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Dupont vs JGP isn't the only 1-on-1 Simon Easterby is looking forward to

By PA
PARIS, FRANCE - JANUARY 31: Antoine Dupont and Romain Ntamack of France celebrate after the 4th try during the Guinness Six Nations 2025 match between France and Wales at Stade de France on January 31, 2025 in Paris, France. (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)

Ireland interim boss Simon Easterby is relishing the prospect of some of world rugby’s finest individual talents going head to head during Saturday’s crunch Guinness Six Nations clash with title rivals France.

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Les Bleus travel to Dublin seeking to snatch top spot in the table heading into the final weekend of the tournament, while back-to-back champions Ireland hope to remain in control and on course for the Grand Slam.

The pivotal fixture has ultimately decided the destination of the championship title in each of the past three years.

Antoine Dupont – arguably the world’s best player – versus Jamison Gibson-Park at scrum-half is among the match’s many mouthwatering subplots.

“That’s interesting, two fabulous players playing at the peak of their game and I think there’s a number of individual battles across the teams,” Easterby said of the number nine showdown.

Head-to-Head

Last 5 Meetings

Wins
2
Draws
0
Wins
3
Average Points scored
27
23
First try wins
80%
Home team wins
60%

“But that one is going to be pretty special.”

The hosts lead the tournament standings on 14 points following three wins from three, while Fabien Galthie’s second-placed side sit three points behind after beating Wales and Italy either side of defeat by England.

Ireland captain Caelan Doris and opposing number eight Gregory Alldritt have each overcome injury issues to add their influence to proceedings.

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“If you’ve got two of the best nines playing against each other, you might have two of the best eights at the moment playing against each other, so I think that creates another little subplot,” said Easterby.

“Alldritt has been a marquee, standout player for them for a number of years.

“He just does everything really well and he has the ability to ride tackles and create turnovers himself.

“We’ve got one of, if not the best number eights in the world ourselves at the moment and there’s very little between those two players.

“(It’s) a little battle in the game that will go a long way to see who gets on the front foot, who gets momentum and potentially goes on to win the game, those little battles between players like Alldritt and Caelan.”

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Meanwhile, Romain Ntamack’s timely return from suspension pits him against the precocious talent of fly-half rival Sam Prendergast.

“Ntamack, physically, he’s probably a lot bigger than people consider when you see him on the TV,” said Easterby.

“He’s actually got a big stature and he has the ability to play the game with his Toulouse team-mate (Dupont) and that sometimes gives them an advantage as a team.

“He’s kind of got an all-court game in terms of his kicking, his ability at the line, his ability in his passing game.

“But we’ve got a couple of pretty special ones there ourselves, in Sam and Jack Crowley.

“So again, probably another subplot and little battle that will go a long way towards the success of either team – how the number 10s that start the game can manage it and how they control the game in the areas of the pitch we play and also the way we play.

“But certainly another interesting dynamic and one that I know Sam is looking forward to challenging himself against.”

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SK 16 minutes ago
How Rassie Erasmus and the Springboks are winning rugby's secret information war

Why and how have the Springboks leaped ahead in terms of innovation? It all comes down to Erasmus and the coaching culture he has built. The Springboks are masters in innovation because they know what winning rugby is and they know that they need to do to evolve and stay ahead. Erasmus chooses to be proactive rather than reactive. He had Nienaber institute his rush and his defensive IP when he joined. He had Felix Jones institute his IP on both attack and defence. When the law changes came in he brought in Tony Brown to add his IP so the Springboks could evolve their attack knowing the same old formula would not work. Now that Flannery has taken the defensive reins, he has been fine tuning Nienaber’s structure and making his own mark. Erasmus doesn’t stand in the way of his coaches. He empowers them and lets them add to the balance. He doesn’t try to dictate, he takes in information and adapts to changes. There is consensus in the group which allows them to all pull in the same direction and allows the Springboks to evolve. He has created a learning environment and succession planning. Stick and Davids are high quality coaches in their own right adding so much value to the set up but imagine the IP they must have gained learning from some of the games leaders in a wide variety of coaching areas. Erasmus has empowered them to succeed. He is now doing the same with Vermeulen and mentoring him. He used Proudfoot and later Human to get an edge in the specialist area of scrummaging and used Walters and Edwards to shape Springbok player conditioning to give them a physical edge and manage the physical needs of the players expertly. Erasmus does not dominate his coaches, he gives them a free hand, he guides them and guides the overall plan. He is a master man manager and motivator and not a dictator. He brings in coaches that add value and who can guide the evolution of the gameplan so that the Boks can win. What sets the Springboks apart is not just the IP they have gained but how they are using it.

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B
Bull Shark 1 hour ago
How Rassie Erasmus and the Springboks are winning rugby's secret information war

👌


Nice one Nick. I used to think New Zealand were the masters of gleaning information from their coaches from across the globe. And always felt that SA was missing a trick of their own. Until we started exporting coaches much like New Zelaand does.


Rassie will long be remembered for putting the boks back on track and then on top of the pile. A legend for what he has done, love or hate him.


Long may it last, because of course teams have seasons. We’ve seen the ABs and now possibly the Irish seasons change.


I think what you are hitting on for me is that the health of the coaching pipeline, the quality of the coaches being developed is the best indicator of where sustainable results for international teams will come from.


I think England and Australia have some potential in terms of coaches out there and developing. How and if that is ever successfully brought into the national setup in a thoughtful, integrated way stands to be seen.


Because that’s where Rassie (who had cited the ABs in particular in this regard) has actually been his most successful. Making the springboks the ultimate goal, getting the systems to at least work in some synchronous way despite politics and competing interests. And in a country like SA!


When he moves on from coaching the boks, I sincerely hope World Rugby considers him for some role. Or at least - I hope he leads SA rugby. Perhaps as president of SA rugby.


The man’s mouth might not always seen as coming from the right place but his heart is. And he is a true leader.


PS. I don’t see a lot about France in my feed - and I should look more deeply, but while France has resources currently, I’m not sure what their coaching stocks look like and across the globe. Galthie seems like a generational coaching talent.


PPS. It will be interesting to see how many player turned coaches emerge out of this current springbok era. I think there are a few players who show great potential as future coaches. Having experienced Rassie, and possibly being encouraged and influenced in that direction.


Apart form Vermeulen, I suspect Frans Steyn might make a little dent coming out of the Free State. He’s a good man too. And I think he has good game smarts. He leads with heart too.


I have read that Willie le Roux is another potential. Although I think he’s bat sh1t crazy!


I have a feeling Kitschoff might make a move into coaching too. There are a lot of good rugby brains in the player group. The future looks bright for SA in this regard and with Rassie directing things in some further bigger picture role, I think this bodes well for us and sustaining a season of success for the boks.

8 Go to comments
S
Spew_81 1 hour ago
Stat chat: Clear favourite emerges as Sam Cane's All Blacks successor

Do they want to replace Sam Cane and his capabilities? Or do they want something different? What do they want from the loose forward trio?

 

If the All Blacks to want to play their flowing, offloading game. They need more players who can bend/brake tackles and offload. That was one of the weaker aspects of Sam Cane’s game.

 

In 2024 the All Blacks set piece returned to world class. The ruck and maul work was good. The goal kicking and punting was good enough. You would’ve expected an All Blacks team, with those positives, to dominate. But most of the games were uncomfortably close for their liking. Part of the reason is that rush defences are extremely effective at countering the ‘offloading game’.

 

To get the ‘offloading game’ working, they need more power runners. Having a true left wing, Caleb Clark, made a difference. Roigard made a difference at 9. The midfield seems to be under achieving, but the backs aren’t the focus of this article.

 

The front row’s running game is good. As with the locks'; Vaa’i really broke through last year. If Holland gets in, he could reproduce the consistent ‘go forward’ that Retallick delivered; while also having more height and work rate than Tuipulotu.

 

That leaves the loose trio. Savea is a good all around openside. While he’s not the cleanout/tackle/turnover machine that Cane was, Cane did not have Savea’s running game. The question is – does one player have to be the cleanout/tackle/turnover machine – or can it be split between the pack?

 

Sititi is mobile, a solid lineout option, and has openside skills. Vaa’i is mobile and multiskilled for a lock, so is Holland. Finau is a formidable runner and tackler, and is a genuine lineout option. Suafoa has great potential as a blindside/lock reserve. Peter Lakai can cover all three loose roles.

 

So maybe: 4) Vaa’i, 5) Holland, 6) Finau, 7) Savea, 8) Sititi, 19) Suafoa, 20) Lakai?

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