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Racing lose three on the trot

Toulouse scrum-half Antoine Dupont

Antoine Dupont’s first-half double set Toulouse on their way to a 28-18 victory over champions Clermont Auvergne which moved them up to third and La Rochelle beat out-of-sorts Racing 92 in the Top 14 on Sunday.

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Toulouse were brimming with confidence ahead of Clermont’s trip to Stade Ernest-Wallon following three consecutive wins and they maintained their momentum, outscoring Clermont by three tries to two.

Scrum-half Dupont crossed twice in the space of 13 minutes to give Toulouse a 17-13 advantage at the break, Morgan Parra going over for Clermont and converting to add to a Camille Lopez penalty and drop goal.

The lively Zack Holmes stretched Toulouse’s advantage with a third try early in the second half and Thomas Ramos took his tally from the tee to 13 points before a David Strettle try which proved to be too little, too late for a Clermont side that has now suffered back-to-back defeats.

La Rochelle sit fourth in the table after responding to their defeat at Toulon with a 16-9 success over Racing.

Racing suffered a third loss in a row at Stade Marcel-Deflandre, where Vincent Rattez scored the only try of the game for the home side.

La Rochelle suffered a blow when they lost Brock James to injury in the first half, but the fly-half’s replacement Rattez went over just after coming on and Alexis Bales scored 11 points with the boot. Three Maxime Machenaud penalties were all Racing could muster in response.

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F
Flankly 2 hours ago
There remains a culture of excuses in Australian rugby

One team has exceeded expectations in this series and the other has not. Hats off to a Wallabies team in rebuild mode for a smile-inducing effort in the second test (especially the first half).


Completely agree that a top ranked team finds ways to defend a big half-time lead, and they did not quite pull it off. The fact that Piardi did not run the Head Contact Process in the 79th minute Tizzano/Morgan incident is worth discussion. However, Schmidt will be pointing out to the team that avoiding a defensive breakdown on your own 5m line at that point in the game is the thing in their control. Equally, clarification 3-2022 says you cannot jump or dive as a means of avoiding a tackle, as Sheehan admits to have done, but the question for Australia is why and how they were facing a tap-and-go 5m from their line (again).


Where I disagree with this article is the suggestion that Australia are caught in an excuse-making trap of poor performance. For me they are on a steep curve of improvement, and from what we have seen of Schmidt, there is little reason to assume that this will end now. Granted Australia lacks player depth, and that’s a real problem against big teams and in major campaigns. But the Lions are a pretty good team, probably ranking in the top five in the world, and the rebuilding Wallabies were seconds (and a couple of 50/50 ref calls) away from beating them at the MCG.


In the end, the Wallabies are building to a home RWC, and were expected to lose the Lions series on the way to that goal. Success looks like being seriously competitive in the series loss, with good learnings about what needs to be fixed. A series win would have been a fantastic bonus, and humiliation for the UK/Ireland team.


I expect the Wallabies to be very credible in the 2025 RC, to be much better in 2026, and to be a very challenging opponent for any team in the 2027 RWC.

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