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The 'biggest gift' France have and the blueprint to combat it

By Josh Raisey
The 'biggest gift' France have and the blueprint to combat it
Players of Team France react before the Guinness Six Nations 2025 match between France and Scotland at Stade de France on March 15, 2025 in Paris, France. (Photo by Xavier Laine/Getty Images)

The question the rugby world has been asking in the fallout from the Guinness Six Nations is how to stop the French pack.

Scotland tried and failed at the Stade de France in round five, leaving an awestruck Gregor Townsend to describe the task of taking on Les Bleus' pack, and the seven extra forwards Fabien Galthie rolls out from the bench at his leisure, as “one of the biggest challenges in world rugby right now.”

South Africa may have been the architects of the 'Bomb Squad', but France now have their own squadron to blow the world champions' out of the water in terms of weight, when they are able to bring off 145kg tighthead prop Uini Atonio and have the equally hefty Emmanuel Meafou on the bench ready to add that same amount of weight in the second-row.

But former Springbok Jean de Villiers believes the world champions may also be the architects of the gameplan to combat 'Le Bomb Squad.'

Speaking on RugbyPass TV's Boks Office this week, de Villiers cited the encounter between France and South Africa in Marseille in 2022 as that blueprint. Though the Boks controversially lost that match, the former South Africa captain pinpointed the tactics adopted by Jacques Nienaber and Rassie Erasmus on that occasion as the recipe to nullify the Six Nations champions.

"Think back to November 2022," he said. "When South Africa played France in Marseille. The way that the Boks decided not to kick it back and run back when they kicked deep to make the forwards work. I think that's how you defuse that.

"Then you'll still have a fresh pack to come on, but I think that will certainly help to an extent."

Schalk Burger agreed with his former team-mate, saying France's "biggest gift" is the body type of their players at breakdowns, who can take the pace out of the game and turn ball over - Louis Bielle-Biarrey's second try against Ireland this year epitomising that.

The former flanker, therefore, says teams must force France's sizeable pack to make tackles by keeping the ball in play.

"Make it a long kicking game and you just truck it back and you make those biggies in the middle work, make tackles, run back and forward," he said.

"If you take the pace out of the game, those athletes that they've got currently are power athletes. They get into that 22 and they're fresh when they get there.

"I think you want to keep ball in play against the French side, make them work, make them do tackles. Put different pressure on them through your contested kicking game, force them to run back 50 metres, and then make one or two of those 'dead carries', then eventually space is going to open up to you. But they've got a fresh pack coming off the bench which they access like the Boks do, quite early.

"I think it will be fascinating to see if both countries go with a 7-1 split against each other.

"Their biggest gift is those body types at breakdowns. They've got the ability to take the pace out. You go one or two quick rucks and then big hit, man over the ball, slow ruck - five seconds, seven seconds - and next thing you've got a turnover or you've got to go to your kicking shape."