Showing posts with label StadeFrance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label StadeFrance. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 January 2016

Stade End Ulster Championship Hope


Ulster are out of the Champions Cup despite Saturday’s hammering of Oyonnax after Leicester Tigers were beaten 36-21 away at Stade Francais.

Leicester had already secured top spot in Pool 4 after winning their opening five matches but were unable to make it six from six as Stade Francais claimed a bonus-point triumph in Paris which sealed the French side’s quarter-final berth as well.

England centre Tuilagi, in his third game since returning from his lengthy lay-off with a groin injury, lasted 50 minutes before being replaced as he continued his comeback and never looked out of place.

And it was the 24-year-old who opened the scoring in the 19th minute with a 35-metre dash to the posts for a try that was converted by Freddie Burns.

However, Stade Francais’ response was emphatic with the French champions running in three tries in the space of 10 minutes through Jules Plisson, Waisea Vuidarvuwalu and Rabah Slimani to establish a 19-7 lead at half-time.

The home side’s bonus point try, from their rampaging flanker Raphael Lakafia, came in the 53rd minute shortly after Leicester had lost their skipper and hooker Tom Youngs to the sin-bin for a midfield fracas with Slimani.

That try more or less ensured Stade — who had scored 26 unanswered points at that stage — would go into the quarter-final draw and meant Ulster were pushed out, resulting in no Irish province being in the last eight in the top tier of European rugby for the first time since 1998.

Leicester had no such concerns, as they were already assured of a home quarter-final before kick-off.

And the Tigers were good value for the lead given to them by Tuilagi’s score having totally dominated the opening 20 minutes.

But then the momentum shifted as Stade tightened their discipline as well as getting their off-loading game going.

Plisson, who finished the match with 16 points, got the home side on the scoreboard following good work by Jonathan Danty, and the fly-half converted his own try to make it 7-7.

Vuidarvuwalu then went over in the left corner on the overlap before prop Slimani powered over for another score soon after, Plisson adding the extras on that occasion having missed his previous conversion attempt to put Stade 12 points clear.

Plisson also converted the Lakafia score that brought up the crucial bonus point, but the Tigers then regrouped and hit back.

Dom Barrow used all of his 6ft 7in frame to touch down at full stretch for a try at the posts and there could have been another had the TMO not called up Sam Harrison’s inside pass as forward.

There was a third Leicester try from replacement hooker Harry Thacker to close the gap to eight points heading into the final four minutes, but an interception score from replacement centre Geoffrey Doumayrou gave the French side a final flourish as they progressed to the last eight as one of the best runners-up.

Sunday, 10 January 2016

Munster Defeat by Fourteen Stade


The Stade Français wing Josaia Raisuqe was sent off but that did not stop the French Champions inflicting a 27-7 defeat on Munster in Paris.

Raisuqe was sent off by the World Cup final referee, Nigel Owens, on the stroke of half-time for gouging the Munster captain, CJ Stander, as the pair wrestled for the ball.

Yet despite playing for 40 minutes with just 14 men, it was the hosts who ran out comfortable winners at Stade Jean-Bouin. And such was their dominance that only a try by Conor Murray five minutes from time prevented Munster suffering their first shut-out in 21 years of European rugby.

Paul Williams, Sekou Macalou and Hugo Bonneval all crossed as Stade halved Leicester’s lead at the top of Pool Four to four points.

Anthony Foley’s side are now all but out of the Champions Cup barring a miracle run of results after suffering three pool defeats in a row for the first time.

Munster were dealt a series of early blows with the loss of two players in the opening eight minutes and a third before half-time. BJ Botha, their tighthead prop, failed to recover after he was injured in a tackle in the opening minute. The full-back Andrew Conway then followed moments later after he came off worse from a collision with Stade’s talismanic captain, Sergio Parisse.

It only got worse for Munster as Ian Keatley narrowly missed out on a try after Julien Arias was caught ball-watching, before missing the posts with his first penalty attempt.

Francis Saili saved a certain try with a finger-tip tackle to deny Waisea Nayacalevu after the Stade centre benefited from Simon Zebo’s ill-judged pass.

Moments later and Nayacalevu made the burst that produced the game’s first try. Parisse provided support but Williams picked his angle between forwards Dave Kilcoyne and Dave Foley to score under the posts on 32 minutes. Morné Steyn converted and added a penalty for a 10-0 lead.

Munster then lost Tommy O’Donnell despite the flanker initially returning from a head injury assessment.

But Stade were reduced to 14 men when Raisuqe was shown by television replays on the stadium’s giant screens to put his hands in the face of Stander as they wrestled for the ball after Owen had blown his whistle.

The chorus of boos and whistles were deafening as Keatley kicked and missed his penalty and the noise only intensified as Welsh referee Owens walked off at half-time

Steyn added a second penalty before Munster saw Rory Scannell’s try ruled out for a forward pass. Stade flanker Macalou then tore clear for a try before full-back Bonneval beat Zebo to score a third.

Zebo and Scannell combined for Murray’s consolation try late on but the game had already been lost.



Thursday, 7 November 2013

Hansen Changes Paris Team

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New Zealand coach Steve Hansen has made wholesale changes to his line-up for Saturday's clash with France in Paris.

The All Blacks, who have yet to lose in 2013, warmed up for the match at the Stade de France with a 54-6 rout of Japan.

However only four players remain in the starting XV for the much tougher test against France - with Charles Piutau, Ben Smith, Dan Carter and Richie McCaw set to tackle Les Bleus.

McCaw, though, returns to his favoured role on the openside, while Piutau switches wings.
United

Israel Dagg, Cory Jane, Ma'a Nonu and Aaron Smith will come into the back division, while Kieran Read, Liam Messam, Sam Whitelock,Brodie Retallick, Owen Franks, Keven Mealamu and Tony Woodcock are named in the pack.

"The full squad has come together well after the Japan Test and are united with a common purpose - to play well on this European tour and put in performances that we can all be proud of," Hansen said.

"But we know this weekend's test won't be easy - the French will come at us with real physicality, passion and something new."

New Zealand: 15 Israel Dagg, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Ben Smith,12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Charles Piatau. 10 Dan Carter, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (capt), 6 Liam Messam, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brodie Retallick, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock. 
Replacements: 16 Dane Coles, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Charlie Faumuina, 19 Steven Luatua, 20 Sam Cane, 21 Tawera Kerr-Barlow, 22 Aaron Cruden, 23 Ryan Crotty.


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Saturday, 21 September 2013

ERC Appoint Mediator

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The body that organises the Heineken Cup (ERC) has appointed an independent mediator in an attempt to resolve the row surrounding the event's future.

Canadian barrister Graeme Mew will help negotiate a new structure from 2014-15.

The ERC's Jean-Pierre Lux said Mew's appointment is "a hugely valuable opportunity to find an agreed solution which will benefit all European club rugby stakeholders".

Clubs from England and France have revealed they will launch an alternative competition after announcing their intention to quit the Heineken and second-tier Amlin Challenge Cup at the end of the 2012-13 season.

They feel that clubs from Wales, Scotland, Ireland and Italy hold an unfair advantage in the competition in its current structure, and are also unhappy about how revenues are shared.

Their proposed new tournament would include English and French teams but be open to teams from other countries.

However, the ERC insists it is the only organisation that has the authority to organise European club cross-border competitions.

Mew was recommended to the ERC by the International Rugby Board (IRB).

The Canadian heard the IRB's appeal against the decision by a citing commissioner to clear Australia captain James Horwill of stamping on Alun Wyn Jones during the first Test against the British and Irish Lions in June.

After reviewing the original decision, Mew cleared Horwill to play in the final Test of the series.


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