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France outclass Scotland

05th February 2011 15:32

Maxime Medard opening try France v Scotland 6N 2011

Opening try: Maxime Medard

Defending Six Nations champions France sent out a statement to their championship rivals on Saturday with an impressive 34-21 win over Scotland in Paris.

Unlike the nightmare against Australia the last time les Bleus were at the Stade de France, Marc Lièvremont's side were all singing from the same hymn sheet as they scored four eye-catching tries.

Out-muscled up front, outpaced out wide, Scotland looked down and out with an hour left on the clock. Credit to them however for scoring three tries of their own by the final whistle, with a late consolation touch down lending the scoreline an air of respectability.

Scotland's scrum has been a strength in recent times but the French scrum is quite possibly the best there is right now and they showed the world as much. It's not often that Euan Murray is put under pressure at scrum time but the Scottish tighthead, like the rest of the visiting front row, was going either backwards or down all evening from the moment the "engage" call came from referee Wayne Barnes.

But for a change, the French backs were also firing and the hosts ensured that the game was played at a frenetic pace.

The French off-loading in the tackle and support running on the counter attack had their visitors scampering back with high frequency and only a handful of last-gasp tackles prevented the score-line from running away in the first half.

By full-time, Maxime Médard, Imanol Harinordoquy and Damien Traille had all touched down, all from movements started in broken play.

France were cruising to such an extent that Lièvremont had no fear of disrupting his team by sending most of his bench on well before the last quarter.

France were on the scoreboard with the almost their first touch of the ball. From a turnover in the tackle Thierry Dusautoir fed wing-turned-centre Aurélien Rougerie who dropped the ball onto his left boot. Médard turned on the gas on the outside and dotted down for the opening try after just three minutes.

A François Trinh-Duc drop goal saw the French take a ten-point lead after as many minutes.

Scotland did well to hang in there and Alastair Kellock's first Test try at the end of the first quarter kept his side in contention. After some solid build-up play the skipper found a gap on the fringe of a ruck to sneak over.

But the visitors failed to threaten for the rest of the first period. Referee Barnes was left with no choice but to award France with a penalty try on the half-hour mark after the visitors' pack was murdered in series of 5metre scrums.

Scotland would have been relieved to head to the changing rooms at 17-7.

Trinh-Duc linked up with Harinordoquy - via a pass between the fly-half's legs - to get the scoreboard ticking in the second period with the big loose forward backing himself for pace to finish under the sticks.

Again the reply came from Scotland as Kelly Brown profited from some sloppy tackling to charge over and reduce the gap to ten points.

The changes had taken some of the rhythm out of the French attack but they were still lethal from broken play and a silky string of interpassing saw Traille end under the posts.

With the result sewn up, Lamont grabbed a try in the dying minutes as the French defence went missing.

Ironically the game ended - like it did against the Wallabies - with a few boos coming the crowd who were denied another try when France opted for an easy penalty rather than going for the whitewash.

Man of the match: A handful of candidates here. Richie Gray had a strong game for Scotland while Maxime Médard and François Trinh-Duc looked good for the hosts. But we'll go for prop Thomas Domingo who, along with William Servat and Nicolas Mas, was awesome at scrum time.

Moment of the match: Went it's going right for les Bleus, it seems anything is possible. François Trinh-Duc's between the legs pass to set up Harinordoquy's try was a classic!

Villain of the match: Nothing to report here. A wonderful night of rugby.

The scorers:

For France:
Tries: Médard, Penalty try, Harinordoquy, Traille
Cons: Parra 2, Yachvili 2
Pens: Yachvili
Drop: Trinh-Duc

For Scotland:
Tries: Kellock, Brown, Lamont
Cons: Parks 2, Jackson

France: 15 Damien Traille, 14 Yoann Huget, 13 Aurélien Rougerie, 12 Maxime Mermoz, 11 Maxime Médard, 10 François Trinh-Duc, 9 Morgan Parra, 8 Imanol Harinordoquy, 7 Julien Bonnaire, 6 Thierry Dusautoir (c), 5 Lionel Nallet, 4 Julien Pierre, 3 Nicolas Mas, 2 William Servat, 1 Thomas Domingo.
Replacements: 16 Guilhem Guirado, 17 Luc Ducalcon, 18 Jerome Thion, 19 Sébastien Chabal, 20 Dimitri Yachvili, 21 Vincent Clerc, 22 Clément Poitrenaud.

Scotland: 15 Hugo Southwell , 14 Nikki Walker, 13 Joe Ansbro, 12 Nick De Luca, 11 Max Evans, 10 Dan Parks, 9 Rory Lawson, 8 Kelly Brown,7 John Barclay, 6 Nathan Hines, 5 Alastair Kellock (c),4 Richie Gray, 3 Euan Murray,2 Ross Ford, 1 Allan Jacobsen.
Replacements: 16 Dougie Hall, 17 Moray Low, 18 Richie Vernon, 19 Ross Rennie, 20 Mike Blair, 21 Ruaridh Jackson, 22 Sean Lamont.

Venue: Stade de France, Paris
Referee: Wayne Barnes

Comments

admack says...

mlbp: Nathan Hines did look out of pace at 6... however... look at the pictures of the game on RugbyPlanet and look for the one of him dumping Imanol Harinordoquy..boooom!! As a Scot that was at the match in the awesome Stade France I am happy in defeat, if I am honest if we play the way we did last week against Wales, Ireland and Italy we will beat them, my only fear is England who look like serious championship winners... lets wait and see...... Richie Gray for King!!!

Posted 13:34 10th February 2011

JP07 says...

Scot RSA. Here Here. Its just nice to have something to cheer as a Scot. I thought Ansbro was out of his dpeth in the Autoumn but he was up against bulldozer centres, he really showed an eye for a run on Saturday. De Luca is out of his depth, would rather Lamont in the absence of Morrison. Maybe even Jackson to give him some game time but as a promising 10 we need to keep him as a 10. Parks wont get us anywhere after the world cup, Jackson needs to be implemented in the team ready to take the reigns next season

Posted 15:36 07th February 2011

AllyB says...

Why do Scotland still play Dan Parks? His game plan is just pass the ball and kick... Isn't that what a scrum half does? The SRU needs to find and play other 10s and keep them, let Parks go and move on. Same with De Luca.

Posted 03:10 07th February 2011

mlbp says...

Great defensive blunders by the French, totally unexpected of them (or maybe that's what they truly are like). The three tries by the Scots came from tackling errors. France has the bulk in the players to be able to defend well. Maybe it's a question of mental disposition and fitness, as Kiwirooster says.

Massive scrumming. I am happy to see a team honouring this classical aspect of the game. France clearly shows that a team can have a good scrum and mobile forwards at the same time (Australia and others only want dynamic big men who pay no attention to packing down).

Lots of work for the centres to improve their performance. Unfortunate injury for Mermoz. Traille much better at centre than at fullback. Rougerie excelled in the first play of the match (great grubber for Medard). The rest of the match he looked a bit quiet. I would like him to develop into a fine outside centre as Umaga did (I believe he went from winger to centre as Rougerie is trying to do), but he may not have the talent or the class for that. I imagine Lièvremont changing his centres once again.

Bonnaire is an underrated player. He does everything in a quiet way but his workrate is enormous.

Richie Gray is called to be one of the greats (I agree with you, 5Lock4ward, he'll be a British and Irish Lion one day, and his partnership with Courtney Lawes could be legendarious).

Joe Ansbro looked really dangerous. A find in the backline for the Scots.

Didn't Nathan Hines look a bit out of place in such a fast-paced much?

Aren't you tired of the mindless changes in the second halves of the matches (as Jonathan Davies said)? Isn't it a bit stupid to rob the players and the audience of a great show just because all the players on the bench deserve to have a go? The All Blacks don't engage in these stupidities. Lièvremont loves doing that, though. What for?

Posted 00:15 06th February 2011

Carpelone says...

France by 15 next week. The only chance for Ireland is that the French fall asleep during the two anthem protocol.

Posted 21:22 05th February 2011

ericmarseille says...

The french lineout was outplayed and Guirado the sub hooker is a terrible thrower.

Several kicks were missed

Huget is useless

Rougerie looked out of sync with his teammates

The kick start contests were all won by the scots

The french scrum was outsmarted by the scottish one in 2nd half

And esp. despite all the good will and real talent displayed France is still uncapable to score firsthand ; THIS is really worrying

Congrats to the Scots, always valiant opponents

Posted 20:20 05th February 2011

scot_rsa says...

This article is a bit tough on Scotland. Sure the scrum struggled but there is a massive improvement in spirit and cutting edge. The French were great but profited from sloppy turnovers, Scotland kept their composure well to build three excellent tries. As a long-suffering fan I feel I've got my team back and can't wait to take my seat at Murrayfield next weekend. Scotland is a work in progress with some excellent players still to return, please SRU - don't let this excellent coaching set-up get drawn away. Oh, and Richie Gray - superb!

Posted 20:11 05th February 2011

Sinolated says...

The French were frighteningly excellent going forward! Still, their final touch... that final pass eluded them at times particularly in the first half. Scotland also managed a number of turnovers which is uncharacteristic from France to allow.

Might need to work on their defence as well and they missed more tackles than Scotland.

But all in all; a cracking game! Scotland played very very well so credit to them too and France were an absolute beauty to watch!

Looking forward to Ireland v France. That one should be interesting especially on the back of Ireland's embarrassing outing in Rome earlier today.

Posted 20:08 05th February 2011

stuart10 says...

Workman like performance from France. Far from perfect though. Tough trips ahead to Dublin and London. Fabien Galthie once was quoted as saying "French rugby is like the weather, sometimes it is sunny, sometimes it rains " Still quite appropriate !

Posted 19:17 05th February 2011

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