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L'Angleterre l'emporte d'une tête sur le Japon

NICE, FRANCE - SEPTEMBER 17: Joe Marchant of England scores his team's fourth try during the Rugby World Cup France 2023 match between England and Japan at Stade de Nice on September 17, 2023 in Nice, France. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

L’Angleterre prend la tête de la poule D après avoir battu le Japon 34-12 au Stade de Nice dimanche 17 septembre 2023.

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Les équipes sont arrivées à la pause avec un score de 13-9 pour l’Angleterre, grâce à un essai de Lewis Ludlam et à la botte du Joueur du Match Mastercard, George Ford.

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Coupe du Monde de Rugby
England
34 - 12
Temps complet
Japan
Toutes les stats et les données

Le demi d’ouverture du Japon, Rikiya Matsuda, a ajouté sa quatrième pénalité peu après la mi-temps pour ramener le score à un point, mais Courtney Lawes a répliqué en inscrivant le deuxième essai de l’Angleterre après que le ballon a rebondi sur la tête du pilier Joe Marler, par conséquent auteur d’une surprenante passe décisive.

Freddie Steward a ensuite profité d’un coup de pied croisé précis de Ford pour marquer dans le coin, avant que Joe Marchant ne plonge pour l’essai du bonus dans la dernière action.

De son côté, le Japon n’a pas à rougir de sa prestation, mais ses joueurs ont été bien trop maladroits balle en main pour vraiment inquiéter son adversaire du jour.

L’Angleterre a ainsi remporté sa deuxième victoire en deux matchs à la Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2023.

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Nickers 3 hours ago
Why the All Blacks overlooking Joe Schmidt could yet hurt them in the Bledisloe battle

I've never understood why Razor stayed on in NZ after winning 3 SR titles in a row. Surely at that point it's time to look for the next thing, which at that stage of his career should not have been the ABs, and arguably still shouldn't be given his lack of experience in International rugby. What was gained by staying on at the Crusaders to win 4 more titles?


2 years in the premiership, 2 years as an assistant international coach, then 4 years taking a team through a WC cycle would have given him what he needed to be the best ABs coach. As it is he is learning on the job, and his inexperience shows even more when he surrounds himself with assistant coaches who have no top international experience either.


He is being faced with extreme adversity and pressure now, possibly for the first time in his coaching career. Maybe he will come through well and maybe he won't, but the point is the coaching selection process is so flawed that he is doing it for the first time while in arguably the top coaching job in world rugby. It's like your first job out of university being the CEO of Microsoft or Google.


There was talk of him going to England if the ABs didn't get him, that would have been perfect in my opinion. That is a super high pressure environment and NZR would have been way better off letting him learn the trade with someone else's team. I predicted when Razor was appointed that he would be axed or resign after 2 years then go on to have a lot of success in his next appointment. I hope that doesn't happen because it will mean a lot of turmoil for the ABs, but it's not unthinkable. Many of his moves so far look exactly like the early days of Foster's era when he too was flanked by coaches who were not up to the job. I would like to see some combination of Cotter, Joseph, Brown, and Felix Jones come into the set up.

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