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France team to face Ireland in Women's Six Nations opener

PARIS, FRANCE - JULY 30: Seraphine Okemba #1 of Team France scores her team's first try during the Women's Rugby Sevens Women's Placing 5-8 match between Team France and Team Ireland on day four of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de France on July 30, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

Gaelle Mignot and David Ortiz have named their side to face Ireland in the first round of the Guinness Women’s Six Nations on 22 March.

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The team will be led by co-captains Manae Feleu, who starts in the second row (alongside Madoussou Fall-Raclot), and Marine Menager, who is named on the left wing.

From their last outing against New Zealand in WXV 1 in October 2024, Agathe Sochat and Yllana Brosseau retain their positions at hooker and loosehead prop respectively and will be joined in the front row by Rose Bernadou. The tighthead was a replacement in their last match but is named to start against Ireland with Assia Khalfaoui unavailable due to a knee injury.

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‘This Energy Never Stops’ – Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025

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‘This Energy Never Stops’ – Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025

Seraphine Okemba and Lea Champon will make their first Six Nations appearances, the latter starting on the bench and sevens star Okemba, who switched to XVs during WXV,  is named to start at openside flanker alongside Charlotte Escudero and Teani Feleu in the back row.

Carla Arbez will make her first appearance for France since November 2023 and will start at fly-half alongside the most-capped player in the current squad, scrum-half Pauline Bourdon Sansus (61 caps).

The centre partnership of Gabrielle Vernier and Nassira Konde remains the same as their three WXV matches last year.

Morgane Bourgeois, who missed WXV, will start at full-back, and the right wing will be occupied by Mélissande Llorems Vignères.

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France won just one match at WXV, against the USA, which saw them finish second from last in Vancouver. Les Bleues last won the Women’s Six Nations title in 2018 and will be eager to replicate the victory of their men’s team in the Men’s Six Nations.

Fixture
Womens Six Nations
Ireland Women
15 - 27
Full-time
France Women
All Stats and Data

France team vs Ireland, Kingspan Stadium, 22 March

15. Morgane Bourgeois (Stade Bordelais)

14. Melissande Llorems Vignères (Blagnac RF)

13. Nassira Konde (Stade Bordelais)

12. Gabrielle Vernier (Blagnac RF)

11. Marine Menager (Montpellier HR) CC

10. Carla Arbez (Stade Bordelais)

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9. Pauline Bourdon-Sansus (Stade Toulousain)

1. Yllana Brosseau (Stade Bordelais)

2. Agathe Sochat (Stade Bordelais)

3. Rose Bernadou (Montpellier HR)

4. Manae Feleu (FC Grenoble Amazones) CC

5. Madoussou Fall-Raclot (Stade Bordelais)

6. Charlotte Escudero (Stade Toulousain)

7. Seraphine Okemba (LOU Rugby)

8. Teani Feleu (FC Grenoble Amazones)

Replacements

16. Manon Bigot (Blagnac RF)

17. Ambre Mwayembe (FC Grenoble Amazones)

18. Clara Joyeux (Blagnac RF)

19. Axelle Berthoumieu (Blagnac RF)

20. Lea Champon (FC Grenoble Amazones)

21. Alexandra Chambon (FC Grenoble Amazones)

22. Lina Queyroi (Stade Toulousain)

23. Emilie Boulard (Blagnac RF)

New tickets for Women’s Rugby World Cup 2025 are now available, with prices starting at £10 for adults and £5 for children. Buy now!

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t
takata 1 hour ago
Can Les Bleus avoid a Black-wash in New Zealand?

Lost on the theory of why it would benefit a WC as well.

Where did I develop a theory about something benefiting the WC as well?!

It’s me lost 😊


I’m fully aware that French International players participation into Top 14, European Cups & 6 Nations will hinder their preparation for a WC. Its nothing new. Galthié & Co also noted that everything didn’t go the way it was planned in 2020 when he took over the national team. They had made detailed projections for players experience, number of caps, etc. that weren’t realistic in the long run to 2023 WC.


As for player welfare, since 2020, they have asked their players’ clubs to record and give them full data access to some set of metrics they had defined together concerning more than 120 targeted players (form U20 to senior players). Meanwhile, they were also frequently interviewing them in order to control their psychological state and motivation.


So I’m not particularly worried about Galthié’s ability to precisely know the real condition, mental & physical, of anyone he’s going to select to play for the team. From my humble level of observation, what I would guess about his current strategy, taking into account all those realistic limitations (game time, wellness, etc.) he is facing, is that he is trying to replicate for the national team what the clubs are doing in Top 14, in particular Toulouse (and now Bordeaux as well) since many seasons:


- drill as many quality players, as young as possible, to the core game plan and don’t build your team around individualities; then rotate players depending on who’s available for the day and keep the system flowing.

332 Go to comments
I
IkeaBoy 2 hours ago
Can Les Bleus avoid a Black-wash in New Zealand?

Forgive me, I meant BILLIONAIRES.


Altrad (Montpellier), Lorenzetti (Racing 92) & Wild (Stade Francais) have a combined NET worth of more than €10 billion! Altrad even gets to kit sponsor the national team despite the conflict of interest that would bring.


They are all cash cows as teams who go some length without winning major trophies still yield huge returns on the money their owners pump into them. The prize money is of little consequence even to serial winners. Any time they need a cash injection, they just hit up an investment partner.


Fiducial – the largest private shareholder in the league - has a 12% interest in Toulouse. They wouldn’t have to pay much in to get a cut of the €700 million broadcast deal, the bulk of which goes to the Top 14.  


Dupont – the league and indeed the games poster boy – is the product of rural dairy farmers rather fittingly as he is milked. His salary is a fraction of what he generates for his club, his country and for the sport.  Cash cow. And now recovering from his second major injury in as many years.


The clubs certainly don’t mess about when it comes to pumping money into the game but look at it in inflation terms.  It’s never at a higher rate year on year than the increase in their TV and broadcast deals. 


The club game has always been France’s priority. They got kicked out of the 5 Nations for almost 15 years because they paid players to play the game at club level despite its amateur status at the time. They were so very resistant to the eventual professionalism of the game. And openly so.


Their former Vichy government quite literally banned rugby league as a sport to clear the way for rugby union!


It’s a great league to watch and well supported but it’s a money league.  If you are going to mix metaphors and compare sports it’s not the French soccer league but the Saudi oil leagues that is a better comparison.  That’s what the Top 14 is in relative terms.


A lot of their current dealings around salary caps are shady. Proper shady. It was only a couple of seasons ago when Jaminet was ‘loaned’ 450K as a disguised payment to buy out his own contract to then move clubs. Interest free as well…

332 Go to comments
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