Teulet, un pro du pied au chevet des Bleues
Samedi dernier, au coup de sifflet final entérinant la victoire des Bleues sur l’Irlande (37-18), Romain Teulet n’a sans doute pas pu contenir un petit sourire de satisfaction. Et pas seulement par chauvinisme patriotique. Les buteuses françaises du jour (Lina Queyroi puis Morgane Bourgeois en fin de match) venaient de signer un 100 % au pied face aux perches, le royaume de l’ancien artificier en chef du Castres Olympique.
Deuxième meilleur réalisateur de l’histoire du Top 14 (derrière Richard Dourthe), auteur de plus de 3000 points avec son club de toujours, Romain Teulet a en effet élevé le coup de pied placé au rang d’art. Obsessionnel de la chose, celui qui confiait avoir « toujours un ballon et une paire de crampons dans le coffre » de sa voiture distille désormais ces astuces et son expérience auprès des joueuses de David Ortiz et Gaëlle Mignot.
« On collabore avec Romain sur l’année », étayait cette dernière ce jeudi, lors de la conférence de presse qui a suivi l’annonce de l’équipe. « Il est en contact permanent avec Sylvain Mirande, responsable des trois-quarts qui gère aussi ce secteur-là. Romain reviendra avec nous sur la fin du Tournoi », et assurera à distance le suivi des séances de jeu au pied, qui vont se poursuivre en son absence.
Plus concrètement, Teulet supervise depuis le début de sa mission six joueuses du groupe France (Queyroi, Bourgeois, Boulard et Vernier, plus les absentes Duces et Arbez), auxquelles il faudra sans doute ajouter Lina Tuy, qui déboule en équipe de France, et Caroline Drouin, actuellement blessée.
« C’est top de l’avoir »
« J’aime travailler les mises en situation et le travail technique, explique l’ancien arrière dans L’Equipe. On fait un rappel d’ancrage sur la technique, sur la tenue du ballon, les mains, les doigts. […] Petit à petit, j’essaie de leur amener une routine là-dessus, que ce ne soit pas le hasard. En fonction du jeu au pied qu’elles utilisent, je prends des choses très simples, très faciles à retenir sur les données techniques pour leur amener du confort, de la confiance dans la répétition, pour avoir ensuite un jeu au pied efficace. »
Les joueuses, en tout cas, en redemandent. « C’est hyper bénéfique pour nous, s’enthousiasme Emilie Boulard. On a eu la chance de l’avoir en club, il est venu faire quelques interventions pour optimiser cet atelier. Il nous apporte énormément. Quand on est avec lui, on travaille uniquement le jeu au pied. On n’a pas forcément le temps pour le faire sur des séances en équipe complète ou même sur une séance de trois-quarts. C’est top de l’avoir ».
Conscient du retard pris par le rugby féminin dans ce secteur de jeu primordial, le staff a donc accueilli d’un bon œil ce nouvel apport de compétences. « On voit de plus en plus d’équipes qui utilisent le jeu au pied à bon escient, qui mettent l’adversaire sous pression. Le jeu au pied de la 9, de la 10, de l’arrière, ça fait partie du bagage qu’elles doivent avoir. Au niveau international, tu ne peux pas passer au travers », juge celui qui était surnommé « RoboCop » durant sa carrière à cause de routine un peu mécanique – mais diablement efficace.
Et on dirait que cela porte déjà ses fruits. Au-delà du 100% depuis le tee, on a vu face à l’Irlande de bons coups de pied de dégagement ou de déplacement, notamment de la part de Gabrielle Vernier, Pauline Bourdon ou Lina Queyroi.
De quoi encourager tout le monde à poursuivre la démarche. Car, et Teulet en est le parfait exemple, le jeu au pied se travaille tous les jours, durant toute la carrière. « Il s’agit surtout d’acquérir une routine, appuie Mignot. Les joueuses pourront ainsi approfondir le travail en club, car le jeu au pied demande un travail au quotidien ». Mais avec un peu de Teulet dedans, ça parait plus simple.
Comments on RugbyPass
“upon leaving said establishment I tripped over a stool knocking some bottles into the air and as I fell I accidently dislodged a police officer’s teaser who was passing by on an unrelated matter there by landing on said taser which caused it to discharge 50,000 watts into me. Out of shock I shouted Ireland are going to win the world cup. Upon waking up I apologised for the distress caused by my Ireland comment. The matter is closed. If you wish to pursue this matter may I remind you what I told Wayne Barnes when he sent me off. I AM A BIG ASS MAN”. Or was it “I AM A BIG ASS, MAN” or was it “I AM A BIG ASSMAN”?
1 Go to commentsThe only championship the Boks hold are: Great value for the incompetence of referees during the RWC Moaning endlessly and champions of spewing utterly ignorant 💩 at all times. Displaying the dangers of a third world education End of.
24 Go to commentsSouth Africa and Rassie do a phenomenal job of treating the 4 years in between World Cups as nothing more than a training exercise to build squad depth. The Six Nations money that keeps Irish rugby afloat is unfortunately too important to allow the same approach, and basic population size means we'll never get close to matching the depth of South Africa, England and France. That being said, Irish rugby is in a relatively good place and slowly improving inch by inch. If the other three provinces can pull the finger out and actually develop some players it'd be even better.
24 Go to commentsGood on Clarke for taking on the criticism and addressing his deficiencies, principally his laziness.
2 Go to comments“It is the people’s favourite against the actual favourite. It is the people’s champions against the actual champions. I’m joking, but it’s going to be a fantastic series.” Why did Darcy make that joke knowing it would be used as click bait? Why did RP headline it as a serious comment? Anyway, the tired comment isn’t very astute. SA players may have played more games etc. Darcy over estimated as a pundit.
24 Go to commentsNot sure Frisch will ever make the French team with Depoortère and Costes waiting in the wings to take over from Danty and Fickou.
1 Go to commentsThe Irish are tired and the Boks are old. The test series won't confirm who is best in the world, it will confirm which team needs to pursue the task of rebuilding with the most urgency.
24 Go to commentsGrant, the first time I have seen an article written by you. Maybe I have missed your previous stuff. These days all professional players effectively play a common season so all top players are equally tired, or rested. That is the job of the coaching ticket to build squad depth and juggle resources so players are ‘ fresh’ when the big games come. Possibly Ireland are less inclined to juggle squad compared to Rassie, who is prepared to take the risk to rest players as well as build depth throughout the year so come WC he has a full squad, experienced and rested enough to win 7 games. After all, to win WC you need to get through the tournament and then win the final big 3 games. Ireland should try and build a bit so come final 3 they are ready. So far only played final 1(QF). I am so looking forward to the Irish tour. Hopefully Rassie has enough time to align his guys, as he draws them from across the globe, and not from 2 sides locally( eg Leinster, Munster). No excuses, going to be exciting.
24 Go to commentsIn football, teams get fined and sometimes docked points for deliberately fielding weakened teams yet Leinster can pretty much do as they please with no comebacks. Could it be because Ireland run the URC? Could it be that Ireland run the ERC? Whichever it is, it stinks!!
6 Go to commentsIreland are only the People’s Champions in Irish eyes. The rest of the world do not care for them very much because of attitudes of people like Gordon, Ferris, Best, Jackman…I could go on!!
24 Go to commentsNot sure how Karl Dickson can ever ref a Quins game, he played for the club for 8 years as understudy to Care and is still close friends with half the team
3 Go to commentsAre bookies taking bets on how many times Vunipola's eventual statement will use the term “elders"? My money is on at least 4 times.
4 Go to commentsSo Ireland will be tired, despite having the most rested test squad in the world. They only play tests, champions cup and urc play off games ffs! Case in point; Leinster sent a B squad to SA for their last two games while their first xv rested up and trained at their leisure for the sf vs Saints at the so called ‘neutral venue’ of Croke Park. So tired? Do me a favour… And as for “people’s champions”? Seriously??? Outside of Ireland they are respected for their ability to win 6N. And of course plenty of inconsequential test friendlies without any real pressure. WC ko games when the pressure is white hot? Not so much…
24 Go to commentsSurprising how standing down or benching a player can do wonders for their motivation. Several players this week in that category.
2 Go to commentsHaha lads lads lads, that’s how you have a holiday In Majorca
4 Go to commentshit on Lynagh was defo late and card-worthy. The other 2 are bang on OK. Hurts you at Test level if youre timing is off and the nostrils are flared. Jerry C knew when to lean in on one, Finau just needs to keep his discipline and head straight.
7 Go to commentsSlade was exceptional against Gloucester. Not only was he doing the classic Slade stuff of running amazing lines and timing passes to perfection to put his wingers into space, he was kicking goals, flying off the line smashing people and crashing into rucks like a flanker… his hair even looked on point. 😍
1 Go to commentsThat’s really sad, hope everyone involved is ok. At least he had pants on.
4 Go to commentsTo be fair it was nowhere bear the Leinster first team (for which, btw, Leinster copped nothing like the outrage that Jake White did for sending a rotated team to the UK). But it’s fun to watch the Stormers doing their thing. They are attracting big, diverse crowds of young fans, and deservedly so. Great to see.
1 Go to commentsIt might be legal but he’s sailing pretty close to the wind. Not a lot needs to go wrong for Finau to end up in the bin. Was it late? Not quite, but borderline. High? A couple of CM within the laws, no room for error with that one. Did he wrap the arms? There was a token effort to wrap one arm, the intent was clearly to hit with the shoulder. So yeah, it’s legal, just. But as we all know, a very slight change in the dynamics could easily have him seeing red. Hopefully not when it really matters.
7 Go to comments