Championship favourites France got their Six Nations campaign off to a winning start as they sealed a 37-10 victory over a stubborn Italy side.
It was not the most auspicious of performances from Les Bleus, especially in the opening half-hour, but they eventually pulled away.
The Azzurri gave it a real go and stunned the Stade de France early on when 19-year-old Tommaso Menoncello touched down, but the hosts hit back and eventually emerged with a comfortable win.
Anthony Jelonch benefited from an Italian mistake to move the French in front before Gabin Villiere gave Fabien Galthie’s men an 18-10 advantage at the break.
In difficult conditions, mistakes continued to pervade their play in the second period but brilliantly worked tries for Villiere, who completed his hat-trick, and Damian Penaud secured the triumph.
France got on the board first through Melvyn Jaminet’s early penalty, but Italy were making the most of some ill-discipline from the hosts.
Their reward came in the 17th minute when Paolo Garbisi kicked towards the corner and debutant Menoncello grabbed the ball to cross.
That quietened the Paris crowd momentarily but France hit back eight minutes later as Jelonch intercepted a pass from Gloucester scrum-half Stephen Varney and raced 20 metres for the try.
After the two sides traded penalties and the lead, France struck again on the brink of half-time – swift passing through the middle left Jaminet and Villiere two on one, and Jaminet set up his team-mate before kicking the conversion to give the hosts an 18-10 lead at the break.
With breathing space, France looked slightly more assured when the teams re-emerged.
Jonathan Danty was stopped just short of the line two minutes into the second half, but it was only a temporary reprieve for Italy.
Five minutes later Gregory Alldritt fed Villiere who raced into the corner to give the hosts a 23-10 lead.
The bonus-point was confirmed as the game moved into the final 10 minutes, with Penaud exchanging passes with Antoine Dupont before touching down, with Jaminet adding the extras.
And there was just time for Villiere to complete his treble at the death, taking a short pass from Yoram Moefana to slide in and complete France’s first Six Nations hat-trick since Vincent Clerc in 2008.
No comments:
Post a Comment