Saturday February 23, 2013
New-look France seek to end arch-rivals England's Grand Slam bid
LONDON: Rarely can France have been in such need of a win at Twickenham as they will be when they try to salvage a flagging season by stopping England’s bid for a Six Nations Grand Slam in its tracks today.
Pre-tournament favourites France, arguably just one refereeing decision away from winning the 2011 World Cup final, are now bottom of the Six Nations table after defeats by Italy and Wales.
Yet for all it is a cliche, no side in world rugby has the capacity to go from the supine to sublime in the space of a couple of matches like “Les Bleus”.
And much criticised coach Philippe Saint-Andre, who as a dashing France wing had a key role in some sensational Test tries, tried to rally his side by urging them to live up to the best traditions of French rugby
“The English will start favourites,” he said. “We will have to show all our qualities of being French tomorrow (today) - that means being brave, daring, unpredictable and to take the fight to them.
“When we are able to do that, we are able to pose problems for any team in the world.”
It’s 31 years since France had such a wretched start to a Championship and Saint-Andre has responded by making seven changes and a positional switch as they seek only an 11th win in what will be their 42nd match at Twickenham. Significantly, Saint-Andre has recalled scrum-half Morgan Parra, regarded by some judges as the best number nine in Europe, and fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc.
Out go Maxime Machenaud and the misfiring Frederic Michalak, picked at stand-off for the opening two matches even though he is playing inside former England fly-half Jonny Wilkinson at Toulon.
Meanwhile, the fact Wesley Fofana, one of the rising stars of world rugby, is back at centre having been on the wing, where the fit-again Vincent Clerc returns, suggests Saint-Andre has finally been won round to the idea of picking players in their specialist positions for the clash.
Up front, the return of hooker Benjamin Kayser, prop Thomas Domingo, flanker Yannick Nyanga and a debut for lock Christophe Simon should add some much needed strength in both scrum and loose to a previously insipid pack.
In seeing off Scotland by 20 points and then grinding out a 12-6 win against Ireland on a rainy day in Dublin, England have shown an ability to adapt to conditions that is a hallmark of the best sides.
The other matches see Ireland travelling to take on Scotland in Glasgow while Italy will host the dashing Wales side in Rome. — AFP
- China confident of sweeping aside their final opponents
- World No. 1 Nicol sinks Waters to reach British Open final
- Pandelela-Mun Yee and Yan Yee-Jun Hoong bag bronze medals in Mexico
- Koreans in the final despite Dong-keun’s loss
- Nico Rosberg revels in the rain as Mercedes stamp their mark
- Sweet revenge as Froch defeats Kessler
- Macdonald and Marques share the lead
- Djokovic in Nadal’s path for French Open super eight
- Demons lurk at Serena’s favourite place in the world
- Indiana bounce back against Miami to level series
- Sweet revenge as Froch defeats Kessler
- Kuchar takes one-shot lead into final round at Colonial
- Froch beats Kessler to retain IBF super middleweight title
- Kenny Perry stalks Senior PGA Championship title
- China confident of sweeping aside their final opponents
- Hafizh needs to step up a gear after coming in fifth
- Affendi brushes off hand injury to win CP130 race in Terengganu
- England-NZ second Test washed out
- Koreans in the final despite Dong-keun’s loss
- Vignesa right on track to retain GT Open title
