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Le Japon l'emporte sur une valeureuse équipe du Chili

Kotaro Matsushima of Japan jumps over the tackle of Clemente Saavedra of Chile

Le deuxième-ligne Amato Fakatava a marqué un doublé pour lancer avec succès la campagne du Japon à la Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2023. Le Japon a battu le Chili 42-12 avec le point de bonus au Stadium de Toulouse, dimanche 10 septembre dans la poule D.

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Le demi d’ouverture Rodrigo Fernandez a marqué le premier essai chilien de l’histoire de la Coupe du Monde Rugby dès le début de la rencontre, mais Fakatava a inscrit son premier essai peu après, avant que l’ailier Jone Naikabula n’ajoute un deuxième essai après que le pilier chilien Matias Dittus a reçu un carton jaune.

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Coupe du Monde de Rugby
Japan
42 - 12
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Chile
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Le Chili a de nouveau été réduit à 14 hommes après que le capitaine Martin Sigren ait été expulsé avant la mi-temps et Fakatava a ajouté un autre essai pour donner au Japon une avance de 21-7 à la pause.

Le centre des Brave Blossoms, Dylan Riley, a également reçu un carton jaune avant que le numéro huit Alfonso Escobar ne réduise l’écart du Chili en inscrivant son deuxième essai. Mais les essais du troisième ligne Michael Leitch, du centre Ryoto Nakamura et du deuxième-ligne remplaçant Warner Dearns ont permis au Japon d’alourdir le score jusqu’à l’ultime minute de la rencontre.

« Aujourd’hui, ça a été assez difficile. On s’attendait à ce que le Chili soit très fort. Il fait très chaud, mais je suis heureux d’être sur le terrain avec les garçons », commentait Amato Fakatava, Joueur du match Mastercard.

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JW 18 minutes ago
Competing interests and rotated squads: What the 'player welfare summer' is really telling us

Nice, that’s good to hear, I was worried for the tackler and it increasing concussions overall.


My question is still the same, and the important one though. Where the rate of concussions in Fed 2 high? Of course if there where only three concussions, and they were reduced now to one, then there is no need for the new laws etc.


There are two angles to this discussion, mine above about player welfare, and of course the that which you raise, legal responsibility. More, the legal responsibility we are concerned with is what’s happening now.


WR don’t really know much about CTE I wouldn’t think, whether it happens from innocuous things like heading a ball, or from small knocks or big knocks that don’t heal. Right now they are ensuring the backside is clean by implementing laws to rule out any possibility they didn’t do enough. So once they understand the problem more they may realise some things are overboard.


The other legal responsibility is the one you are talking about in France, the past. Did the LNR and WR know about the severity and frequency of CTE in rugby? That is the question in that debate. If they didn’t know then theres nothing they could have done, so there is no worry. Further, what we may have now is a situation where 90% of those court actions might not happen in future thanks to the new framework we already have around HIA and head contact processes. Your English example is only going to be an issue if future players still continue to receive CTE (as that is obviously bad), as it is now, the players have taken on their own responsibility by ignore advice. No doubt some countries, like France and New Zealand, will lower their tackle height, but as long as the union has done an adequate job in advising of the severity of the problem at least the legal shadow over the community game will have gone.

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