France’s painful losing streak extended to four matches as they suffered a collective collapse at the Stade de France, surrendering a commanding position to lose 32-17 to a 14-man South Africa. For 40 minutes, Les Bleus looked set to finally gain revenge for their World Cup heartbreak, but they disintegrated under the weight of Springbok pressure and their own indiscipline in a disastrous second half. The loss was made even more bitter by the fact they held a numerical advantage for the entire period.
The afternoon had started with such promise, bordering on jubilation. Damian Penaud was in sublime form, scoring two quick tries to write his name into the history books as France’s top try-scorer, overtaking Serge Blanco. With the scoreboard reading 14-6 and South African lock Lood de Jager receiving a red card for a dangerous tackle on Thomas Ramos just before the break, the stage was set for a famous French victory in their Autumn international campaign.
But the team that emerged after halftime was a shadow of the one that started. South Africa, rather than retreating into their shell, embraced the challenge. They showcased their champion mentality, absorbing France’s attacks and then countering with brutal physicality. The French team, missing the calming influence of the injured Antoine Dupont, began to crack, conceding a cascade of reckless penalties that handed the initiative straight back to the Springboks.
The critical turning point came when France’s own discipline failed them. Winger Louis Bielle-Biarrey was sent to the sin-bin for a deliberate knock-on, erasing the French man advantage. The Springboks pounced immediately. They turned down points to kick for the corner, and André Esterhuizen rumbled over from the ensuing maul. Soon after, Grant Williams exploited a tired and disorganized defence to score again, swinging the momentum irreversibly.
Fabien Galthié lamented his team’s inability to convert chances just after the hour mark, but the damage was done. Sacha Feinberg-Mngomezulu sealed the French fate with a try and conversion, capping a dominant Springbok display. The result means South Africa has now beaten France in nine of their last ten encounters, leaving Les Bleus to regroup before facing Fiji.