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Russia had barely a year to prepare to play the likes of Ireland and Scotland

Kirill Golosnitskiy of Russia celebrates with teammate and captain Vasily Artemyev. (Photo by Cameron Spencer / Getty Images)

Coping with the pace of tier one nations has been the biggest struggle for Russia’s players at the Rugby World Cup, but the fact they had little more than 12 months to get ready for the tournament was a testament to the side, coach Lyn Jones says.

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Russia ended their second World Cup tournament with a 61-0 loss to Scotland at Shizuoka Stadium on Wednesday, which kept the Scots hopes of advancing to the quarter-finals alive until their final match against Japan on Sunday (though typhoon Hagibis could put an end to that).

The Bears only made the tournament after Romania, Belgium and Spain had points stripped for fielding ineligible players in qualifying.

“For Russia it’s been a huge success,” Jones said.

“To have late qualification for the tournament and the way we have prepared and got ready for supersonic rugby at tier one level is all credit to our players.

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“Tier one rugby is not another level it’s another sport for tier two teams.

“Fast, furious, error free and the referee never blows the whistle. It was obviously going to be a challenge for us.

“If we’d played this tournament 12 months ago we would have been blown out of the water.

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“We have played four big games in a short period of time and I think it is commendable to the Russian players who stood up and played for their country as best they can and with pride.”

The Russians were competitive in each of their four matches, but ran out of steam against Scotland, who controlled the ball and increased the tempo as they began to find space.

The fatigue was most evident in the second half when captain Vasily Artemyev put up a clearing kick that barely travelled 30 metres and only a few players trudged forward to stop the counter attack, which ended with another Scotland try.

“It was always a difficult task, playing four games in a row,” Artemyev said.

“We pushed ourselves to our limits.

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“(But) we have made a name for the Russian rugby team as a dedicated side and a tough nut to break.”

– AAP

What did Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend have to say after his side dispatched Russia?:

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Soliloquin 26 minutes ago
Why New Zealand learned more from their July series than France

Hastoy was a good prospect before the 2023 RWC, he was the fly-half who led La Rochelle to the victory in the Champions Cup final in Dublin against Leinster.

But he made it to the squad only because Ntamack got his ACL.

He played against Uruguay, which a terribly poor game by the French side, and since then he declined a bit, alongside his club.

Under the pressure of Reus and West at 10, he regained some credit at the end of the season (among all a drop at the 81st minute of a game).

He’s quite good everywhere, but not outstanding.

He doesn’t have the nerves, the defense and the tactical brain of Ntamack, the leadership and the creativity of Ramos or the exceptional attacking skills of Jalibert.


I really hope that:

-Ntamack will get his knee back. The surgery went well. He wasn’t the most elusive player in the world, but he was capable of amazing rushes like the one against NZ in 2021 or the Brennus-winning try in 2023.

-Jalibert will continue to improve his defense. He started working hard since March (after his defensive disaster against England) with a XIII specialist, and I’ve seen great moments, especially against Ntamack in the SF of the Champions Cup. It’s never too late. And it would be a great signal for Galthié.

-Hastoy will build up his partnership with Le Garrec, that La Rochelle will start a new phase with them and Niniashvili, Alldritt, Atonio, Boudehent, Jegou, Bosmorin, Bourgarit, Nowell, Wardi, Daunivucu, Kaddouri, Pacôme…

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