Motivated

Are you ready ? Because they obviously are. For many months, the players and the staff of the French rugby team have been preparing to compete in this World Cup at home, motivated by the desire to finally win this trophy, which until then has remained inaccessible to the XV of France. Selection, training, tours, test matches, injuries, controversies… The intense preparation of the French finally ended in style, Saturday September 2, in Rueil-Malmaison (Hauts-de-Seine), with a ceremony that cannot be more symbolic.

capped

If rugby does not always live up to the values ​​it proudly claims, we cannot blame it for denying its traditions. Thus, the rugby selections continue, on the eve of each World Cup, to indulge in the ritual of the cap delivery, born in the 19th century in England. It consists in materializing the selection of a player by giving him a funny cap, or rather a “cap” similar to that traditionally present in the uniform of English schoolchildren. This is why a selected player is said to be “capped”.

Unbuttoned

That day, in their base camp at Bois-Préau Park and in front of nearly 5,000 supporters, the French players were also able to demonstrate their difficulty in fully wearing the costume. Note that two players, as well as a member of the French staff, had given up buttoning their shirts up to the collar, displaying a loose tie. Laziness ? Neck too muscularly developed to tolerate full breasting? Or a subtle nod to the sultry dancer Louis Pécour, instigator, in the 17th century, of this loose tie trend? We will ask them.

scruffy

In the same vein, note that the player Louis Bielle-Biarrey had chosen to wear his bag loose with a jacket left wide open and a shirt out of the pants. Such an accumulation of stylistic choices obviously leaves no room for doubt. The young Bordeaux winger from Bègles refines his third half look here. And how to blame him?

contrasting

Finally, let’s take advantage of this group photo to continue our relentless fight against one of the greatest stylistic scourges of the time. Concretely, the four French rugby players in the image, visibly tricked by the equipment supplier of the XV of France, wear here their navy suit with a pair of white sneakers, giving them all the characteristic look of the boss of a scooter advertising agency three wheels desperately trying to look young and creative… Failed. It is precisely the opposite that occurs. Come on, Blues anyway.