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Retraite forcée pour le pilier irlandais Marty Moore

Par Jérémy Fahner
L'Irlandais Marty Moore pendant le match entre l'Irlande A et les All Blacks XV à la RDS Arena à Dublin. (Photo Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Le pilier international irlandais Marty Moore a annoncé ce lundi sa retraite immédiate, motivée par des raisons médicales.

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Le joueur aux dix sélections avec le XV du Trèfle, 33 ans, a pris cette décision afin de « préserver sa santé mentale », peut-on lire dans un communiqué commun publié sur le site de la fédération irlandaise et sur celui de l’Ulster, son dernier club.

Moore évoluait depuis 2018 au sein du club de la province irlandaise. Il a également évolué au Leinster, aux Wasps.

Solide et technique en mêlée, le pilier droit est devenu international en 2014 contre l’Écosse, remportant dès le Tournoi des Six Nations dès ses premières apparitions au niveau international.

Il ajouta un 2e Tournoi à son palmarès l’année suivante, les deux fois sous la direction de Joe Schmidt.

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Mais sa carrière internationale prit fin en 2016, quand il quitta le Leinster pour rejoindre les Wasps.

« Au nom de tous les membres de l’Ulster Rugby, anciens et actuels, je voudrais remercier Marty pour tout ce qu’il a donné au club au cours des six dernières années et des 94 matchs disputés sous les couleurs de la province », a exprimé Bryn Cunningham, responsable des opérations rugby et du recrutement à l’Ulster.

« Nous souhaitons à Marty et à sa famille le meilleur pour son avenir et nous continuerons à le soutenir de toutes les manières possibles ».

Visionnez gratuitement le documentaire en cinq épisodes “Chasing the Sun 2” sur RugbyPass TV (*non disponible en Afrique), qui raconte le parcours des Springboks dans leur quête pour défendre avec succès leur titre de Champions du monde de rugby

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C
CO 34 minutes ago
Hard to see what the All Blacks are building unlike South Africa

This is exactly it. Cane is a tough cookie and I admire him but he's had his go and didn't quite make it at RWC and that was in 2019, he had another go and didn't quite make it in 2023 and has made it very clear he's retiring.


Cane is missing it tackles at times and is part of a loose forward trio that's lost two from three and incredibly lucky to sneak a win against the Wallabies who were all over the Allblacks like rash.


And yet we get the distinct impression we are all supposed to be feting him as a legend that's being given 100 test caps because he's been in the Allblacks since 2012.


Savea had also had a good go and been not quite good enough in 2019 and 2023 also. Two key loose forwards that has one definitely not at the 2027 world cup and Savea who is simply not going to be good enough by then to retain the number eight position.


Meanwhile we've three larger, younger Dalton carrying the tackle bags as soon as Cane got over a back injury and we are literally dying in the final half of each game as our two aged loose forwards fade.


Married to that we've DMac, a delightful player with tremendous skill. Very elusive like one of the small Bok wingers. The problem is that he simply doesn't shut down and manage territory, hes tantalizingly close but no cigar and he's now 29. A case of he's not going to change.


Will Jordan is the ordained fullback and the plan is to ensure he lacks any competition by picking his under study at the Crusaders, a guy that hasn't done anything yet unlike several other fullback candidates.


Reece, another DMac, small and tantalizingly close but not test standard.


Meanwhile the Allblacks now seen to all get long term contracts and if half descent it just keeps going like David Havilis.


The Allblacks need urgent reform, players need to be on retainers at super level and then picked seasonally.


The world cup squad build years are now, 2025 with firmed up squad by late 2026. There seems to be very little recognition of that or the contracts the rugby players association have got the NZ union to agree to prevent a surge in players capped to see if they have what it takes.


The painful losses in South Africa were avoidable with a heavier six forward ratio on the bench, Beauden at ten. Cane ir Savea leading in a NZ answer to the bomb squad


Big fan of Razor but he's going to have to build depth, get ruthless and leave at home players he knows what they give him at test level that aren't threatening to start and blood new caps.


It's becoming obvious he's got a Crusaders bias and needs to stop it quick, he's in my view been a flop so far and Schmidt would've been the better pick.


Can Razor sort this crisis out? Each test he trundles out the DMac, Cane and Ardie show I get less and less confident.

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