France put trust in Ntamack for Six Nations decider

By News / Wire

Romain Ntamack will start at flyhalf for France in one of five changes for their Six Nations Championship decider against Scotland.

In their team for Friday’s big finale in Paris, Ntamack steps in for Matthieu Jalibert, who hurt his jaw in last Saturday’s dramatic 32-30 win against Wales.

Both those teams are still in contention for the title, although 2019 champions Wales remain the favourites despite missing out on the grand slam.

France, who have not won the title since 2010, need a bonus-point win and a 21-point margin of victory – or a 20-point victory and at least six tries – to pip Wales.

If France get a bonus-point win by exactly 20 points and score five tries, then the title would be shared for the first time since France and Wales were co-winners of the old Five Nations in 1988.

Coach Fabien Galthie has put his faith in Ntamack, who was among France’s best players last year and did well when he came on for Jalibert during the first half against Wales.

“Ntamack made a winning return for us last weekend, and he was very solid in a funny kind of game,” Galthie said when naming his team on Wednesday.

“He made good decisions and showed all of his talent. He will be running the game for us.”

Galthie has changed his second row with locks Bernard Le Roux and Swan Rebbadj replacing Romain Taofifenua and Paul Willemse, who is suspended following his red card against Wales.

The coach has also dropped winger Teddy Thomas and called up Arthur Vincent to centre.

Gael Fickou moves out of midfield and onto the left wing in place of Thomas, while Damian Penaud crosses over to the right wing in a positional switch.

The last change sees Anthony Jelonch preferred to Dylan Cretin at blindside flanker.

Galthie has made a surprising choice on the bench, leaving out flyhalf Louis Carbonel and instead using versatile fullback Anthony Bouthier as his flyhalf cover for Ntamack.

Scotland are fourth in the Six Nations but can finish second if they win by at least eight points and deny France a try bonus point.

“The match against France provides us with an opportunity to finish the Six Nations in our highest position,” Scotland coach Gregor Townsend said.

Flyhalf Finn Russell returns to their side as one of four changes from the 52-10 rout of Italy last Saturday.

Captain Stuart Hogg filled in for Russell against Italy but returns to fullback while Sean Maitland is dropped from the squad.

A new halves pairing sees Ali Price come in for Scott Steele, while Chris Harris replaces Huw Jones in midfield and hooker George Turner comes in for David Cherry.

The Crowd Says:

2021-03-25T14:57:20+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


That’s so true. France is and will always be French. Up and down; and sometimes wayyyyyy down.

2021-03-25T14:16:21+00:00

Kane

Roar Guru


Should've read your comment before I replied below :laughing:

2021-03-25T14:16:00+00:00

Kane

Roar Guru


The Wales v France game would have been the decider should France have beaten Scotland earlier so they would have known what they needed to achieve when playing Wales anyway? I understand it was France who broke covid protocols and they should have been punished for that but I don't think they gain anything by knowing what they need to win by

2021-03-25T13:19:48+00:00

Neil Back

Roar Rookie


Maybe Harry. But a known target like that can cause a team to overstretch rather than play 'organically'. And if there's one team that handles the favourite tag as badly as England, it's the French. If there's one team that loves the underdog tag as much as England, it's the Jocks. Hoping they both let rip.

2021-03-25T10:14:12+00:00

Faith

Roar Rookie


That's really the difference with this game as opposed to having played during the normal schedule - France know exactly what they need to do. Not sure why the headline says trust Ntamack - he was the first choice before injury and Jallibert coming in ...

2021-03-24T18:30:04+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


So, the permutations include FR winning 6N or Wales winning it or they share it. Seems to revolve around the 20-point margin (PD) and tries scored. Not sure this is totally on the up and up, with France's breaking of Covid protocols kind of giving them an edge (knowing exactly what they need, and Scotland having to adjust).

Read more at The Roar