Édition du Nord

Select Edition

Nord Nord
Sud Sud
Mondial Mondial
Nouvelle Zélande Nouvelle Zélande
France France

Pro D2 : Nevers passe sur le fil face à Brive

La Pro D2 est le championnat de 2e division française. Elle compte cette saison quelques grands noms du rugby international comme Courtney Lawes, George North ou Jonny May.

Brive a perdu gros jeudi à Nevers en match d’ouverture de la 3e journée de Pro D2 en s’inclinant 27 à 26 mais en s’emparant tout de même provisoirement de la tête du championnat grâce au point du bonus défensif.

ADVERTISEMENT
Rencontre
Pro D2
USON Nevers
27 - 26
Temps complet
Brive
Toutes les stats et les données

Les Brivistes n’ont pu empêcher les joueurs de l’USON d’arracher la victoire grâce à une pénalité à la 75e minute après une faute s’accompagnant d’un carton jaune pour Nathan Fraissenon.

Nevers peut aussi remercier Arthur Mathiron qui a inscrit les deux essais pour son équipe (38e et 49e) répondant à ceux de Brive aux 35e et 46e.

Malgré cette première défaite de la saison, Brive prend la tête du championnat alors que les Nivernais remontent eux à la 11e place avant les autres matchs vendredi.

Pro D2

P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
Total
1
Brive
3
2
1
0
9
2
Dax
2
2
0
0
8
3
Grenoble
2
2
0
0
8
4
Biarritz
2
2
0
0
8
5
Colomiers
2
2
0
0
8
6
Soyaux Angouleme
2
1
1
0
6
7
Beziers
2
1
1
0
5
8
Nice
2
1
1
0
5
9
US Montauban
2
1
1
0
5
10
Provence Rugby
2
1
1
0
5
11
USON Nevers
3
1
2
0
5
12
Oyonnax
2
1
1
0
4
13
Valence Romans
2
0
2
0
2
14
Agen
2
0
2
0
2
15
Aurillac
2
0
2
0
1
16
Mont de Marsan
2
0
2
0
1

Le programme de la 3e journée

Vendredi 13 septembre

19h

Aurillac – Grenoble

19h30

Provence Rugby – Montauban
Mont-de-Marsan – Agen
Nice – Soyaux-Angoulême
Dax – Colomiers
Valence-Romans – Béziers

21h

Biarritz – Oyonnax

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Commentaires

0 Comments
Soyez le premier à commenter...

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et dites-nous ce que vous en pensez vraiment !

Inscription gratuite
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

J
JW 3 hours ago
How law changes are speeding up the game - but the scrum lags behind

so what's the point?

A deep question!


First, the point would be you wouldn't have a share of those penalities if you didn't choose good scrummers right.


So having incentive to scrummaging well gives more space in the field through having less mobile players.


This balance is what we always strive to come back to being the focus of any law change right.


So to bring that back to some of the points in this article, if changing the current 'offense' structure of scrums, to say not penalizing a team that's doing their utmost to hold up the scrum (allowing play to continue even if they did finally succumb to collapsing or w/e for example), how are we going to stop that from creating a situation were a coach can prioritize the open play abilities of their tight five, sacrificing pure scrummaging, because they won't be overly punished by having a weak scrum?


But to get back on topic, yes, that balance is too skewed, the prevalence has been too much/frequent.


At the highest level, with the best referees and most capable props, it can play out appealingly well. As you go down the levels, the coaching of tactics seems to remain high, but the ability of the players to adapt and hold their scrum up against that guy boring, or the skill of the ref in determining what the cause was and which of those two to penalize, quickly degrades the quality of the contest and spectacle imo (thank good european rugby left that phase behind!)


Personally I have some very drastic changes in mind for the game that easily remedy this prpblem (as they do for all circumstances), but the scope of them is too great to bring into this context (some I have brought in were applicable), and without them I can only resolve to come up with lots of 'finicky' like those here. It is easy to understand why there is reluctance in their uptake.


I also think it is very folly of WR to try and create this 'perfect' picture of simple laws that can be used to cover all aspects of the game, like 'a game to be played on your feet' etc, and not accept it needs lots of little unique laws like these. I'd be really happy to create some arbitrary advantage for the scrum victors (similar angle to yours), like if you can make your scrum go forward, that resets the offside line from being the ball to the back foot etc, so as to create a way where your scrum wins a foot be "5 meters back" from the scrum becomes 7, or not being able to advance forward past the offisde line (attack gets a free run at you somehow, or devide the field into segments and require certain numbers to remain in the other sgements (like the 30m circle/fielders behind square requirements in cricket). If you're defending and you go forward then not just is your 9 still allowed to harras the opposition but the backline can move up from the 5m line to the scrum line or something.


Make it a real mini game, take your solutions and making them all circumstantial. Having differences between quick ball or ball held in longer, being able to go forward, or being pushed backwards, even to where the scrum stops and the ref puts his arm out in your favour. Think of like a quick tap scenario, but where theres no tap. If the defending team collapses the scrum in honest attempt (even allow the attacking side to collapse it after gong forward) the ball can be picked up (by say the eight) who can run forward without being allowed to be tackled until he's past the back of the scrum for example. It's like a little mini picture of where the defence is scrambling back onside after a quick tap was taken.


The purpose/intent (of any such gimmick) is that it's going to be so much harder to stop his momentum, and subsequent tempo, that it's a really good advantage for having such a powerful scrum. No change of play to a lineout or blowing of the whistle needed.

165 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Junior Kpoku: 'My goal is to fight for an England place at the 2027 World Cup.' Junior Kpoku: 'My goal is to fight for an England place at the 2027 World Cup.'
Search