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'I'd love Manu to get almighty shot off on Radradra at some point'

(Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Sale boss Alex Sanderson is salivating over the prospect of two of the world’s best midfielders – Manu Tuilagi and Semi Radradra of Bristol – going at it over the next two weekends in the Heineken Champions Cup. Tuilagi returned to club action last weekend following his Guinness Six Nations injury setback and his comeback was best remembered for the scintillating tackle he put in on Saracens’ Ben Earl. 

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It was an impact that has left Sanderson eager to see more with inside centre Tuilagi going up against outside centre Radradra this Saturday in the midfield at the AJ Bell Stadium and the following Friday in the return leg at Ashton Gate. 

“That cliche, unstoppable force meets immovable object, springs to mind,” said Sanderson when quizzed by RugbyPass on his thoughts about Tuilagi encountering Radradra with a European quarter-final place at stake for their respective clubs. 

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“It will be brilliant. That is why these games are great because you have to play all your best players. Radradra is superb. I still think there is more in him, I don’t think we have seen the best of him since he has come back from injury. He was almost unstoppable pre that and these are the games that these big players get up for. 

“That’s him and we know what he is about, his tackle-breaking and his offloading abilities. In attack, he is very dangerous wheeras I feel Manu ir probably good on both sides (of the ball). He is great at getting over the gain line but he is horrible to play against. 

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“You don’t even see him coming sometimes. Ben Earl didn’t see him coming. The way he got up from that ruck and ran back around andf filled in and came straight off the line and rolled into that defensive line, his timing and his ability to see a play as it happens is nothing short of brilliant. So yes, I would love Manu to get an almighty shot off on Radradra at some point. That is the best way you stop offloads and get him going backwards. Let’s all cross our fingers for that occurring some Saturday.”

Last Friday’s second-half run off the Sale bench against Saracens was the first outing for Tuilagi in seven weeks as he was unable to take his place in the England lineup after getting selected to start against Wales in the February 26 Guinness Six Nations clash. 

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A hamstring tweak was the reason for the cry-off and at the time Sanderson suggested there would likely be a meeting between Sale and the England medics after the championship to try and best plot an injury-free future for the Tuilagi. 

That meeting hasn’t happened but England boss Eddie Jones texted Sanderson on Tuesday to ascertain an update on the midfielder. The hope is he will come through the upcoming European games unscathed and reach the Premiership bye week Sale have later this month still going strong following his latest recovery.

“We are still figuring out how best we can manage,” admitted the Sale boss. “If we get him through these next few weeks then we will probably have a pretty good blueprint for what his week looks like. It probably pays just to see how it goes the next few weeks but we are confident we can manage him through. 

“We are going to be quite stringent in terms of game time this week as well for him, not just see how it goes. Just have a real plan around that. But Eddie texted me Tuesday morning and there is still regular interaction there. It is very easy to pick up the phone and have that conversation. It doesn’t have to be anything formal, it’s when the opportunity arises.”

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Asked how Tuilagi has been looking on his latest Sale comeback, Sanderson added: “He seems more mobile than he was. He has always had that in him, he has always had that ability to bang in him but he shuddered. 

“Ben Earl was in one spot and then half a second later he was four metres somewhere else. It was like Manu teleported him. Great to watch. We watched it again on Monday because that part of our game we are very happy with. He just seems really bouncy, agile, better for it after losing the weight. That is part of his management to keep him on the field.”

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BleedRed&Black 1 hour ago
Who is telling the truth about France's tour of New Zealand?

What you mean is that you have now put the hookers on the list, having edited them in after I pointed out their absence. Even then you missed out that Mauvaka is allegedly "eligible", when of course we all know that "eligible" means exactly what French rugby wants it to mean, and therefore a propaganda device designed to convince the credulous and protect the dishonest. I will leave you to make another edit.


It's nice to see what you and AlanP are finally admitting what is real, that France puts all its focus on its own domestic interests and gives Southern hemisphere rugby the leftovers. You finally admit that the way French Rugby is structured France's strongest squad, its 6N squad, will not play in the southern hemisphere. That is exactly what Bishop’s article is about, that the French rugby's claim that the leading French players have "played too much" to tour NZ is a fraud designed to explain away the fact this is purely a development tour for France, and therefore a betrayal of the spirit, if not the letter, of the international tours agreement. Someone really should let Bishop know his most extreme critics are finally admitting he is right. He will be very pleased.


It's worth emphasizing just how isolated France is in this. Every 6N team manages their players in a way that they allows them to tour the Southern Hemisphere with the strongest squad they have. Except France. Every 6N team, England, Wales, Scotland, Ireland, even Italy, live up to the spirit as well as the letter of the tours agreement. Except France. Ireland have delivered massively over the three years, winning three tests and narrowly losing two in their five tests in NZ and SA. Those were genuinely great series. Even the England series in NZ last year was excellent, crude but close with the English pouring everything into getting a win. The contrast between the efforts made by Ireland and England as against France is extreme. France instead sits back in its splendid isolation, sends NZ its third best, and lies that it is the best it can do. You have to wonder what Blanco and Sella and Berbizier and Rives, the greats of French rugby, men who gave their guts for France, in NZ as much as anywhere, think of French rugby's contempt for NZ rugby. And of the barrage of lies that have accompanied it.

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