French Rugby Dominance: Bordeaux, Montpellier, and France Secure European Titles
En resumen
French rugby teams achieved a clean sweep in European competitions, with Bordeaux Begles retaining their Champions Cup title, Montpellier winning the Challenge Cup, and France winning the Six Nations.
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Por qué importa
French men's rugby teams have completed a clean sweep of European competitions, with Bordeaux Begles winning the Champions Cup, Montpellier winning the Challenge Cup, and France winning the Six Nations. This dominance highlights a shift in European rugby, with French clubs prioritizing European glory and possessing the financial means to attract top talent.
Six Nations. Champions Cup. Challenge Cup.
Bordeaux Begles' demolition job over Leinster completed the European clean sweep for French men's rugby teams.
Leinster, a side full to the brim of Irish internationals, did not have an answer as Bordeaux romped to a 41-19 victory in Bilbao to become only the sixth side to retain their European crown.
That came less than 24 hours after Montpellier put in a similar showing against Ulster in the Challenge Cup final as they won the competition for the third time.
Earlier in the year, after a dramatic conclusion to a thrilling tournament, France also retained their Six Nations title at the expense of Ireland.
For Bordeaux, according to their Irish attack coach Noel McNamara, their inspiration came from Rory McIlroy, who won the Masters for the second time in April as he backed up his historic wait for the Green Jacket.
The irony of a player from Northern Ireland being used as motivation will not be lost.
"We spoke about Rory McIlroy in the lead-up to the quarter-final against Toulouse," McNamara told the BBC's Rugby Union Weekly podcast.
"There's a beautiful ad that said good players want one Green Jacket and really good players want two, and we've got fantastic players.
"That's what makes the game of rugby wonderful. They made a decision that one isn't enough. The challenge for us now is we're a young club, we're a new club and it's continuing to set that standard."
Bordeaux did it the hard way. They beat the United Rugby Championship holders Leinster in the final.
Before that, they battled past reigning English Prem champions Bath in the last four and disposed of Top 14 champions Toulouse in the quarter-finals.
That impressive run of wins underlines how far Bordeaux - who were only formed in 2006 after the merger of two clubs - are ahead of the rest of Europe.
Behind a powerful yet athletic pack, player of the tournament Louis Bielle-Biarrey's ability to conjure magic out of nowhere translates as well from the French jersey to his club colours.
In Maxime Lucu, they have arguably the best scrum-half currently playing rugby, which is saying something when Antoine Dupont is the national team captain, and in fly-half Mathieu Jalibert they have a world-class operator to pull the strings.
Lucu and Jalibert's partnership - which shone for France when Dupont was sidelined with a knee injury - goes beyond what you see on the pitch.
"It's no happy accident," said McNamara. They make the effort to connect. They've been together for quite a long time.
"I think there's a really nice symbiosis between the two of them, but honestly a lot of it is work, it's connecting off the pitch, it's preparation and it's understanding what they see."
Behind it all, says McNamara, is a "very straightforward mindset" and "part of our identity" is to celebrate the player who wins a big collision or a crucial turnover as much as the team-mate who scores the try.
"It's something that really suits our profile and something we've worked really hard to build good habits around," he added.
"I think that's probably where we've probably come on a little bit even this year, just understanding the effort and the work that goes in to create those moments where we're going to strike, rather than just when that moment comes."
It is those habits that will drive Bordeaux's bid to match the great Toulon side of 2013-2015 who won three successive Champions Cups.
Being second best has been a theme this season, too, with Andy Farrell's Ireland and Ulster also the best of the rest in the other competitions.
Tony McWhirter, a 1999 European Cup winner with Ulster, feels French rugby "is completely different" as sides target European glory as a priority.
He said France have the money to build their club structure around the best players in the game, while Ireland's focus is on developing the international side.
"You could see what it meant to Bordeaux to win it, and the same with Montpellier," McWhirter said on the Ireland Rugby Social podcast.
"The issue is we are talking about taking ourselves from being second, and the problem from the weekend is that it shows we are probably not close enough to make that move to be number one.
"We're not too far away and we're building to get there, but French rugby is in a different place at the minute."
Preguntas abiertas
- Will this French dominance continue in future seasons?
- How will other nations adapt to the financial and performance gap with French clubs?
- What is the long-term impact on the development of international rugby outside of France?




