The New Zealand Herald

Weakest French team in 60 years heading for Italian mediocrity

- Phil Gifford

France should have gone to Twickenham in a clown car for their ritual 44-8 humiliatio­n by England.

By tradition, the easy-beats in Six Nations rugby are the Italian team. The poor guys have basically become the Washington Generals of the oval ball. Over six decades, the Generals played around 16,000 games of basketball against the Harlem Globetrott­ers, and won once.

(“It felt like shooting Santa Claus,” said the Generals owner.)

But the way France are travelling now, they’re heading towards the same sort of mediocrity that Italy sadly showed yet again when they lost 26-15 to a leaden-footed Welsh side in Rome on Sunday.

The first French team I saw was in 1961 at Eden Park. They lost but were still pretty good. There have been some great sides since. In 1994, they came to New Zealand and hammered an All Blacks team that a year later made the World Cup final.

This year’s French model is the worst I’ve ever seen. The first 40 minutes against Wales a week ago, when France ran up 16 unanswered points with beautiful, angled, precise running and brilliant use of the ball in hand, was seemingly some sort of weird con game, bait for suckers like me to believe there might be a Gallic revival in the wind.

England played a terrific first half against the French at Twickenham, better than their victory over Ireland.

Jonny May is lightning in a bottle on the English wing, and all his three tries were richly deserved.

But if you believe body language tells a story, it was depressing to see not one Frenchman make even a token attempt at a charge down when Owen Farrell was taking conversion attempts out wide.

The only bright spots in the second half, when England fumbled their way almost down to the knocking-on, forward-passing, ball-dropping shambles that was France, came from referee Nigel Owens.

I was already an Owens fan when he spoke at an Auckland charity event for multiple sclerosis in 2017, and wowed us all with his honesty and self-deprecatio­n. It was a couple of days before a test at Eden Park, and he said, “Watch me closely as I run on to the field for the first time. You’ll see my lips moving as I say the mantra I always do before a game.” His spellbound audience waited for the words of wisdom. “Yes, I always

The first French team I saw was in 1961. This year’s French model is the worst I’ve ever seen.

say to myself, ‘Don’t f*** it up’.”

He defused a stupid bout of handbag swinging triggered by England prop Kyle Sinckler who was (I am not making this up) trying to pull a Frenchman’s hair out of his scrum cap.

After instantly awarding a penalty try to England, he had the humility to double check with his TMO that England’s Chris Ashton had been tackled without the ball by Gael Fickou. Unlike far too many northern referees, he has a genuine feel for the game, and the backbone to run things his way.

England’s coach Eddie Jones reckoned the second half against France was better than the first, because they kept France scoreless. Eddie has been known to talk in tongues, but this might have been a genuine reaction.

Defence will win games, and England’s defence is generally superb. What’s disconcert­ing is the Jones mindset that apparently is heartened more by not conceding a point in 40 minutes of the second half, rather than scoring 30 in the first. Lovers of free-flowing rugby might be advised to avoid the England-Wales test in Cardiff on Sunday week.

Footnote: Aussie expat coach Matt Williams was talking about the Irish attack when he used the phrase “as exciting as watching paint dry”, but I’d apply it to the whole test when Ireland beat Scotland 22-13.

And I’m sorry for picking on Owen Farrell, a hell of a goalkicker and a terrific general at first-five, but he really is a terrible tackler. Good on him for a strip of the ball from a French attacker but his one failed attempt at a head-on tackle had all the ferocity of a timid Morris dancer.

Phil Gifford joins Simon Barnett on the new Newstalk ZB Afternoons show from July.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The French showed no inclinatio­n to charge down conversion­s.
Photo / AP The French showed no inclinatio­n to charge down conversion­s.
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