Rugby World Cup Depth Chart - France
In the latest of our series looking at the Rugby World Cup squads, we turn our attention to France depth chart, with the enigmatic side placed in a pool alongside England, whose squad we looked at previously.
The cliche around French rugby is that you never know which side will turn up, although over the last few years that has largely gone out of the window, as Les Bleus have struggled to be consistently competitive with the best sides in Europe, with England, Ireland and Wales having all enjoyed stints atop the Six Nations.
Jacques Brunel's side does not lack for individual ability, however, with plenty of Top 14 stars in its ranks, many of whom have proven their quality time and time again in the European Rugby Champions Cup against the best of their European rivals.
Plenty of those standout club performers feature in the French depth chart below, as well as a handful of players who have already established themselves as difference-makers at the international level.
One of the major strengths of the French side lies up front, where Brunel can not only call on quality, but also quantity, as the set-piece proficiency of the Top 14 shines through.
The one-two punch of Jefferson Poirot and Dany Priso is one of the best in the world at loosehead, whilst Guilhem Guirado offers almost unmatched consistency from hooker.
The duo of Demba Bamba and Camille Chat are fast-improving players and the development of Sebastian Vahaamahina and Paul Gabrillagues over the past couple of seasons in the engine room should give hope to French fans.
There was a reshuffle on Wednesday with Romain Taofifenua called up as one of the half-dozen reserves in place of the injured Paul Willemse.
The back row has seen a changing cast in recent years, although Wenceslas Lauret and Arthur Iturria have established themselves as strong options on the flank, with Yacouba Camara and Francois Cros providing decent depth behind them.
Louis Picamoles' form since moving back to France has ebbed and flowed and this may be his last shot at glory at the international level, although on his day he is still among the very best number eights in the world.
Baptiste Serin and Maxime Machenaud make up arguably the best depth chart of scrum-halves in world rugby, with Antoine Dupont the favoured man as stands, as French rugby's propensity for churning out talented nines shows up clearly in their senior squad.
Consistency has been harder to find at fly-half, although Romain Ntamack and Anthony Belleau offer enticing potential as they sandwich the veteran Camille Lopez.
In-form Toulouse players Thomas Ramos and Sofiane Guitoune sit just behind the starting options, although Maxime Medard and Yoann Huget do start and provide plenty of experience in an all-Toulouse and Clermont back line.
Wesley Fofana and Alivereti Raka sit ahead of the La Rochelle pair of Geoffrey Doumayrou and Vincent Rattez in their respective positions, as Brunel leans heavily upon the back lines of the more high-tempo and expansive sides in the Top 14.
(Graphic Credit: Sam Stevens, Reddit. Depth chart republished with permission of the author)
Watch: Part One of RugbyPass' documentary looking at the adventures and experiences on offer to fans in Japan later this year.
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Stephen Larkham, Mick Byrne, Scott Wisental, Ben Mowen, Les Kiss, Jim McKay, Rod Kafer.
There are plenty of great Australian coaches who could do a better job than Schmidt.
Go to commentsThis piece is nothing more than the result of revisionist fancy of Northern Hemisphere rugby fans. Seeing what they want to see, helped but some surprisingly good results and a desire to get excited about doing something well.
I went back through the 6N highlights and sure enough in every English win I remembered seeing these exact holes on the inside, that are supposedly the fallout out of a Felix Jones system breaking down in the hands of some replacement. Every time the commentators mentioned England being targeted up the seam/around the ruck or whatever. Each game had a try scored on the inside of the blitz, no doubt it was a theme throughout all of their games. Will Jordan specifically says that Holland had design that move to target space he saw during their home series win.
Well I'm here to tell you they were the same holes in a Felix Jones system being built as well. This woe is now sentiment has got to stop. The game is on a high, these games have been fantastic! It is Englands attack that has seen their stocks increase this year, and no doubt that is what SB told him was the teams priority. Or it's simply science, with Englands elite players having worked towards a new player welfare and management system, as part of new partnership with the ERU, that's dictating what the players can and can't put their bodies through.
The only bit of truth in this article is that Felix is not there to work on fixing his defence. England threw away another good chance of winning in the weekend when they froze all enterprise under pressure when no longer playing attacking footy for the second half. That mindset helped (or not helped if you like) of course by all this knee jerk, red brained criticism.
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