Hansen held up by Dupont again, two Australian born players in Six Nations team of the tournament

By News / Wire

One of the vivid images of this year’s Six Nations championship was the almost comic vision of Ireland’s Australian wing star Mack Hansen desperately wriggling to touch down for a try but being held up in the seemingly superhuman clutches of Antoine Dupont on the French line.

Once more on Wednesday, Hansen was unable to break the bullocking French halfback’s mastery as Dupont was deservedly named player of the tournament in Europe’s annual championship for a record-equalling third time.

Hansen was one of three Irish players on the shortlist for the award, alongside Caelan Doris and Hugo Keenan, up against the French trio of backs Dupont, Thomas Ramos and Damian Penaud.

Hansen, stopped by Dupont (Photo by David Rogers/Getty I

But while Hansen, who won two man of the match awards during the tournament, could at least enjoy the most satisfying laugh with Ireland beating the French before going on to lift the grand slam and the championship itself, there was still no argument about who remains the best player in the European game.

“It showed his brute strength for a start – but it also showed what a smart player he is too,” reflected Canberra’s former Australia Under 20 player Hansen at the time about the remarkable moment in Paris when Dupont wrapped him up and stopped him scoring.

It was so freakish that former Wallabies skipper George Gregan called it a “Cirque du Soleil-type” performance.

“I’ve never before seen anyone go for someone’s hips to lift them off the ground so they can’t go forward,” admitted Hansen, who’s starred for Ireland since moving to Galway and opting to represent the nation of his mum’s birth.

“There was nothing I could really do about it. I think it shows what sort of high-calibre player he really is.”

It was the third time in four years that Dupont, a previous World Player of the Year, had taken the Six Nations top player prize as he became only the second player to earn a hat-trick of awards after Ireland great Brian O’Driscoll (2006, 2007 and 2009).

Fans were asked to vote from a shortlist of six nominees, with 26 per cent of the 138,000 voters plumping for Dupont, who was also selected in their ‘team of the tournament’.

Hansen didn’t make that select team but two other Australians did – Canberra’s Irish prop Finlay Bealham and Melbourne’s Scotland centre Sione Tuipulotu, who have also taken advantage of their British Isles’ family connections to play for their adopted countries.

1 Andrew Porter (Ireland), 2 Dan Sheehan (Ireland), 3 Finlay Bealham (Ireland), 4 Thibaud Flament (France), 5 James Ryan (Ireland), 6 Peter O’Mahony (Ireland), 7 Josh van der Flier (Ireland), 8 Caelan Doris (Ireland); 9 Antoine Dupont (France), 10 Johnny Sexton (Ireland), 11 James Lowe (Ireland), 12 Sione Tuipulotu (Scotland), 13 Huw Jones (Scotland), 14 Damian Penaud (France), 15 Hugo Keenan (Ireland).

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-30T04:24:17+00:00

Armchair Halfback

Roar Rookie


I don't think that's quite accurate in Finlay Bealham's context - he played lower league amateur club rugby in Ireland before getting a pro contract. He was never in any Australia pro squads or academies.

2023-03-30T04:19:15+00:00

Armchair Halfback

Roar Rookie


Played for Belfast Harlequins I think, so lower leagues off the AIL. Similar story to former Ireland flanker Andy Ward.

2023-03-30T00:29:49+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Heimlich manoeuver has been discredited JD, replaced by the 'Hindlick' manoeuver.

2023-03-29T23:27:24+00:00

HenryHoneyBalls

Roar Rookie


Finlay Bealham has lived in Ireland for about 13 years. Dont think he ever played pro rugby in Australia, he has an Irish wife and comes from an Irish/Australian family and is well settled in Galway. He is an Aussie but he came through the amateur club system in Ireland so is fairly Irish/Irish educated too.

2023-03-29T22:21:26+00:00

Simon_Sez

Roar Guru


It is great news that Australia contributes rugby talent to the Six Nations competition, providing their teams talent to showcase their competition. It will enable that competition and the various rugby unions to generate even more cash as it increases its capacity to sell TV and digital steaming rights for even greater amounts. The cascading effect will be more money to pick off even more up and coming Australian players with fat juicy contracts, with the cherry on top that you too get to play test rugby as well, but not for Australia. Now we know how the Fijians feel. The question is what are we going to do about it? I think we can all agree that leaving everything as it is with the hope more money comes in, compounded by trying to hang onto talent by offering big contracts to single players is the road to ruin. We wouldn’t really know anyway as the RA annual audited accounts from KPMG from FYE 2022 haven’t even been published yet. Anyone on the board at RA with any ideas? ….. crickets!!

2023-03-29T22:07:25+00:00

JD Kiwi

Roar Rookie


If I ever choke on something when I'm near the French team I know who I'd want to perform the heimlich maneuver! :laughing:

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