
Understrength French an unwelcome 'deja vu' in New Zealand
France coach Fabien Galthie picked 17 uncapped players in his squad of 37, with a slew of senior figures rested from the Dunedin opener due to the Top 14 championship match last Saturday.
Galthie may reinforce his Gael Fickou-captained squad for the final tests in Wellington and Hamilton with up to five players from the Top 14 finalists, Toulouse and Bordeaux-Begles.
That could bring fullback Thomas Ramos, lock Thibaud Flament and wingers Damian Penaud and Louis Bielle-Biarrey into the mix.
But flyhalf Romain Ntamack is unlikely to feature after having knee surgery in the wake of Toulouse's triumph, while scrumhalf Antoine Dupont has been sidelined with an ACL injury since the Six Nations in March.
They would add to an absentee list which includes loose forwards Gregory Alldritt and Paul Boudehent, and prop Jean-Baptiste Gros.
Injuries and calendar constraints notwithstanding, the B-squad has been viewed dimly in New Zealand, seven years after a similarly depleted France were trounced 3-0 on their last tour.
"I'm really disappointed with the way the French always seem to come up with excuses to not bring their top players," former All Blacks halfback and TV pundit Justin Marshall fumed on Sky Sports.
"Our fans deserve to see their best players playing in our country against our All Blacks because we do that in November to them."
Galthie has said he had no other solution than to pick a developmental squad.
"I think that's pretty clear. Or the New Zealanders will have to help us reinvent a national calendar," he told a press conference last month.
New Zealand Rugby might like the idea of tweaking the calendar but can only hope that a contest is served up and fans will not feel short-changed.
In 2018, Steve Hansen's All Blacks humiliated the French with a combined scoreline of 127-38 from the three tests at Eden Park, Wellington and Dunedin.
France have not won in New Zealand since a famous 27-22 win at the old Carisbrook ground in Dunedin.
They may struggle to break the losing streak on this tour against an All Blacks outfit keen to make a statement halfway through the World Cup cycle.
Coach Scott Robertson has been at pains to warn his squad to avoid complacency, having tasted defeat in a 30-29 classic at Stade de France last November, the All Blacks' third successive loss to Les Bleus.
While he has lost a couple of key soldiers with injuries to prop Taimati Williams and loose forward Wallace Sititi, Robertson will hope 'next-gen' talents can make strides.
Cameron Roigard and Cortez Ratima are fighting for the starting scrumhalf slot and one-test Wellington Hurricane Ruben Love is looking to make his mark at fullback.
Overall, though, the squad captained by lock Scott Barrett is seasoned and familiar.
Only five uncapped players have been given a chance, including Wellington Hurricanes flanker Du'Plessis Kirifi and Waikato Chiefs hooker Brodie McAlister.
Playmakers Beauden Barrett and Damian McKenzie will resume their running battle for the number 10 shirt, with the loser likely to be deployed at fullback.
"The biggest thing (for us) is we respect (France) with our preparation and understand those strengths," Robertson said on Monday.
"We have been together for a year and our cohesion is high and we trust ourselves."
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Times
13 hours ago
- Times
Scotland find a way to repel second-half Maori onslaught
Making life difficult for themselves has become something of an art form for Scotland down the years. Escaping from tight spots has been a harder habit to acquire — but that is precisely what they did to secure victory in the opening match of their Pacific Tour. While the Maori All Blacks came close to the winning score in a frantic seven minutes of time added on, Gregor Townsend's team deserved to hold out. They had led 24-12 at half-time at the Semenoff Stadium in Whangarei, then stretched their lead by a further five points early in the second half. Even after the Maori hit back and closed to within three points, the tourists looked like running the clock down in comfort. Instead, they conceded a penalty 30 seconds from the end of normal time, and had to withstand a furious onslaught before eventually turning over possession and kicking dead. 'The good thing is we found a way to win,' Townsend, the head coach, said. 'It was probably beyond expectations that we were so far ahead, knowing what the Maori did last week in Japan,' he continued, referring to the 53-20 win against a Japan XV in Tokyo. 'We knew that they would come back, and it looked like they had the momentum at the end. 'We decided to put a team out tonight that wasn't as experienced, knowing that it'll be a great development and learning experience for them. But we also wanted to win this game and we're so pleased that we did win the game and how we set that win up in the first half — how clinical we were. 'And then the pressure around set piece and our defensive effort at the end saw us through. So we're really pleased that the tour starts on a positive.' If that late penalty concession was an unnecessary complication, the real difficulty came earlier in the second 40, when Scotland could only score five points against opponents who had two men sent to the sin-bin within a minute of each other. That minor advantage was wiped out within a minute of the pair returning, swinging the momentum firmly back in favour of the Maori. However, notwithstanding such defects, the match has to go down as a major success for Scotland, with the only real downside being a late concussion which rules Gregor Brown out of Saturday's game against Fiji. Townsend had chosen to rest some key players with a view to keeping them fresh for the forthcoming full internationals against Fiji and Samoa, which count for world ranking points, unlike this non-cap match. So it was an inexperienced team that lined up to face the Maori for the first time since the 2000 tourists lost by three points. And perhaps that lack of experience showed in an uncertain start that saw the home side take the lead after only 49 seconds when Sam Nock scored an unconverted try off a counterattack. Scotland steadily got back into the game, however, and took the lead when Harry Paterson won the chase into in-goal after Ollie Smith had chipped ahead. Adam Hastings converted, then added a penalty as the visitors' domination grew. Next, George Horne got the first of his two tries, like Paterson winning a race to the line from a kick, this time supplied by Rory Hutchinson. Hastings' conversion made it 5-17. Scotland had given Fin Richardson a first appearance from the start, and, after Ben Muncaster was taken off with a dead leg, Alex Masibaka became the second debutant, to be joined later by a third, Fergus Burke. Masibaka had an inauspicious start, being sin-binned after collapsing the maul, but in the second half his meaty contribution proved crucial to the defensive effort. Isaia Walker-Leawere had touched down for the Maori just before Masibaka's dismissal, with Rivez Reihana converting. However, the tourists ended the half on top, and Arron Reed got their third try after another clever kick through from Smith. Hastings' conversion ended the half. The opening stages of the second half should have seen Scotland make the most of their momentum, as first Masibaka returned and then Te Kamaka Howden and Zarn Sullivan were carded for defensive offences. But a knock-on by Hastings ended one gilt-edged opportunity to score against the 13 men, and a lost lineout put paid to another chance. Still, after failing to score the easy way, Scotland succeeded in doing so in more difficult fashion, as Horne touched down at the end of a magnificent counterattack from deep. Hastings failed to convert, but at 12-29 the lead looked solid enough. Or at least it did until Kurt Eklund, the home captain, scored from a lineout maul, and Reihana's conversion made it a ten-point game. With around quarter of an hour still to play, that became three points. Gideon Wrampling touched down on the far left after the Scots defence had been stretched to breaking point, and Kaleb Trask, on for Reihana, added the two points. Scotland reasserted themselves after that setback, and had a lot of promising possession deep inside Maori territory. Had they scored a fifth try then, that would surely have been game over. Instead, in the end, they had to resort to that last-ditch defence. It may have been undisciplined enough, in terms of the laws, for the referee to send Cameron Henderson to the sin-bin. But in terms of structure and tenacity, it was spot on. Star player George Horne (Scotland). Scorers: Maori All Blacks: Tries Nock (1min), Walker-Leawere (31), Eklund (57), Wrampling (66). Cons Reihana 2, Trask. Scotland: Tries Paterson (11), Horne 2 (24, 53), Reed (39). Pen Hastings (16). Cons Hastings 3. Maori All Blacks Z Sullivan; C Forbes (C Evans 58), B Sullivan, G Wrampling, D Rona; R Reihana (K Trask 58), S Nock (K Hauiti-Parapara 70); J Proffit (P Rakete-Stones 54), K Eklund (capt; J Devery 64), K Sykes-Martin (B Kumeroa 54), A Shalfoon (L McWhannell 54), I Walker-Leawere, T Howden, J Brown, C Grace. Scotland O Smith; H Paterson, R Hutchinson, S McDowall (capt), A Reed; A Hastings (F Burke 61), G Horne (J Dobie 61); N McBeth (A Hepburn 50), P Harrison (G Turner 50), F Richardson (W Hurd 50), M Sykes (M Williamson 50), C Henderson, J Bayliss, A Onyeama-Christie (G Brown 70, Onyeama-Christie 78), B Muncaster (A Masibaka 29). Yellow cards: Maori All Blacks Howden (46-56), Sullivan (47-57). Scotland Masibaka (32-42), Henderson (85). Referee Nika Amashukeli (Georgia). Attendance 10,100.


BBC News
17 hours ago
- BBC News
Wales U20s beaten by Ireland in Summer Series opener
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Rhyl Journal
21 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
Wales losing run extends to 18 defeats after late capitulation against Japan
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