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Victoire de la France contre la Nouvelle-Zélande - Antoine Dupont : « C’est fondateur pour la suite »

PARIS, FRANCE - 16 NOVEMBRE : Antoine Dupont (France) avant une m lors du match Autumn Nations Series 2024 entre la France et la Nouvelle-Zélande au Stade de France le 16 novembre 2024 à Paris, France. (Photo par Franco Arland/Getty Images)

La France a livré un match énorme face à la Nouvelle-Zélande en l’emportant d’un point samedi 16 novembre au Stade de France.

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Une victoire à l’image des dernières minutes étouffantes grâce à l’abnégation et à la détermination des joueurs. Les Bleus ont su revenir après s’être fait malmener sur la première période par des All Blacks dominateurs qui affichaient près du double de sélections, puissants en mêlée et en touches.

Rencontre
Internationals
France
30 - 29
Temps complet
New Zealand
Toutes les stats et les données

Pas loin du match référence. « Gagner contre une grosse équipe comme ça c’est fondateur pour la suite de notre parcours, notre nouveau cycle », a confié le capitaine Antoine Dupont.

« Surtout après la série de matchs qu’ils avaient eue : aller gagner en Angleterre et en Irlande, c’est pas neutre. Ils venaient avec beaucoup de confiance, avec des joueurs en pleine possession de leurs moyens. C’est une grande victoire.

Graphique d'évolution des points

France gagne +1
Temps passé en tête
34
Minutes passées en tête
36
42%
% du match passés en tête
44%
30%
Possession sur les 10 dernières minutes
70%
3
Points sur les 10 dernières minutes
3

« L’expérience commune qu’on a créée depuis 4,5,6 ou 7 ans pour certains nous sert dans des moments comme ça, même si on est malmené et qu’on sait qu’on n’est pas dans les meilleures conditions. On a eu du mal à gagner les collisions sur le début du match, on avait du mal à gagner les ballons », rappelle Dupont.

« Mais malgré ça on ne s’affole pas parce qu’on sait qu’on a les clés pour renverser le match. Les jeunes et ceux qui ont connu leur première sélection ont suivi cette dynamique. On ne les a pas senti paniquer. »

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Un exploit nuancé par le troisième-ligne Paul Boudehent, encore exceptionnel sur cette rencontre et auteur d’un essai.

« Je trouve que c’est bien qu’on réussisse là où les autres nations de l’hémisphère Nord se sont cassé les dents », dit-il. « Mais faut qu’on garde les pieds sur terre. Ça ne reste qu’un match. On va savourer le moment ce soir, mais il reste l’Argentine et plein d’autres matchs. »

Visionnez l'épisode exclusif de "Walk the Talk" où Ardie Savea discute avec Jim Hamilton de son expérience à la Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2023, de sa vie au Japon, de son parcours avec les All Blacks et de ses perspectives d'avenir. Regardez-le gratuitement dès maintenant sur RugbyPass TV.

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J
JW 6 minutes ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

ould really devalue the competition unless there is a way to incentivise performance, e.g. by allowing teams that do well one year to directly qualify for the next year's competition.

So your intention is that teams prioritize those games because it's going to be more reliable way to remain in Champions than league performance. Say in your predicted case where England has 8 strong teams, only four are going to gain automatic entry, so the other four are going to stay up by doing well enough in Champions Cup pool games.


I would be interested on just how many teams would have gone out of contention in the last few years using your system, my thought is that it would not be a lot. Winning a quarter of your games might be enough to remain in it each year. It greatly depends one how much the leagues fluctuate, and I see that becoming less and less.

the appeal of pools of 4, but 6 pool games might not go down well with the French or the South Africans given already cramped schedules.

This is more of a suggestion for NBs new article on SA but I'd argue more pool games mean its easier to have a structure based on region system where say all of the SA teams that qualified are in the same pool, and you can play all those away games against them consecutively. Then return home and they come to you etc.


I don't think its necessarily needed as I think it would be quite easy for EPCR to take into account/do in conjunction with each leagues fixture list. To me, pool play should be sort to just acheive a ranking system. The bottom team of each pool is kicked out or 'culled' (perhaps to Challenge Cup, I'm fond of that exchange), but the fixtures then go into consecutive knockouts of home/away fixtures, say 1 v 16, then go thru to 1 v 8(or worst seed of the other winners etc) home/away, 1v4, etc etc. Maybe the Semi's onwards are 'neutral' fixtures and those last three games are just do or die fixtures?

124 Go to comments
J
JW 2 hours ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

It's just an endemic problem within EPCR. Glasgow threw away the game on the weekend too by resting players. Those sorts of crazy results are all over tournament.


The closest knockout result in 23' was a 14 point win. 24' had a 1, 3 and 12 point margin games, the rest all 30/40 point thrashings by the home team. In every single game.

“We are not disrespecting [the tournament], but we need to get ourselves into a better position. I don’t know how we solve it. It’s like being invited to someone’s birthday party, then complaining about the chips. We are so grateful to be here.

Haha that's a great line, thanks for the share.


The issue is not really solving the itinerary for South African teams, that is easy, the problem is solving it for the teams that are required to come back from South Africa and win the following week. The perfect example of this was La Rochelle last year having to beat Stormers away and then return for a day to France before heading off to Dublin. They consequently but unsurprising got spanked. It's the same problem Super Rugby created when it required higher ranking sides to travel to another countries top team at the pointy end of the season.


As has been discussed in a recent article about England having too many teams in EPCR, the problems are many and varied in general. Combining EPCR and league games into a signle itinerary/season is no problem, both comps simply need to get together at planning stage and be prepared to have flexible weekends where the two comps are swapped around, but is it going to be as easy to suggest that the EPCR just needs a week off from the Ro16 stage to Quarters (or pool to Ro16 I can remember which it was)? What if that LaRvStomers game was a quarter, when is the semi, or the final going to be played?


South Africa's future is, of course, in South Africa. There is talk of a group wanting to create a Super League in America, touring big cities, no doubt some in the Middle East being included, in a World Series type format of the games biggest stars. It's a terrible idea by itself, but especially when there is already Europe, the ME, and all of Africa crying out for more high level rugby, and South Africa's huge abundance of players that can provide it.

21 Go to comments
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