A decade of decline: the sad malaise in modern French rugby
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On Thursday, the French rugby club Carcassonne announced that they were entering into a commercial partnership with the pornographic website Jacquie et Michel, on the grounds that they “share values of power, endurance, and vigour”.
Carcassonne’s general manager, Christine Menardeau-Planchenault, explained that “as a family club” they had put limits on what Jacquie et Michel could get up to. “There won’t be any naked young women at half-time or any naked rugby,” she explained. Despite that, Menardeau-Planchenault added that while it is normally “hard to get people to the stadium”, tickets for their upcoming match against Biarritz were now “flying out of the box office”.
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If there has been a sudden swelling of enthusiasm for rugby in that little corner of the south, the mood everywhere else in the country is growing pretty listless. The Stade de France was only three-quarters full during the opening match of the championship against Wales. It was a Friday night kick-off, which did not help, but the real problem, as Bernard Laporte, the head of the French Federation, said on TV last weekend, is: “We have a French team which no longer makes us dream.”
Laporte thinks it has been that way for the past 10 years. Right now, France are ranked 10th in the world, and are closer in points to Spain, who are 21st, than to New Zealand, who are first.
France’s record was bad enough under their last coach, Guy Novès, who won seven of his 21 matches. It is even worse under his replacement, Jacques Brunel, who took over at the start of last year. Under him France have won only three games out of 12, one against Italy, one against England and one against Argentina.
Laporte has been forced into defending his old friend Brunel, even though, as he admits himself, there is no good defence to offer. “We changed the coach just over a year ago because we felt things weren’t going very well, and we can’t say that they’re going much better today,” Laporte said. “But it would be difficult, and certainly dangerous, to make new changes now.”
The odd thing is France were leading at half-time in seven of those same games and then went on to lose five of them. That pattern includes three of the last four Tests they have played, against South Africa, Fiji and Wales.