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France player ratings vs Wales

(Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

France player ratings: Les Bleus first away game was always going to be a major litmus test for Fabien Gathie’s young side.

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After the punishing watch that was Italy Scotland, what a game Wales France ended up being.

Here’s our France player ratings:

15 ANTHONY BOUTHIER 8

Was alive to Leigh Halfpenny’s fumble, pouncing like a trapdoor spider in the 6th minute. As Jiffy said on commentary, he’s a natural footballer. What a find he continues to be.

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WATCH: England Rugby head coach Eddie Jones and fly half George Ford look ahead to Sunday’s Six Nations clash with Ireland.

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14 TEDDY THOMAS 7

Pressured Halfpenny into his opening mistake. Weirdly didn’t tap the ball on with his foot moments later with the line beckoning. How French! Continually upset the Welsh back three. Unfortunately for France, he’s exciting on both sides of the ball.

13 VIRIMI VAKATAWA 8

Brilliant defence and kick-chase game on show today. Didn’t see much of the exciting stuff but what marked out his performance was his workrate. Shaun Edwards will surely have soiled himself watching the centre.

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12 ARTHUR VINCENT 5

A quiet first half culminated in an offside call against him in the 43rd minute. Not much more on offer in the second.

11 GAEL FICKOU 8.5

Did well playing out of position on the wing. An early collision with George North meant he had to mark Jonny McNicol. Took his non-try, which should have been a try as Bouthier’s pass wasn’t forward, with immense swagger. His moments at No.8 had their own, peculiar magnificence.

10 ROMAIN NTAMACK 9

His kicking from hand and tee was impeccable. Took his 52nd minute intercept like he was out on an early morning jog on the Champs-Élysées. Le Petit Prince easily deserved his MOTM. Bravo!

9 ANTOINE DUPONT 7

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This was game as much about guts, passion and unerring commitment. His tackle that stuffed a Welsh move in the 44th minute was massive. Not unlike the toxic pollution that emanated from his namesake chemical company in the US, he appears to be everywhere.

1 CYRIL BAILLE 4

Getting pinged for not rolling away wasn’t a great start. Dan Biggar punished it. Tackled Faletau without the ball in the 25th minute. Again, Biggar punished it. It was an appalling pattern.

2 JULIEN MARCHAND 6

The protection from the elements suited Marchand, who struggled with his lineout throwing in the first two rounds.

3 MOHAMED HAOUAS 6

Things got heated between him and Wyn Jones, and not in a romantic sense. The 127kg prop doesn’t quite have the footwork to defend like a smaller prop but his scrummaging is formidable; although Rob Evans went through him when he came on, resulting in a 68th minute penalty.

4 BERNARD LE ROUX 6

Combative – not unlike a Gallic Ultimate Warrior. As Eddie’s England look to play 3 locks, the French look to 4 backrows instead, and it’s clearly working.

5 PAUL WILLEMSE 8

Massive, brute power for his peel off try in the 30th minute. We like it when he plays angry. Jonny McNicol doesn’t.

6 FRANCOIS CROS 7

Tackled like a rabid but athletically gifted bear. Tore into Wales like they were Leonardo Di Caprio in The Revenant.

7 CHARLES OLLIVON (CAPTAIN) 7

Stalked the backfield like a 6’7 Peeping Tom, waiting for a glimpse of a ball carry. He should be French skipper for years.

8 GREGORY ALLDRITT 7

A confident start for the star No.8 was tarnished when he was penalised for handling in the ruck. France got away with his sin-binning relatively unscathed.  Did you know: His mother is French-Italian and there is also a bloodline in the family that links to Scandinavia.

REPLACEMENTS

16 CAMILLE CHAT 6

Made his test debut on 13 February, 2016, in a 10-9 Six Nations triumph over Ireland in Saint-Denis, and most his caps have come from the bench. We’re not sure why.

17 JEAN-BAPTISTE GROS 6

Put serious pressure on Dillion Lewis when he came on. He’s only 20. Just let that sink in.

18 DEMBA BAMBA 8

Came on and somehow dominated where his colleagues failed. Made BBC commentator Paul O’Connell eat his words.

19 ROMAIN TAOFIFENUA 7

Played a key cameo, even if it was just to add his 133kg to the scrum.

20 DYLAN CRETIN NA

21 BAPTISTE SERIN NA

22 MATHIEU JALIBERT NA

23 THOMAS RAMOS NA

 

 

 

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M
MA 3 hours ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

In regards to Mack Hansen, Tuipoloto and others who talent wasnt 'seen'..

If we look at acting, soccer and cricket as examples, Hugh Jackman, the Heminsworths in acting; Keith Urban in Nashville, Mike Hussey and various cricketers who played in UK and made the Australian team; and many soccer players playing overseas.


My opinion is that perhaps the ' 'potential' or latent talent is there, but it's just below the surface.


ANd that decision, as made by Tane Edmed, Noah, Will Skelton to go overseas is the catalyst to activate the latent and bring it to the surface.


Based on my personal experience of leaving Oz and spending 14 months o/s, I was fully away from home and all usual support systems and past memories that reminded me of the past.


Ooverseas, they weren't there. I had t o survive, I could invent myself as who I wanted, and there was no one to blame but me.


It bought me alive, focused my efforts towards what I wanted and people largely accepted me for who I was and how I turned up.


So my suggestion is to make overseas scholarships for younger players and older too so they can benefit from the value offered by overseas coaching acumen, established systems, higher intensity competition which like the pressure that turns coal into diamonds, can produce more Skeltons, Arnold's, Kellaways and the like.


After the Lion's tour say, create 20 x $10,000 scholarships for players to travel and play overseas.


Set up a HECS style arrangement if necessary to recycle these funds ongoingly.


Ooverseas travel, like parenthood or difficult life situations brings out people's physical and emotional strengths in my own experiences, let's use it in rugby.

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