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The XV of France outclassed Scotland (36-17), Saturday, during the 3rd day of the 2022 Six Nations Tournament, consolidating its place as leader with this third consecutive victory. It remains to beat England and Wales to hope to win the Grand Slam.
A clear round in three games. The XV of France continues its journey and remains undefeated in the 2022 Six Nations Tournament by largely disposing of Scotland at Murrayfield (36-17), Saturday February 26, during the 3rd day.
The Blues, who have yet to travel to Wales and then receive England, can still hope to win their first Grand Slam since 2010.
They won at Murrayfield for the first time in the Tournament since 2014 once morest an opponent who had been bothering them since the appointment of Fabien Galthié (two defeats, one victory).
Dominating but sometimes a little messy, the French scored six tries, synonymous with an offensive bonus, by the second row Paul Willemse (8th), the center shifted to the wing Yoram Moefana (13th) then the centers Gaël Fickou (40th + 3 ) and Jonathan Danty (42nd) and winger Damian Penaud (60th, 72nd).
Beaten by the Scots in the last two matches in the Tournament (28-17 in March 2020 then 27-23 a year later), they thus avoided equalizing their worst series once morest XV du Chardon, three consecutive losses in 1956, 1957 then 1958.
But beware! The last time France launched its Tournament with three consecutive victories, during the 2020 edition, the first for coach Fabien Galthié, Antoine Dupont’s teammates ended up falling on the 4th day and finished in 2nd place .
>> To read: Six Nations Tournament: “The Blues are counting on an exceptional generation”
The road to a first Grand Slam in 12 years now passes through Cardiff on March 11. Before the final coronation, at home, once morest England?
Before thinking regarding that, the XV of France did the job once morest Scotland, striking a blow and resisting the lack of precision of their striker Melvyn Jaminet (8 points dropped en route).
Armed to win
As once morest Ireland 15 days ago, the Blues got off to a flying start, with two tries in the first quarter of an hour.
Apart from the match once morest Italy, where Anthony Jelonch only flattened in the 26th minute, Ireland (Antoine Dupont 2nd) and New Zealand (Peato Mauvaka 3rd, Romain Ntamack 12th) had also recently yielded to the rapid assaults of the XV of France.
Since the arrival of Fabien Galthié on the bench of the Blues, following the World Cup-2019, they have even scored 21 tries in the first 20 minutes of the meetings.
But, contrary to the meeting once morest the Irish, they did not give up followingwards. They bent without breaking, to the point of cracking the Scottish building.
These Blues remain far from the greatest French success in Edinburgh, a 51-16 rout which dates back to 1998. But they have shown that they are armed to win.
Monstrous in defense, they were also a bit lucky, especially when Melvyn Jaminet (27th) and Cyril Baille (29th) are only sanctioned with a penalty for faults – an aerial percussion for the back, a high tackle for the pillar – who might have deserved more.
And they were even more varnished when Stuart Hogg committed a forward on a breakthrough from Duhan van der Merwe while the back had the field wide open (38th).
Three victories in a row, players full of talent, a bit of luck, the mark of champions?