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Japan

Bleus battle past Brave Blossoms

10th September 2011 06:36

Julien Pierre France scores v Japan

Try! Julien Pierre got the ball rolling

France were given a scare by Japan in their World Cup opener on Saturday but managed to get the job done with a 47-21 win at North Harbour Stadium in Auckland.

A bonus point means that les Bleus move level with New Zealand at the top of Pool A, but it was far from plain sailing as the Japanese made a mockery of many of the bookies' predictions.

A virtuoso performance from Japanese fly-half James Arlidge saw him score all his team's points in an entertaining game highlighted by the Brave Blossoms' fighting spirit.

The result looked done and dusted early on as France made the expected strong start. But as complacency set in and Japan continued to fight, the underdogs made an incredible comeback.

After cruising to a 20-3 lead inside the first 30 minutes, France found themselves under huge pressure at 25-21 on the hour mark.

A late revival however saw the French restore order, finishing the game with six tries to Japan's two.

The first half-an-hour went perfectly to script: The Japanese scrum was slaughtered and their defence out wide was found wanting.

Three tries - from lock Julien Pierre, fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc and wing Vincent Clerc - gave France a 23-11 lead at half-time. Arlidge's replied with a try of his own and two penalties.

It took France 27 minutes to score their first points of the second half - although they were unlucky to be denied a try on two occasions by the TMO, who adjudged the ball to have been held up - but scored 22 unanswered points in the last ten minutes.

Dragons fly-half Arlidge got Japan on the board with his second penalty attempt and was handed a stroke of good fortune when his attempted grubber, charged down by Trinh-Duc, rebound into his hands to dash over, although he missed the conversion.

France hit back with a lovely try from deadly finisher Clerc. Arlidge then landed his second penalty on half-time to keep Japan in touch.

Imanol Harinordoquy and Lionel Nallet were both denied tries soon after the restart as the Japanese managed to get body parts under the ball in-goal.

The Cherry Blossoms then began to strike. After a series of phases - prompted by the high tempo play of scrum-half Fumiaki Tanaka - Arlidge spotted the gap and broke through two tackles to score. He also added the conversion to cut the deficit to 25-18.

France suddenly seemed all at sea and lost all shape. However they were given some breathing space by a Yachvili penalty with 12 minutes left before veteran lock Nallet powered over to make the game safe.

And in the dying minutes lock Pascal Papé added the finishing touch after a brilliant move that started in the French 22, while replacement Parra scored in the corner.

Man of the match: We don't often go for a player from the losing team, but James Arlidge deserves the gong. His second try was sensational and gave his team hope of causing an upset.

Moment of the match: France showed what they are capable off when Cedric Heymans made a beautiful offload to Aurélien Rougerie, who sent it wide for Vincent Clerc's try. It gave France a 25-8 lead...Japan were never going to be able to come back from there.

Villain of the match: No nasty stuff to report.

The scorers:

For France:
Tries: Pierre, Trinh-Duc, Clerc, Nallet, Papé, Parra
Cons: Yachvili 4
Pens: Yachvili 3

For Japan:
Tries: Arlidge 2
Cons: Arlidge
Pens: Arlidge 3

France: 15 Cedric Heymans, 14 Vincent Clerc, 13 Aurélien Rougerie, 12 Fabrice Estebanez, 11 Maxime Médard, 10 Francois Trinh-Duc, 9 Dimitri Yachvili, 8 Raphael Lakafia, 7 Imanol Harinordoquy, 6 Thierry Dusautoir (c), 5 Julien Pierre, 4 Lionel Nallet, 3 Nicolas Mas, 2 William Servat, 1 Fabien Barcella.
Replacements: 16 Dimitri Szarzewski, 17 Jean-Baptiste Poux, 18 Julien Bonnaire, 19 Pascal Papé, 20 Morgan Parra, 21 David Skrela, 22 David Marty

Japan: 15 Shaun Webb, 14 Kosuke Endo, 13 Koji Taira, 12 Ryan Nicholas, 11 Hirotoki Onozawa, 10 James Arlidge, 9 Fumiaki Tanaka, 8 Ryukoliniasi Holani, 7 Michael Leitch, 6 Takashi Kikutani (c), 5 Toshizumi Kitagawa, 4 Luke Thompson, 3 Kensuke Hatakeyama, 2 Shota Horie, 1 Hisateru Hirashima.
Replacements: 16 Yusuke Aoki, 17 Nozomu Fujita, 18 Hitoshi Ono, 19 Itaru Taniguchi, 20 Atsushi Hiwasa, 21 Murray Williams, 22 Alisi Tupuailai.

Venue: North Harbour Stadium, Albany
Referee: Steve Walsh (Australia)
Assistant referees: Alain Rolland (Ireland)), Stuart Terheege (England)
TMO: Giulio De Santis (Italy)

Comments

rugbyheim says...

Once again David Skrela has proven to the world that he is not a player of international quality. In his first 3 touches of the ball - they all ended up in turn overs. When he fumbled that pass from a set backline move, he somehow picked up an injury, either that or ML subbed him in fear that Skrela would repeat his antics from Argentina 07'. The Japanese sucked the French into playing a high tempo game - something France was reknown for until Bernard Laporte changed everything. The backline didn't really fire of offer anything collectively. In the end it was individual brilliance from Heymans, Medard, and Parra that did the job. Dimitri Yachvilli was really the only solid player. Mixed results for the forward pack, but 47 points is 47 points. Can't argue with that. Get rid of Skrela

Posted 09:33 10th September 2011

hayj05 says...

@ melkdave - great choice of words there, they were exactly like a "swarm of bees". Fantastic game & atmosphere to match it. Japan just keep on getting better. The speed they were playing at was amazing.

Posted 09:26 10th September 2011

gauca says...

Thought yet again we started well, went into our shells and then did a salvage job at the end. We won't win WCs with that kind of play. That said it should have shaken the team up to full match intensity which is important when it comes to the crunch games. We did however showed some excellent touches with some of the long range tries.

We seemed to lack leadership once the Japanese mounted their fight back which is definately an issue for us. Dussatoir is world class but he is not a great communicator when the chips are down, something which France needs on current form.

The service from the rucks was very slow IMHO leaving Trin-Duc on the back foot alot where he struggles. Though Parra's service isn't exactly the quickest either it is definatley faster than Yach's. Hopefully Parra gets to start the remainder of the games at 9 with Yach coming on to close out tight games.

Great to see teams like Japan, Romania coming along nicley and being genuine competition, hopefully the days of processions are over. Japans 1/2 backs were the best players on the pitch today I thought and the Japanese defensive line was excellent as was their scrambling back.

Posted 09:19 10th September 2011

melkdave says...

What a match Japan where like a swarm of bees never stopping and really put France under the cosh for sometime in the 2nd half BRILLANT.As for France well a bit of a mixed bag lol sometimes they where there other times seemed asleep or may be it was the great Japanese play stunned them lol.ML certinally looked an angry manager at times lol.

Posted 09:13 10th September 2011

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