Philippe Saint-Andre has just weeks remaining as France rugby coach, but he hopes the moment he can say: ‘I told you so’ to his many critics is imminent as they embark on their Rugby World Cup campaign against Italy today.
The 48-year-old former France captain believes he can mount a serious challenge to land France their first World Cup as he sends his troops into battle at Twickenham against an Italy side deprived of their one world-class player, inspirational captain Sergio Parisse.
Anything but a convincing victory over the Italians would be considered yet another below-par performance and hardly build confidence that they can beat Pool D favorites and Six Nations champions Ireland, a side that Saint-Andre has yet to get the better of in four meetings.
Photo: AP
Saint-Andre — who is to be replaced by Guy Noves after the final whistle has been blown on France’s tournament — is only without injured star center Wesley Fofana for the match, and has tried to ease the pressure on his players by telling them to go out and enjoy themselves.
“I have lined up my best team at the moment, the most in-form,” said Saint-Andre, who goes into the game on the back of a rare pair of successive wins in their warm-up games against England and Scotland.
“We have been preparing for this since July 6 and the players are really champing at the bit to get going,” he said.
“I feel that they are in a good place, but what I have told them is it is crucial not to play the game inside their heads before it takes place on Saturday,” Saint-Andre said.
“What is important is that the players don’t put too much pressure on themselves. That they run out onto the pitch with a smile on their faces. It is a match of rugby with a lot of extras thrown in. More spectators, more pressure, more press... but it remains just a rugby match,” he added.
Saint-Andre has been criticized for not sticking with a regular halfback partnership throughout his reign, but belatedly he appears to have fixed that as he lines up Toulon duo, the mercurial veteran Frederic Michalak and scrumhalf Sebastien Tillous-Borde for the third successive match.
Saint-Andre’s woes pale in comparison to those of his compatriot and Italy coach Jacques Brunel, who aside from losing Parisse for the match — he has not yet recovered sufficiently from an operation last week — has been assailed by former Italy player Mirco Bergamasco over losing the dressing room.
“He has failed to create a group, both on and off the pitch,” Bergamasco said earlier this week.
“He usually only refers to four or five players and forgets the rest, and that’s not enough when there are 31 [players in the squad],” he said.
“When one of these four or five players is missing, the squad loses belief and collapses,” added Bergamasco, whose brother Mauro, tellingly perhaps, did not make the squad when Brunel announced the team a day after his remarks.
Brunel, who as forwards coach under Bernard Laporte was part of the France setup that reached successive Rugby World Cup semi-finals in 2003 and 2007, pushed all that aside and said his team has the ability to match the best in the world.
“I came to Italy in 2011 with the goal of turning the team into one that could rival the best in the world,” the 61-year-old said.
“It has not happened all the time, it has on some occasions, but not often enough to my liking. But the final goal was to reach the World Cup quarter-finals [which would be the first time ever].” Brunel said. “It is still possible, despite the results of late [they lost all their warm-up games, twice to Scotland and once to Wales], which was not what we wished for.”
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