Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Saint-Andre acclaims French steel

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France coach Philippe Saint-Andre was known as a dazzling, fleet-footed winger in his illustriou­s playing days, the epitome of socalled “French flair”.

But Saint-Andre has been able to instil a steely level of defensive nous in his team, demonstrat­ed as Les Bleus ran out convincing 33-6 victors over Australia at the Stade de France in their first November internatio­nal.

Saturday's victory was a first over the Wal- labies since 2005 and the result fell just one point short of their record win of 34-6 dating back to 1976.

PARIS (AFP) - France coach Philippe Saint-Andre was known as a dazzling, fleet-footed winger in his illustriou­s playing days, the epitome of so-called “French flair”.

But SaintAndre has been able to instil a steely level of defensive nous in his team, demonstrat­ed as Les Bleus ran out convincing 33-6 victors over Australia at the Stade de France in their first November internatio­nal.

Saturday's victory was a first over the Wallabies since 2005 and the result fell just one point short of their record win of 34-6 dating back to 1976.

The home side scored three tries to none, man-of-the-match Frederic Mi- chalak also contributi­ng 15 points with a perfect kicking record of six from six, including a snap drop-goal.

The Wallabies had only two first-half Mike Harris penalties to their credit.

“I'm proud of my players,” said SaintAndre. “It was a quality game. We went into it wanting to play in a confrontat­ional way.

“We produced a great defence, moving up quickly and were very aggressive at the ruck. That was the key to the match.

“When you see what other southern hemisphere countries did today, South Africa beating Ireland and Argentina beating Wales, I've told my players to enjoy the win because it's not often you beat Australia, especial- ly by 30 points.” Much of the pregame hyperbole was given to the absence of captain Thierry Dusautoir and No 8 Imanol Harinordoq­uy in the backrow.

But the duo were not missed as replacemen­ts Yannick Nyanga and Louis Picamoles both produced outstandin­g performanc­es.

Saint-Andre had talked before the match of the dawning of a new era in French rugby with a cyclical rotation of retiring or injured older players in full swing.

And he offered new caps to loose- head prop Yannick Forestier and lock Jocelino Suta, with Sebastien Vahaamahin­a also coming off the bench in his first outing in the blue shirt.

Scrum-half Maxime Machenaud was winning just his second cap and full-back Brice Dulin his third.

“We had to inject some fresh blood into the squad because of injuries, but everyone performed well,” SaintAndre said.

“The likes of Francois Trinh-Duc and Morgan Parra offered a lot off the bench and the three new caps all came through in impressive style.

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 ??  ?? France's Vincent Debaty (L) and Pascal Pape celebrate after beating Australia during their team's rugby test match at the Stade de France stadium in Saint-Denis, - REUTERS
France's Vincent Debaty (L) and Pascal Pape celebrate after beating Australia during their team's rugby test match at the Stade de France stadium in Saint-Denis, - REUTERS
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