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By Jean-Paul Couret
MARCOUSSIS, France, Oct 9 (Reuters) - Imanol Harinordoquy is
relishing the chance to test his strength against a South
African side he regards as having the "nastiest" players in the
world when France face the Springboks on Friday.
"South Africa are world champions, they are the best team in
the world but they also are the nastiest and most physical team
in the world. A team that is always trying to hurt," the number
eight who will switch to flanker to bring more power to the
French pack, told journalists on Monday.
"Of course, they play inside the rules, they don't stamp on
you or knee you because now if you do that it's a yellow card or
even a red card," he added.
"Our sport is changing but the fundamentals are the same. A
rugby game, and particularly a game against the Springboks, is
above all a fight between two packs of forwards."
Asked if he agreed with Lucien Mias, captain of the first
France team to win a test in South Africa in 1958 who said that
"in a sport of sacrifice, the Springboks have decided once and
for all to be the butcher rather than the lamb", he answered:
"Yes, you could say they are butchers but I can assure you
we are not going to be the lambs on Friday."
The laugh which followed that sentence was clearly a sign
the 29-year-old with 56 caps was approaching the game with a
great respect for the Springboks.
"They don't play a very sophisticated game but they always
try to break their opponents defence, they are very strong on
the tackle, and in the rucks, their line-out is superb and they
are hefty in the physical duels," he said.
"We beat them last time we met but it was in 2006 (36-26 in
Cape Town) and they were rebuilding their team. Friday's test
will be another story, winning the World Cup has given them a
lot of confidence and they can hammer any team in the world," he
added.
"To match them, we'll have to be very strong on the
fundamentals of the game, do simple things but do them well even
if sometimes it's the most difficult. I'm sure we can do it but
we'll have to be at our best and play with a lot of solidarity."
(Editing by Alison Wildey; To query or comment on this story
e-mail sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)
(jean-paul.couret@thomsonreuters.com; +33 1 49 49 53 70;
Reuters Messaging: jean-paul.couret.reuters.com@reuters.net; For
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[RUGU-LEN] for more rugby stories Updated on Monday, Nov 9, 2009 12:14 pm, EST Email to a Friend | View Popular
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