The Fijian Drua won't last long if their top players keep getting picked off
In the space of just a few days, the Fijian Drua have lost the services of two of their most impressive players from their inaugural season in Super Rugby Pacific.
Vinaya Habosi was already confirmed to be heading to France following the Drua's upcoming campaign but the powerhouse winger now won't play any role in the 2023 Super Rugby season.
“Vinaya Habosi has had his contract terminated with immediate effect, due to a high-level breach of the club’s code of conduct," the Drua said in a statement released on Tuesday.
Habosi was a revelation on the left wing last season, finishing the 2022 campaign with 56 beaten defenders to his name - behind just Timoci Tavatavanawai and Will Jordan on the overall standings. He debuted for the Fijian national side later in the year and managed five appearances, taking on the likes of Scotland, Ireland, Tonga and Samoa.
While Habosi's shift overseas was already a blow for the Drua, losing his services for the current season as well is a further disruption to a side that will be pushing for a quarter-final place in just their second year as a Super Rugby side.
The Drua will at least be able to call upon one of their other breakout stars, Kalaveti Ravouvou, for 2023 but his time with the club is also rapidly coming to an end, with Bristol announcing today that Ravouvou will join the Premiership cellar-dwellers on a multi-year deal kicking off in 2023/2024.
Ravouvou was also in the top 10 players for defenders beaten last season and was a destructive force in the midfield, making the No 12 jersey his own. Like his teammate Habosi, Ravouvou also debuted for the national side after his standout season, featuring three times for the Flying Fijians.
The Drua also lost the services of Onisi Ratave after last year's campaign and in the space of just two years, will have churned through three of their most pivotal backs.
Habosi, Ravouvou and Ratave won't necessarily be lost to the national set-up and the argument could be made that the Drua are doing exactly what was intended of them when they were first brought into the Super Rugby mix, assisting in the development of players for the highest level of the game.
The problem, however, is that the Drua can't just be a feeder club, they have to be able to stand on their own two feet - and that's going to be difficult if they lose their top players to foreign clubs as soon as they start performing at Super Rugby level.
In 2022, the Drua managed just two wins - over Moana Pasifika and the Melbourne Rebels - and finished in 11th place. While they will certainly have aspirations of pushing the more established sides this season now that they have some more experience under their belt, that's going to be difficult to do if their top stars drop like flies.
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This France team is as good as they were when they went into the World Cup as favorites. Have gone through a rebuild of confidence and rediscovered that form.
Neither England nor Ireland will trouble this team in the 6N. That’s my prediction.
And I guess about time too. Considering that France has won but one 6N title in 6 seasons despite being the best French team for generations thriving off the platform which is the Top 14.
They must just beware of peaking too soon and going to Australia over confident.
Which is also why I thinks it’s absolutely bonkers that France isn’t sending there best players to New Zealand next year. Yes, it isn’t Australia, but getting some SH travel experience makes more sense than not.
Go to commentsI'm not meaning to criticise the players, it's a professional game, this is their livelihood so all power to them. I am aiming criticism at the selectors. Italy is the perfect opportunity to give players of the future a game such as Lakai, Love etc. There is a finite number of tests until the next world cup to develop the team, we are wasting one today.
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