The Borneo Post (Sabah)

France's Penaud, Dupont fit to face Wales

-

OITA, Japan: Backline tyros Damian Penaud and Antoine Dupont have shrugged off niggles to make the France team named by coach Jacques Brunel for the Rugby World Cup quarter-final against Wales on Sunday.

Electric winger Penaud (lower stomach) and livewire scrum-half Dupont (back) take their place in a starting XV that will be captained by hooker Guilhem Guirado.

"If he hadn't recovered, we wouldn't play him," Brunel said of Penaud.

"The same goes for Antoine Dupont. We've protected them a bit, looked after them and they are 100-percent fit today."

Guirado will make his first start in three matches having played second fiddle to Camille Chat in France's last two pool matches against the United States (33-9) and Tonga (23-21).

The final match of the pool, against England, was cancelled because of the deadly Typhoon Hagibis that swept into eastern Japan.

That cancellati­on meant that Brunel had not been able to pick the team that had opened their campaign with a 23-21 victory over Argentina.

For Wales, Brunel made one change from that team that beat Los Pumas, drafting in South African-born Bernard Le Roux in place of Arthur Iturria in the second row.

Le Roux missed France's three warm-up matches because of a ban, but showed up well against the United States.

"We know how active he is, we've seen that since the start of the tournament," Brunel said, putting ultra-consistent Wales in the top three teams in the world.

"We love that back-row/ second-row player profile. He's very active around the park and loves contact."

Iturria, who also fits that profile but is not quite the physical wrecking ball that Le Roux can be on his day, misses out on the match-day 23, Brunel instead naming lock Paul Gabrillagu­es and number eight Louis Picamoles among the replacemen­ts.

Maxime Medard will start at fullback alongside wingers Penaud and Yoann Huget, while Fiji-born Virimi Vakatawa and Gael Fickou are in midfield.

Dupont will partner Romain Ntamack at half-back, with Baptiste Serin and Camille Lopez on the bench.

Guirado packs down between props Rabah Slimani and Jefferson Poirot, while Le Roux is joined in the boiler house by Sebastien Vahaamahin­a.

Gregory Alldritt, Charles Ollivon and Wenceslas Lauret form a combative back-row that will have its work cut out against Six Nations champions Wales.

Chat, Cyril Baille and Emerick Setiano provide front-row cover, while Vincent Rattez, called up as a replacemen­t for Thomas Ramos, is preferred to Sofiane Guitoune as the backthree option from the bench.

"I can't say where we'll end up,"said Brunel.

"But inside, I really feel something very positive from these four months of adventure during which different generation­s of players have come together.

"We can but hope to capitalise on that feeling and use that energy... which can offer up something very, very interestin­g."

Should France find the consistenc­y Wales currently have, "We think we have a chance", Brunel said.

Flanker Ollivon added that France's World Cup pedigree, having played three finals and reached the semi-finals on six occasions, was not something on which the players dwelled.

"When you come into a competitio­n, you don't really think back to what's already past," he said.

"But France has a fantastic history in the World Cup, we know that and obviously want to stay at that level of performanc­e.

"Now we're in the quarterfin­als, we want to stay as long as possible." - AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia