Nothing to lose: Why rugby has everything to gain from Toulouse at the World Cup

By Nicholas Bishop / Expert

There is something special brewing down in the south of France, more specifically in the Haute-Garonne département.

French rugby, so long in the doldrums internationally, has a new spring in its stride, courtesy of the resurgence at club level of Stade Toulousain.

In its illustrious history, the Toulouse club has won more European Champions Cup gold medals (four) than anyone bar Irish province Leinster, but their decline has mirrored that of the French national team too exactly for comfort.

Toulouse’s most recent European triumph was in 2010, the same year in which France last won the Six Nations tournament. Coincidence? Probably not.

A vital element of the traditionally cavalier Toulousain approach, characterised by throwing caution to the wind and keeping the ball alive from impossibly deep positions, has always stirred the French rugby soul at the deepest level. Les Blues attack from the end of the world, and their supporters roar with pride.

Now the famous rouges et noirs are back with a vengeance, and the medieval pilgrimage route of Saint Jacques de Compstelle has become more than a historical curiosity to ardent rugby followers. It is the French rugby selectors who are now beating a path to the Stade Ernest-Wallon to marvel at some of the most vibrant young talents in the French game.

Toulouse won the domestic Top 14 league title in 2018-19 and reached the semi-finals of the European Champions Cup. The Leinster team who beat them at the knockout stage had already played them twice previously in their pool – losing away in France and winning the return in Dublin.

Toulouse was rated the most dangerous attacking side on Leinster’s schedule, and their threat drew the two most complete European performances out of the capital province in the Cup last year.

As Ireland centre Garry Ringrose said before the semi-final:

“There’s a lot of excitement around this match. We saw in the pool phase that Toulouse are a very difficult team to beat.

“They have a lot of experience in this competition and are dangerous in all positions. All the team are playing well, but we have to keep an eye out for [Cheslin] Kolbe, who has scored some incredible tries this season.”

Toulouse’s success has been sparked by the presence of two ex-All Black forwards up front in the shape of Jerome Kaino and Charlie Faumuina, and by a new generation of fearless young backs behind them.

Les rouges et noirs often play with a mix of halfbacks and back three players, and without conventional centres at all in midfield. Natural halves like Antoine Dupont and Sebastien Bezy at 9, and Zack Holmes and Romain Ntamack at 10 and 12, provide the bullets. Fullbacks and wingers like Sofiane Giutoune (who is pressed into number 13), Maxime Medard, Yoann Huget, Thomas Ramos and Kolbe then fire the ammunition.

That mix of distributors and highly skilled offloaders and line-breakers, with almost nothing in between, makes Toulouse extraordinarily hard to defend on turnover plays. They can shift the ball wide quickly and are lethal finishers in the 15-5 metre zones.

The opening Pool C game between France and Argentina gave a couple of early glimpses of the capabilities of the Toulouse backs. All of Dupont, Ntamack, Medard, Huget and Ramos were selected in the match-day squad:

Clermont’s Damien Penaud makes the break, but it is two beautifully weighted passes off the left hand by Ntamack and Medard, spanning the better part of 40 metres, which get the ball to him in a positive space out on the right.

In fact, there is very little choice but to move the ball wide, because none of the French forwards are showing much animation or urgency in the process of regrouping into their pods. There is a collective, and very Gallic, shrug of the shoulders which means that all the hard work will be left to Ntamack and Medard!

At the end of Penaud’s run, it is Medard and Dupont who are first up in support, because that is the attacking behaviour instilled at their club.

France were able to convert the opportunity a couple of phases later, via a mazy run by another winger playing at 13 in the Toulousain style, Virimi Vakatawa:

France’s second try in the 22nd minute was keyed by the involvement of the same three key players, with Medard making two terrific all-in-one transfers off his left hand, Vakatawa contributing an important offload, and Dupont on hand to finish the move:

As Garry Ringrose’s comments suggest, one player to whom Leinster paid special attention in the European games was Cheslin Kolbe, and he is a perfect fit for Toulouse’s ‘small man’ counter-attack philosophy.

Kolbe was selected on the Springbok right wing in the crunch group game against New Zealand. Despite his Shane Williams-like stature – he is listed at 5’7” and only 80 kilos – Kolbe is a not a defensive weakness, and this was perhaps the only aspect of the All Blacks’ preparation against South Africa which proved to be ineffective on the day.

While their attacks directed down Makazole Mapimpi’s left wing paid spectacular dividends, the probes against Kolbe ultimately only created chances for the Springboks.

New Zealand tested the diminutive winger under the high ball from their first attacking lineout:

All the while, they underestimated his ability to chase high kicks put up by the Springbok halves:

As we discovered in Europe with Leinster, Kolbe is also a terrier in defence, and attacks down his side have to be very carefully managed:

Kolbe first jags in off the right edge to snare Sam Cane and force the ball loose, then he collars Beauden Barrett in the follow-up, before wrapping up Sevu Reece. Three decisive actions, all accomplished in the space of six or seven seconds.

It is Kolbe’s ability with ball in hand which is so stupendous to witness, particularly for the local crowds in Japan. As a rugby nation which cannot produce physical specimens to compete with the likes of South Africa and New Zealand, it must be truly appreciative of the unique small-man skills displayed by Kolbe.

The All Blacks spun the roulette wheel of the kicking game once too often early in the second period:

Kolbe beats George Bridge to the ball before seeing off two other chasers in the follow-up.

A special mention should be made at this point about the excellence of the All Blacks’ scramble defence: Beauden Barrett does all of the running necessary to close off the infield option for Kolbe, which means Richie Mo’unga is left with only one side of the pitch to defend – a task he achieves with outstanding accuracy. If Mo’unga had been left one-on-one without support, it would have been a certain seven-pointer for the Bokke.

The lack of intelligence of a South African attack which did not once feature Kolbe as the spearhead from set plays will remain a mystery known only to their coaches.

Kolbe is a rapier in this area too – just watch this first try:

When Kolbe wanted the ball, he had to go and get it directly from the South African scrumhalf:

Cheslin Kolbe has to virtually pry the ball out of Jesse Kriel’s hands before setting off on another explosive run downfield. For South Africa, it is really a case of what might have been – and they will know that they have only themselves to blame.

Summary
The biggest positive underswell in French rugby for many a year is underpinned by the revival of the Toulouse club. Their results in the 2018-19 season indicate they are at the point of regaining former glories, and French fortunes at the national level may well mirror that upswing.

Toulouse have ex-All Blacks in Kaino and Faumuina up front and they now have the twin towers (Rory and Richie Arnold) in the second row. They have a new generation of adventurers in the backline – from Sebastien Bezy and Antoine Dupont at 9, to Romain Ntamack at 10 or 12, and a clutch of high-class performers from 13 outwards: Sofiane Guitoune, Yoann Huget, Maxime Medard, Thomas Ramos and Lucas Tauzin.

Above all they have Cheslin Kolbe, who is picking up the fluttering standard of the small man temporarily set down by Shane Williams in the modern era. Kolbe can handle the physical and aerial tasks, but he offers so much more besides – so many positives which are a direct result of his diminutive stature.

(Photo By Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Kolbe is the one Springbok back who, on the evidence of the weekend, would walk into the starting All Blacks backline. If the Springboks are to progress to the final stages of the competition, they will have to find more ways to utilise his range of attacking skills, and quickly.

They will not overcome Ireland in a likely quarter-final with a performance like they displayed Yokohama – not a chance.

The wider rugby audience can meanwhile enjoy the skills that Stade Toulousain players are showcasing on the world stage. A strong Toulouse means a strong France, and a strong France means a better game globally.

Maybe it is time for the pilgrimage to begin again, and lend it a modern flavour. Let’s whisper the names together, like rosary beads: Arles, Saint-Guilhem, Toulouse, Pampelune, Logrono, Burgos, Saint Jacques de Compstelle.

The Crowd Says:

2019-10-01T08:06:44+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Cheers Nick. Zack is another West Australian playing high level rugby so I was interested. Also a fly half who played some good games at ACT but when he came back to the Force he didn't see to do a lot. I remember Brock James did nothing in Aus but had a good career in France.

2019-09-29T04:20:13+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


Well Nick seems we are looking at an Ireland NZ quarter – or possibility Ireland or Scotland out in the group stage if they are not careful. The game against Japan yet again exposed Ireland’s biggest Achilles Heel…without Sexton, and as we saw in quarter final in the last WC and recent games in the UK and now against Japan…without Sexton they can look rudderless and show elements of panic as well…Even Joe looked visibly nervous and jittery in the coaching box as he saw the defeat coming ….Unlike sides like NZ – England – SA – Ireland have no player close to Sexton in class as a backup 10. This game illustrated the strength of Super rugby IMO as most of Japan either play in Super Rugby or have played there with the odd exception. At times Ireland struggled with the speed of the Japanese game and tried to slow it down and try as they did, they could not dominate the contact area either and Joe did not field and Irish B-team but and A- team and after all, have we not heard how much depth there is in UK rugby now? With Wales, Ireland and England leading the way? Premature perhaps? Or should Japan now be given tier one status? …I mean are Italy a better side than Japan right now? When was the last time Italy beat Ireland or the Boks? – the latter never…..

2019-09-29T00:45:26+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Nick the IRB head of Refs said it was a yellow....So either you believe that you know better than he does or you are wrong....lets say the Ref boss is paying $1.01.....You are out to $6.50

2019-09-29T00:38:51+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Bing thats a load of BS.....Im happy to say some ABs got away with a bit....But to say the Abs offences that they got away with are Red cards and to totally ignore the SA foul play that was not ruled on is nothing like your totally ignorant "above reproach" comment......For Neutral to claim that its stretching a longbow to suggest Mapimpi should have been YCed is delusional...The Ref boss said it should have been a yellow......Yet you claim he is correct and any NZer saying different is like Kearns?.....Give yourself an uppercut.....

2019-09-29T00:28:22+00:00

Jacko

Guest


seems like its you whinging about the french reffing Neutral.....All good when in your favour but SO BAD when it goes against you ( in NZs favour )......Did you not see the SA side do high tackles on Mounga and on Savea? The one on Savea went way to long and the ref was right there but does nothing......And you also claim the incident with Mounga's break was not a yellow.....I guess the IRB Ref boss saw it different as he came out and said it should have been a yellow.......Yep...a couple of NZ players got away with foul play.....No doubt well scrutinised by the citings people......and were not charged....But not 1 player was charged from that match so that means the SA players had the same favours shown to them .....

2019-09-29T00:09:29+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Ireland has to get thru to the 1/4s yet.....japan and Scotland could be the 2 going thru from that group.....Ireland going home if they dont improve but even if they do get thru.......They aint beating the Boks based on the form they are currently in

2019-09-28T07:03:13+00:00

Emery Ambrose

Roar Rookie


I think France could be a bit of a Dark horse this year, if there on they could make the Semi's

2019-09-28T06:47:56+00:00

riddler

Roar Rookie


Done!

AUTHOR

2019-09-28T06:43:01+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Go on then - but no gloating if you win... I ain't going to sit through a game with that going on in my lug! :stoked:

AUTHOR

2019-09-28T06:38:12+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Aye.

AUTHOR

2019-09-28T06:37:19+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


No, and I'm surprised they picked on Kolbe that way, and so persistently too. The guy's small but he really gets involved under the high ball, as the clips show...

AUTHOR

2019-09-28T06:35:41+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Well we had to do that a fair bit with Leinster last season, but still overcame the odds in the end!

AUTHOR

2019-09-28T06:34:04+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Ouch! - ripping the armpit hair out sounds painful H. Pity big Frans (the smaller one at THP) didn't get any reward at all for it :sick:

2019-09-27T20:11:09+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


The mindset of SA Rugby of big, bigger, biggest so hard to overcome. It requires a cultural shift... Not so easy. . Maybe impossible.

2019-09-27T18:57:42+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


SA and NZ were both offsides a lot; almost half the time, IMO. The ABs were better at escaping their scrum/LO misdeeds, and probably were better at the BD too.

2019-09-27T18:56:50+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


PSDT is sometimes the unluckiest player on the field. It was one of those days for him. Clotheslined by Read (and he will never ever whine about it) as he had a chance to moer a little scrumhalf, and then called for a knock-on hot on attack when it was not forward. Hey, NB!!!!!!!!!!!!! You see the magic of Malherbe. It's his bind! He can rip the armpit hair out and pull you down to the turf. It's beautiful.

2019-09-27T18:46:44+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


The only eating going on will be the Irish eating the grass after they miss Kolbe.

2019-09-27T18:44:45+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


The ABs are good at making you play the way the ABs want you to play. Have you ever seen the ABs hoist two garryowens inside an opponent's half on first phase ball?

2019-09-27T17:11:17+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


He looked amazing. I thought Medard also looked very, very good for France on the weekend. I thought they played the best football of the weekend in the first half, and he was a big part of that.

2019-09-27T16:24:59+00:00

ojp

Guest


'play some footy' ... Cheika style .. I like it :stoked:

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