Thursday, September 21, 2023

France vs Namibia LIVE! Rugby World Cup 2023 match stream

 

France vs Namibia - LIVE!

France will be keen to put on a show in front of their home fans in Marseille tonight as they take on Namibia. It’s two wins from two so far at the Rugby World Cup for Les Blues, their bid for glory on home soil firmly on track, and there is little chance of it being derailed here.

After a less than convincing win over Uruguay last time out, France have named what is close to a full-strength side tonight. The likes of Antoine Dupont, Thomas Ramos and Damian Penaud return, the full focus very much on Namibia with a fortnight break to come before the final Pool A fixture against Italy.

Namibia v France live score and video online live stream starts on 21 September 2023 at 19:00 UTC at Orange Vélodrome, Marseille, France. The match is a part of the Rugby World Cup 2023 Pool A.

France will be looking to put on a show in front of their home fans in Marseille tonight as they take on Namibia. It’s two wins from two so far at the Rugby World Cup for Les Blues, their bid for glory on home soil firmly on track, and there is little chance of it being derailed here.

France coach Fabien Galthié is not taking any risks with this match, making 12 changes to the side that struggled to get the better of a spirited Uruguay last Thursday.

He’s selected a strong 23 for this match, including Cyril Baille and Jonathan Danty who are both eager for game time on their return from injury, and Antoine Dupont, who has yet to lose a match at home since taking over as captain. Only Cameron Woki, Louis Bielle Biarry, and Anthony Jelonch retain their spots in the starting line-up from Lille – and the latter would have moved to the flank but for a slight injury concern over Grégory Alldritt.

The Welwitschias, meanwhile, have conceded 123 points and 18 tries in their two matches to date at Rugby World Cup 2023, managing only one try and 11 points of their own in reply.

FIXTURE: France v Namibia

GROUND: Stade de Marseille (67,847)

KICK-OFF: 21:00 local time (GMT+2)

FIXTURE HISTORY Current France team manager Raphaël Ibañez will maintain an unlikely record when the match kicks off in Marseille.

He was captain in 1999, when France played Namibia for the first time, and he was on the bench for their second meeting eight years later, at Toulouse – when Vincent Clerc scored a hat-trick in an 87-10 victory.

Although he’s not involved directly on the pitch this time, France 2023 continues his run of being involved in every match between the two sides over a 24-year period.

MEMORABLE MATCH As well as the 2007 match in Toulouse, France and Namibia met at RWC 1999 in Bordeaux. As well as Ibañez’s involvement, current Toulouse manager Ugo Mola scored a hat-trick from full-back. Former France coach Marc Lievrement started in the back-row, and Romain Ntamack’s father Emile was on the wing.

KEY TALKING POINT Les Bleus’ squad for this match. Squad rotation is very much the name of the game here, but Galthié and France expected a convincing, bonus-point win over Uruguay in Lille. What unfolded was not convincing, nor did it come with a try-scoring bonus.

That means, although France still hold their Rugby World Cup destiny in their hands, suddenly there’s no room for error in their final two matches, here against Namibia, or against Italy in Lyon on 6 October.

All of which, in turn, explain that France squad. They could do with points, and they have a good-sized break ahead of their next match.

PLAYER HEAD-TO-HEAD Gaël Fickou v Johan Deysel. Two experienced no-backward-step centres go head to head in the middle of the pitch in Marseille.

STATS-AMAZING In losing 58-14 to New Zealand in their opening game at RWC 2015, Namibia – a nation still looking for their first tournament win after 24 matches to date – brought up the unwanted record of conceding 1,000 points at Rugby World Cups. Only four other teams have done so: USA, Canada, Romania and Japan.

REF WATCH Matthew Carley (England). This is Carley’s second match as a Rugby World Cup referee after being a reserve at the tournament in Japan four years ago. His first match was the epic encounter between Wales and Fiji in Bordeaux on the first weekend of the competition.

TEAMS FRANCE Thomas Ramos; Damian Penaud, Gaël Fickou, Jonathan Danty, Louis Bielle-Biarrey; Matthieu Jalibert, Antoine Dupont (captain); Cyril Baille, Peato Mauvaka, Uini Atonio; Cameron Woki, Thibaud Flament; François Cros, Charles Ollivon, Anthony Jelonch

Replacements: Pierre Bourgarit, Reda Wardi, Dorian Aldegheri, Romain Taofifenua, Paul Boudehent, Baptiste Couilloud, Yoram Moefana, Melvyn Jaminet

NAMIBIA Andre van der Bergh; Gerswin Mouton, Johan Deysel (captain), Danco Burger, JC Greyling; Cliven Loubser, Jacques Theron; Desiderius Sethie, Louis van der Westhuizen, Johan Coetzee; Mahepisa Tjeriko, Adriaan Ludick; Max Katjijeko, Johan Retief, Prince Gaoseb

Replacements: Obert Nortje, Jason Benade, Haitembu Shifuka, PJ Van Lill, Richard Hardwick, Oela Blaauw, Alcino Izaacs, Divan Rossouw

After a less than convincing win over Uruguay last time out, France have named what is close to a full-strength side tonight. The likes of Antoine Dupont, Thomas Ramos and Damian Penaud return, the full focus very much on Namibia with a fortnight break to come before the final Pool A fixture against Italy.

Namibia have lost all 24 of their World Cup matches and have already been heavily beaten New Zealand and Italy at this tournament. A long night looks to be in store for the African side, who will do well to keep the scoreline respectable.