Unsatisfied Fabien Galthie wary of Wales' 'pure talent'
Fabien Galthie readily accepts that France “are not at the level we want to be” during what has proved to be a spluttering Guinness Six Nations campaign.
Les Bleus tackle Wales in Cardiff on Sunday, having lost to Ireland and drawn with Italy, while claiming a scratchy victory over Scotland at Murrayfield.
They will arrive at the Principality Stadium showing eight changes to the side held in Lille by Italy, including Test debuts for full-back Leo Barre, centre Nicolas Depoortere and lock Emmanuel Meafou.
Barre takes over from Thomas Ramos, who moves to fly-half instead of an injured Matthieu Jalibert, with Depoortere replacing a suspended Jonathan Danty and Meafou preferred to Posolo Tuilagi.
Elsewhere, captain and number eight Gregory Alldritt returns after injury as France defend a four-game unbeaten Six Nations record against Wales.
“The results are not what we wanted, now what we wished for. We will be better soon,” France head coach Galthie said.
“We are not satisfied, no one is. We have high expectations of ourselves, and we are not at the level we want to be.
“I am convinced in the strength of people and their character, individually and collectively.
“Right now, the team we will play is a young, brave Welsh team. They have always had pure talent.”
Ramos’ positional switch has come with Jalibert and Romain Ntamack sidelined, while Nolann Le Garrec also features in a new half-back partnership that will be key to victory hopes.
Galthie added: “He (Ramos) has played a lot at 10 since the World Cup in important games with Toulouse. He has been among the best 10s in France.
“With how we play, when you are at 15 you are often asked to step up into the 10 slot. He has been a second 10 in our system.
“He is mature and we know his qualities. It is a coherent choice to give him this responsibility.
“(Le Garrec) has been very good with Racing, and with us for three years during training.”
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Nothing to stew son.
Go to commentsTupaea is a natural 12. What is it with you kiwis and playing players out of their positions. Is that some sort of national sport? Is that on purpose? You’ve got an utility back and a winger at 12 and 13 respectivelly. You played Savea at 8 for ages, wasting the potential of one of the world’s three best players in the last 4-5 years.
ALB is equally effective at 12 and 13, so why not have him or Tupaea at 12, and Proctor at 13? God forbid you’d have two midfielders playing at their natural positions! There must be a law in New Zealand, that prohibits that. Small sample size, but Proctor walked on water in his international debut at 13.
But the kiwi selectors seem to love Rieko’s speed, so as long as the horse is fast enough, they decided they’ll teach him to climb trees anyway.
You don’t have a better 10 than BB and Mo’unga. DMac is a more instinctive attacker (almost as good as Mo’unga … almost), but doesn’t have BB’s game-controlling skills. You have and will lose games due to his aimless kicking and spur-of-the-moment inventions none of his team mates are able to read at the international pace. Works okay at Super Rugby level, doesn’t mean it’s transferable to test matches. But hey, suit yourself.
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