025. Sure to be an incredible SRP season now that the Crusaders injury crisis is over.

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