{"id":292124,"date":"2023-10-13T14:38:16","date_gmt":"2023-10-13T14:38:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportstoft.com\/?p=292124"},"modified":"2023-10-13T14:38:16","modified_gmt":"2023-10-13T14:38:16","slug":"france-and-south-africa-prepare-to-go-to-dark-place-to-keep-world-cup-dream-alive","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportstoft.com\/rugby-union\/france-and-south-africa-prepare-to-go-to-dark-place-to-keep-world-cup-dream-alive\/","title":{"rendered":"France and South Africa prepare to go to \u2018dark place\u2019 to keep World Cup dream alive"},"content":{"rendered":"
France and South Africa played out a brutal Test match in Marseille last year <\/p>\n
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It was Steven Kitshoff who delivered the most chilling warning of what to expect at the Stade de France on Sunday evening. \u201cYou\u2019re going to have to go to a dark place quite early in this game,\u201d he grimaced.<\/p>\n
And as the flame-haired South African prop continued, the lengths to which his Springbok counterparts and their French foes might have to go in order to reach a Rugby World Cup semi-final were laid out even more clearly. \u201cBecause of where the physicality is going to be, it might get to a point where some players haven\u2019t been and we will see if both teams are willing to go to that dark spot,\u201d he concluded ominously.<\/p>\n
South Africa\u2019s 13-8 group-stage defeat to Ireland has been the most compellingly physical match of the tournament so far. The No 1 and No 2-ranked sides knocked seven bells out of each other in a vintage display of pure Test match rugby, but Sunday\u2019s quarter-final might just top it.<\/p>\n
The Springboks are renowned for their intensity and sanctioned brutality on the rugby field \u2013 it has long been their calling card. Opposition used to try to out-think or go round, rather than through, them and, while this sometimes worked, the South Africans often prevailed. See the 1995, 2007 and 2019 World Cups for examples.<\/p>\n
Now, the best teams seem to have tacitly acknowledged that you need to physically match, or even bully, them as Ireland so brilliantly did last month.<\/p>\n
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\u201cWhen teams play against the Springboks, they always talk about the physicality of the game,\u201d smiled Kitshoff. \u201cIreland and Tonga were probably two of the toughest games I have played all year. We always try to make it as physical as possible but we know France are going to bring a lot of physicality.\u201d<\/p>\n
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Steven Kitshoff has warned both teams will have to go to a dark place in Sunday\u2019s quarter-final <\/p>\n
The almost anti-Springbok stereotype of the flashy, unpredictable France side fuelled by Latin flair has dissipated. They are, of course, still capable of mesmerising brilliance through the likes of Damian Penaud, Matthieu Jalibert or returning captain Antoine Dupont \u2013 whose recovery from a fractured cheekbone has given the whole country a lift \u2013 but the tired \u2018you don\u2019t know which France will turn up\u2019 clich\u00e9 has long since been disproven.<\/p>\n
They are a well-oiled, ruthless machine under Fabien Galthie, who are more than willing to go toe to toe with the South Africans up front as proven last November in Marseille when they ground their way to a brutal 30-26 triumph over Jacques Nienaber\u2019s men in a gruelling Test match that saw both Dupont and Pieter-Steph du Toit sent off.<\/p>\n
\u201cViolent is the right word,\u201d said France flanker Charles Ollivon when reflecting on that clash this week. \u201cWe\u2019re expecting the same kind of match. We know the South African style. They\u2019re well prepared to make a physical mark on their opponents. They\u2019ll stay true to themselves. We\u2019ll be ready.\u201d<\/p>\n
Dupont\u2019s cheekbone, fractured after a high shot from Namibia captain Johan Deysel during the pool match between the sides, had become a topic of national conversation and debate. His quickfire, three-week recovery that enabled him to be named in the starting line-up for this quarter-final gives a spark to Les Bleus and the 80,000 fans who will pile into the Stade de France \u2013 even though his deputy Maxime Lucu admirably stepped up in his absence for the tail-end of the pool stage.<\/p>\n
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Antoine Dupont will wear a scrum cap for added protection as he recovers from a fractured cheekbone <\/p>\n
\u201cHaving him back gives us a lot of confidence,\u201d admitted fly half Jalibert. \u201cHe puts a fear in the opponents, they try to find solutions to counter him and that gives us more space. Even in a scrum cap [Dupont will wear the headgear at the request of his surgeon to provide added protection], he will be playing at 100 per cent of his ability.\u201d<\/p>\n
Facing South Africa, of all teams, while still recovering from a facial injury is perhaps not ideal but the scrum half is ready for the challenge and sounds prepared to go to that \u2018dark place\u2019 that Kitshoff claims will be required.<\/p>\n
\u201cIn matches with these levels of intensity, there\u2019s always pain, whether physical or mental,\u201d said Dupont. \u201cWe have to be willing to suffer to achieve what we want. We have very high goals. We know what we have to do and that it\u2019s going to be very tough from start to finish. If we\u2019re not ready for that, we\u2019re not ready to go where we want to go.”<\/p>\n
With promises of suffering, pain, violence and dark places, this won\u2019t be a clash for the faint-hearted, but the rewards for those who can dig deepest in Paris will be huge.<\/p>\n
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