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France player ratings vs Wales | 2025 Six Nations

France's scrum-half and captain Antoine Dupont (C) celebrates France's third try during the Six Nations international rugby union match between France and Wales at the Stade de France, in Saint-Denis, north of Paris, on January 31, 2025. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP) (Photo by FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images)

France player ratings: Fabien Galthie’s France made a strong start to their Six Nations campaign, dispatching Wales 43-0 at the Stade de France with a certain icy efficiency.

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Here’s how Les Bleus rated in a performance that was more measured precision than flashy flamboyance.

1. Jean-Baptiste Gros – 8
Handed Gareth Thomas a few lessons at scrum time, though neither prop was in the mood for small talk. Looked comfortable in the loose, where he got through a mountain of work.

2. Peato Mauvaka – 7.5
Smart in the set-piece, finding his jumpers like a man scanning a menu he already knows by heart. A handful in close quarters and gave the Welsh pack little breathing room.

3. Uini Atonio – 6.5
Towered over Henry Thomas, but his mass advantage didn’t help him much at scrum time. Did a bit better against Nicky Smith. Didn’t waste time with frills in the loose – just direct, abrasive rugby.

Fixture
Six Nations
France
43 - 0
Full-time
Wales
All Stats and Data

4. Alexandre Roumat – 7
Went about his business with minimal fuss, quietly denting Welsh carriers and making sure lineouts stayed on track, even if his handling in the loose let him down on occasion. Like a plongeur at a giant Parisian hotel, he never stopped working.

5. Emmanuel Meafou – 7.5
Carried like a freight train. The Welsh second-row unit struggled to contain the 145kg lock’s power game when he decided to rumble.

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6. Francois Cros – 7.5
Efficient all day, piling up tackles in a no-nonsense manner. Not the first name on highlight reels, but crucial in shutting down any Welsh sparks.

7. Paul Boudehent – 6
Steady in the breakdown skirmishes, where Jac Morgan tried to unsettle France. A little quiet at times – but few complaints overall.

8. Gregory Alldritt – 8.5
Commanded collisions and refused to let Welsh defenders halt him. As relentless as ever, the La Rochelle star ensured Les Bleus kept up the momentum from start to finish. Deserved his try.

9. Antoine Dupont (c) – 9
The return of the king. Seemed a step ahead of everyone, including his teammates on occasion. Kept the Welsh back row guessing with tempo changes and pinned Wales back with a boot that remains among the best in the game. Had a hand in everything France did well.

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Attack

147
Passes
235
143
Ball Carries
158
292m
Post Contact Metres
306m
8
Line Breaks
5

10. Romain Ntamack – 4
Maintained composure [until the 70th minute at least] under pressure and released his runners with a nonchalance that belied the match’s stakes. Gets a 4/10 for a braindead shoulder check on Wales’ Ben Thomas with just ten minutes left to play, an indiscretion that was rightly upgraded to a red card and will likely cost him a chunk of his Six Nations.

11. Louis Bielle-Biarrey – 8
Didn’t see the ball as often as he might have liked, but kept the Welsh defence honest with a few incisive runs. Threatening enough to demand constant vigilance. His 23rd-minute try was easy work for the Bordeaux TGV, although his 5-pointer just before the break needed a little more work.

12. Yoram Moefana – 7
Direct in his carrying, asking questions of the Welsh midfield. Distribution was tidy, if a tad safe. A brick wall in defence. A solid, if understated, evening.

13. Pierre-Louis Barassi – 7
Neat defensive reads and decent link play from the powerful outside centre. Maybe lacked fireworks, but given France’s stranglehold, he wasn’t required to produce any.

14. Theo Attissogbe – 8
Struggled to find open pasture, though he grafted well on the kick chase. Took his 18th and 34th minute tries with ease, suggesting bigger moments are ahead for the blistering fast Pau rookie.

15. Thomas Ramos – 8.5
Opened his account with a supreme 60-metre touchfinder. Economical in everything he did, from pinpoint punts to slicing through defenders.

REPLACEMENTS:

16. Julien Marchand – 8
Slotted in smoothly, keeping set-piece stability intact and offering calm aggression in the loose. Took only his second-ever try for France well.

17. Cyril Baille – 7.5
Brought fresh legs and further stability to the scrum. Showed up in a couple of rucks to ensure France finished strongly.

18. Georges-Henri Colombe – 7
The 142kg tighthead contributed energy against a tiring Welsh front row. Nothing flashy, but did enough to maintain France’s dominance.

19. Hugo Auradou – 6
A steady cameo, secure at the lineout and mobile enough in open play to keep the Welsh forwards on the back foot.

20. Mickael Guillard – 7
A late injection of grunt, offering little in the way of glamour—just what France required in the closing stages.

21. Oscar Jegou – 7
Managed the breakdown tidily, helping extinguish any lingering Welsh hopes. Minimal fuss.

22. Nolann Le Garrec – 8
Brought pace and crisp service late on, challenging the fringes with quick snipes that pinned Wales back further. Lovely back-handed pass in the build-up to Emilien Gailleton’s try.

23. Emilien Gailleton – 8
A glimpse of his attacking spark; scoring just seconds after coming onto the field. A potent reminder of France’s impressive backline depth.

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Comments

3 Comments
J
JJ 33 days ago

I though Alldritt was Man of the Match. Other than one break, Dupont had a quiet game. It's just lazy journalism these days to give everything to the media darling. Jack Morgan made more metres than Dupont, both made one clean break, both made one offload. The holes up front were punched by Alldritt, who turns bad ball into good in his sleep.

N
NK 32 days ago

Other than one break, Dupont made 3 try assists, 2 of which were really spectacular.

T
Tom 33 days ago

Dupont was insane. In 48 minutes he made breaks through midfield, put in chip kicks over the top, put wingers away with both passes and cross field kicks, smashed people in contact and made defensive reads which shutdown the opposition and nearly caused interceptions. I absolutely loved it. He's like a scrumhalf-flyhalf-centre-flanker.

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RedWarriors 1 hour ago
France change two for Ireland but stick with 7-1 bench tactic

Again we beat SA in Durban with an injury ravaged team. Guys like you have been predicting Irelands downfall for years for the same reasons.


Re the draw: NZ and SA were making plenty of noise about the draw until they squeeked through. SA and NZ don’t ‘rise above’ the draw. They BENEFIT from it!!


Should Scotland #5 seed globally but drawn in a Pool with Ireland and South Africa just have ‘risen above it’? Wow, if only your advice had occurred to them.

Should Japan in 2015 have ‘risen above it’ and beaten Scotland when forced to play them 4 days after beating South Africa?


That old chesnut about Ireland playing too many players in 2023. Ireland showed no fatigue in the RWC. We played the backline a lot early for coordination as Sexton back from ban. For professional sports people, you need to look at extreme fatigue to failure at the end of full intensity matches. They are the pertinent minutes. A backline running shapes for 60 mins against Romania is not a recovery issue. Amateur statisticians adding up minutes and jumping to silly conclusions means little.


I saw South Africa struggle badly with fatigue after the Quarter Final. Against Engalnd, in the final, you needed luck. You didn’t rise above it: you got poxed.


(BTW son. YOU haven’t won a World Cup

Also to note: you are jsut adding to the reputation of SA as having the most thin skinned supporters on the planet. A comment about Ireland dominating SA physcially and you can’t accept it. SA are never domianted! (even when they are))

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P
PR 2 hours ago
France change two for Ireland but stick with 7-1 bench tactic

Oh here we go again - the draw. If Ireland were that good they would rise above the draw. South Africa did. New Zealand did. Ireland, not so much. You seem to think that it matters what happens in the group stages of the WC. The ONLY thing that matters at World Cups is who lifts the cup in the end. That’s it. Do you take any pride in Ireland being ‘the best’ in your group at the World Cup? Does it make up for the hurt of crashing out in the quarters? Do you think it means anything to the All Blacks that they beat the Boks in the pool game in 2019? Of course not. You only care about those things when, like Ireland, you don’t progress past the knock out stages and are looking for silver linings.


Leinster beating an injury-ravaged Stormers means nothing. For starters the best player in the Leinster team was RG Snyman. Also a young Leinster team lost 62-7 to the Bulls a couple of years ago. You don’t know how good youngsters are until they play Test rugby. And that’s the concern for Ireland. They have blooded some youngsters but by-and-large they need to play their best team to get results. We saw it at the World Cup when the game minutes of Ireland players were off the scale.


Meanwhile the Boks had a 85% win record last year chopping and changing using 50 players. This year the wider Bok squad stands at 80. And Rassie will keep experimenting.


As for the Six Nations - I love it. Great comp (even though it only delivered one team in the last four at the last WC). I love the rivalry and the rich history, although winning it is no way near comparable to winning a World Cup. Maybe you need to have won one to understand.

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Bull Shark 3 hours ago
The revitalised Australians are pushing a Super Rugby revival

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Where’s Delisha gone?


I think it’s unfair and appalling that the moderators silence Delisha about her “fluid marital situation”!


Fascist censors!


I have decided to come to Rugbypass for all my Herbal and cybersecurity news given the many wonderful posts shared here. And now this!


Delisha, where ever you are, God speed. I hope the fluids in your marriage remain strictly between you and your husband.

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