Gael Clichy strips for French rugby calendar

Oh la la! Manchester City's Clichy strips for French rugby calendar

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UPDATED:

13:19 GMT, 21 December 2012

The annual nude calender of French rugby club Stade Francais has gained a cult status in France for its images of toned, muscular rugby players pulling revealing poses.

But the 2013 edition is sure to raise a few eyebrows this side of the Channel, too.

Manchester City and France star Gael Clichy has agreed to bare all in the calendar, which gives new meaning to the club’s anthem ‘Blue Moon’.

Calendar boys: City full-back Gael Clichy poses for Stade Francais's rugby shoot

Calendar boys: City full-back Gael Clichy poses for Stade Francais's rugby shoot

On the ball: Back-rower James Haskell, now at Wasps, fronted the Stade calendar in 2010

On the ball: Back-rower James Haskell, now at Wasps, fronted the Stade calendar in 2010

Gael force: Clichy leaps to evade a tackle from Danny Simpson (left) during City's 3-1 defeat of Newcastle last weekend

Gael force: Clichy leaps to evade a tackle from Danny Simpson (left) during City's 3-1 defeat of Newcastle last weekend

He is joined by France team-mate and Lille star Rio Mavuba as the only other footballer to appear in the calendar.

England rugby stars James Haskell and Tom Palmer have also appeared in the calender, with Haskell even appearing on the cover in 2010, covering his delicates with only a rugby ball.

Scott Lavalla

Rio Mavuba

Cover stars: Stade's American lock Scott Lavalla (left) fronts this year's offering while Lille footballer Rio Mavuba (right) also appears in the collection

Other French rugby stars include Clermont’s Wesley Fofana and Morgan Parra, Jonny Wilkinson’s team-mates at Toulon Maxime Mermoz and Alexis Palisson.

The calender includes more than 40 photos in both black and white and colour. This year’s includes players from other clubs in the Top 14, as well as hockey players, boxers and athletes from a range of other sports.

Morgan Parra

Wesley Fofana

Djibril Camara

Parra-dise: France scrum half Morgan Parra (left), Wesley Fofana (centre) and Djibril Camara (right). Former England lock Tom Palmer (below, right), who still plays for Stade, posed for the 2011 calendar

Stade Francais calendar

Stade Francais calendar

Tom Palmer

Meanwhile, City manager Roberto Mancini has told Clichy's team-mate Mario Balotelli that he needed to show respect for himself and his responsibilities by accepting a 340,000 punishment from the club.

Earlier this week Balotelli dropped his fight against the fine for breaches of discipline, deciding not to take City to a Premier League tribunal ‘as a sign of respect for Roberto Mancini, the supporters and the club’, according to a club statement.

Wrestle mania: Stade stars arm wrestle in one of the calendar's coulour pictures

Wrestle mania: Stade stars arm wrestle in one of the calendar's coulour pictures

Pants: A rare shot with the rugby players wearing trousers features in the 2011 calendar

Pants: A rare shot with the rugby players wearing trousers features in the 2011 calendar

But Mancini believes that above all the controversial striker owed it to himself to admit he was wrong after Balotelli was banned for a fifth of City’s games last season.

'It’s normal that when someone makes a mistake he should take his responsibilities and Mario did this,’ said Mancini. ‘He respected himself, not me because it’s important for him to respect himself, very important.’

France squad for autumn internationals

Teenager Fickou given chance to shine for France in autumn internationals

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UPDATED:

11:55 GMT, 16 October 2012

Highly-rated centre Gael Fickou is one of several new faces included in France's 33-man squad for their autumn internationals.

The 18-year-old has been compared with former England three-quarter Jeremy Guscott after excelling with Toulouse, and has now been given the chance to impress national head coach Philippe Saint-Andre.

Pierrick Gunther, Vincent Martin, Jocelino Suta (all Toulon), Jules Plisson (Stade Francais), Eddy Ben Arous (Racing Metro) and Sebastien Vahaamahina (Perpignan) have also been called up to the international fold for the first time ahead of France's fixtures against Australia, Argentina and Samoa in November.

One to watch: Gael Fickou (right) has been called up by France

One to watch: Gael Fickou (right) has been called up by France

FRANCE SQUAD

Forwards: E Ben Arous, T Domingo, Y Forestier, B Kayser, C Tolofua, D
Szarzewski, D Attoub, V Debaty, N Mas, Y Maestri, P Pape (vice-captain),
J Suta, S Vahaamahina, D Chouly, T Dusautoir (captain), P Gunther, W
Lauret, F Ouedraogo, L Picamoles

Backs: M Machenaud, M Parra, F Michalak, J Plisson, F Trinh-Duc, V
Clerc, B Dulin, B Fall, G Fickou, W Fofana, F Fritz, Y Huget, V Martin, M
Mermoz.

Saint-Andre chose to rest several notable names during France's two-Test series in Argentina, which they drew 1-1.

Among those absent was captain Thierry Dusautoir, who returns to the side although 71-cap veteran Aurelien Rougerie has been omitted.

“We were very happy with the three centres taken in Argentina this summer,” Saint-Andre said in L'Equipe. 'Aurelien just returned and has not played a lot of matches with Clermont.

Six Nations 2012: France squad for Wales

France coach shuffles pack ahead of Grand Slam decider for Wales

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UPDATED:

14:30 GMT, 12 March 2012

France coach Philippe Saint-Andre has reshuffled his squad ahead of their final RBS 6 Nations clash against Wales on Saturday.

Les Bleus head to Cardiff looking to derail Welsh hopes of landing the Grand Slam and Saint-Andre has made six changes, the most notable of which sees 19-year-old Clermont back Jean-Marcellin Buttin called up for the first time.

Tweak: Philippe Saint-Andre has called up the uncapped Jean-Marcellin Buttin

Tweak: Philippe Saint-Andre has called up the uncapped Jean-Marcellin Buttin

Julien Pierre, Fulgence Ouedraogo, Dimitri Yachvili, Alexis Palisson and Florian Fritz were all named as Saint-Andre reacts to yesterday's 24-22 home defeat to England which ended France's title hopes.

Julien Dupuy, Maxime Mermoz, Julien Malzieu and Lionel Nallet all make way while Vincent Clerc has a shoulder injury. There are also injury doubts over Thierry Dusautoir (knee), Imanol Harinordoquy (knee) and Julien Bonnaire (elbow).

FRANCE SQUAD v WALES

Forwards: J Poux (Toulouse), N Mas (Perpignan), V Debaty (Clermont), D
Attoub (Stade Francais), D Szarzewski (Stade Francais), W Servat
(Toulouse), P Pape (Stade Francais), Y Maestri (Toulouse), J Pierre
(Clermont), T Dusautoir (Toulouse, captain), F Ouedraogo (Montpellier), J
Bonnaire (Clermont), I Harinordoquy (Biarritz), L Picamoles (Toulouse).

Backs: M Parra (Clermont), D Yachvili (Biarritz), F Trinh-Duc
(Montpellier), L Beauxis (Toulouse), W Fofana (Clermont), A Rougerie
(Clermont), F Fritz (Toulouse), A Palisson (Toulon), J Buttin
(Clermont), C Poitrenaud (Toulouse)

Six Nations 2012: France unchanged for England

Saint-Andre keeps the faith as he names unchanged squad for England

France have named an unchanged squad to face England in the RBS 6 Nations at the Stade de France on Sunday.

Les Bleus recorded a 17-17 draw with Ireland in their rearranged game on Sunday and coach Philippe Saint-Andre has resisted the temptation to make alterations.

'Bizarrely, it was only a draw but it was our best performance since the start of the Six Nations,' he said. 'Statistics showed that we dominated but did not win.'

In a spin: despite drawing with Ireland, France will field the same team against England in the next round of Six Nations matches

In a spin: despite drawing with Ireland, France will field the same team against England in the next round of Six Nations matches

The stalemate with the Irish left France in second place in the RBS 6 Nations table, a point behind Triple Crown winners Wales with two games remaining.

'We can still win the tournament,' added Saint-Andre. 'And we will prepare for a big match against England.'

Scrum-half Dimitri Yachvili had been tipped for a recall but Saint-Andre opted to stick with Julien Dupoy.

FRANCE squad v England

Backs: C Poitrenaud, V Clerc, A Rougerie, W Fofana, M Mermoz, J Malzieu, F Trinh-Duc, L Beauxis, M Parra, J Dupuy.

Forwards: J Bonnaire, I Harinordoquy, L
Picamoles, T Dusautoir, L Nallet, Y Maestri, P Pape, D Attoub, V
Debaty, N Mas, J Poux, D Szarzewski, W Servat.

SIX NATIONS 2012: France 17 Ireland 17

France 17 Ireland 17: Les Bleus stage second-half fightback to deny Irish in Paris

Ireland were denied a precious victory in Paris when France staged a second-half fightback that concluded in a tense RBS 6 Nations stalemate.

At half-time that elusive first Irish triumph in the French capital since 2000, and only a second in four decades, appeared within grasp.

Two tries from Tommy Bowe, who has now crossed 24 times in 47 games including five times in this Six Nations, offered sight of a rare prize.

Comeback complete: Weiley Fofana scores a try in the second half as France earn a draw against Ireland

Comeback complete: Weiley Fofana scores a try in the second half as France earn a draw against Ireland

MATCH FACTS

France:
Poitrenaud, Clerc, Rougerie, Fofana, Malzieu, Trinh-Duc, Parra, Poux,
Szarzewski, Mas, Pape, Maestri, Dusautoir, Bonnaire, Harinordoquy.

Replacements: Beauxis for Poitrenaud (68),
Servat for Szarzewski (53), Nallet for Pape (61), Picamoles for Bonnaire (71).

Not Used: Debaty, Dupuy, Mermoz.

Tries: Fofana. Pens: Parra 4.

Ireland: R. Kearney, Bowe, Earls, D'Arcy, Trimble, Sexton, Murray, Healy, Best, Ross, O'Callaghan, O'Connell, Ferris, O'Brien, Heaslip.

Replacements:
O'Gara for D'Arcy (71), McFadden for Trimble (73), Reddan for Murray
(59), Court for Healy (75), Cronin for Best (75), Ryan for O'Callaghan
(58), O'Mahony for O'Brien (66).

Tries: Bowe 2. Cons: Sexton 2. Pens: Sexton.

Att: 80,000

Ref: Dave Pearson (RFU).

The brilliant Bowe snatched an intercept score from Aurelien Rougerie's loose pass before later completing a fine solo effort.

And with Jonathan Sexton kicking a penalty and two conversions Ireland established a 17-6 interval lead, but they were unable to score again.

Instead it was France who threatened, centre Wesley Fofana pouncing on a loose ball to touch down in the 51st minute and the boot of scrum-half Morgan Parra doing the rest.

The outcome ends the prospect of a Grand Slam decider between Wales and France on March 17, while Ireland's title aspirations are now effectively over.

France were as poor in the first half as Ireland were magnificent, but a more aggressive Les Bleus emerged after the break, displaying greater urgency.

The rivals were originally scheduled to meet three weeks ago only for a frozen pitch to force referee Dave Pearson to postpone the contest 10 minutes before kick off.

And while the rearranged match was no classic, there was enough tension at the Stade de France to make it uncomfortable viewing for supporters.

Only a handful of Irish fans had managed to travel to Paris for a second time in three weeks, though the ground was full.

Flying wing: Andrew Trimble scores a try for Ireland as his side took control in Paris

Flying wing: Andrew Trimble scores a try for Ireland as his side took control in Paris

France, unbeaten until today, recalled full-back Clement Poitrenaud and flanker Julien Bonnaire following their narrow defeat over Scotland and the former was influential early on.

He showed nimble feet to break from his own 22 before play was held up as winger Vincent Clerc recovered from a fierce tackle by Cian Healy.

France were showing some dangerous touches in attack, but their attempts at offloading were repeatedly foiled by Ireland wrapping them up in the tackle.

Lift me up: Yoann Maestri catches the ball during France's Six Nations draw with Ireland

Lift me up: Yoann Maestri catches the ball during France's Six Nations draw with Ireland

Recent Irish attempts at storming the Stade de France have been undermined by a disastrous start, but today it was Les Bleus' turn to implode in the opening quarter.

A ponderous attack from just outside the French 22 reached centre Rougerie, whose lazy floated pass intended for winger Julien Malzieu instead found the lurking Bowe.

The Ospreys winger made light work of the gallop home and when Sexton converted from beneath the posts, Ireland were 7-0 ahead.

On the march: Tommy Bowe looked to have put Ireland on the verge of victory with his second try

On the march: Tommy Bowe looked to have put Ireland on the verge of victory with his second try

Morgan Parra and Sexton exchanged penalties before Bowe almost escaped with another intercept try, though this time the ball slipped from his fingertips.

Ireland's scrum was now in full retreat, allowing Parra to land a monster three points that reduced the deficit to four points.

Prop Cian Healy was lucky to escape a yellow card as he blocked Clerc from an outrageously offside position as France sought to escape down the right.

Easy does it: Jonathan Sexton pops over a conversation for Ireland in Paris

Easy does it: Jonathan Sexton pops over a conversation for Ireland in Paris

Les Bleus' sense of injustice intensified when Parra missed the penalty and then they slipped further behind as Bowe struck once again.

Swift hands and a mix-up in defence allowed him to break free and although it seemed as though he had blown a chance by failing to release Rob Kearney, his chip ahead bounced kindly and he dummied Poitrenaud to stroll over with Sexton converting.

The second half was ushered in by rain and it took Parra six minutes to land his third penalty, but Ireland were soon back on the front foot.

Can we win it Ireland celebrate during their draw with France in the Six Nations

Can we win it Ireland celebrate during their draw with France in the Six Nations

Winger Andrew Trimble had the ball knocked from his hand as he switched with Jamie Heaslip and a fine opportunity vanished.

Irish hearts sank when France touched down in the 50th minute, initially profiting from good fortune during a loose passage of play.

The ball bounced into the arms of Fofana and the centre accelerated clear, out-running Kearney to dive over in the left corner.

Charge: France's Aurilien Rougerie (left) looks for a way past the Ireland defence

Charge: France's Aurilien Rougerie (left) looks for a way past the Ireland defence

The momentum had clearly shifted, a fact underlined when Parra rifled over a long-range penalty to level the score.

Moments later scrum-half Conor Murray was replaced by Eoin Reddan after being stretchered off because of an injury to his right knee.

Ireland then spent a sustained spell in the opposition half but failed to trouble the scoreboard, while Lionel Beauxis sent an ugly drop goal under the crossbar and then saw a second charged down.

France, camped in an ominous position, conceded a penalty with two minutes to go but then had one last throw of the dice only for Kearney to bundle Malzieu into touch.

SIX NATIONS 2012: France unchanged for Scotland

Saint-Andre names unchanged side for Scotland clash as France await new Irish date

France manager Philippe Saint-Andre has retained the same squad that was due to face Ireland last weekend for his side's clash with Scotland at Murrayfield on February 26.

Saturday's match in Paris was called off minutes before kick-off due to a frozen pitch at the Stade de France.

Off: France's home tie with Ireland was postponed due to the frozen pitch

Off: France's home tie with Ireland was postponed due to the frozen pitch

FRANCE SQUAD

Forwards: David Attoub, Vincent Debaty, Nicolas Mas, Jean-Baptiste Poux, William Servat, Dimitri Szarzewski, Pascal Pape, Yoann Maestri, Lionel Nallet, Julien Bonnaire, Thierry Dusautoir (captain), Louis Picamoles, Imanol Harinordoquy.

Backs: Morgan Parra, Julien Dupuy, Francois Trinh-Duc, Lionel Beauxis, Aurelien Rougerie, Maxime Mermoz, Wesley Fofana, Vincent Clerc, Julien Malzieu, Maxime Medard.

A new date has yet to be set, with the Six Nations Committee, set to make an announcement on Tuesday or Wednesday.

In a statement released on Monday, they said: 'Further to a meeting of the Six Nations Council today, we can confirm
that the postponed RBS 6 Nations France versus Ireland match will not
take place this weekend (Feb 17/18/19).

'A further meeting of the Council will take place tomorrow [Tuesday] to hopefully resolve the issues of rescheduling and ticket policy.

'There
are very significant logistical issues arising from this situation, and
we would wish to be in a position to give a comprehensive clarification
following the meeting.'

France opened their campaign with a 30-12 victory over Italy.

Six Nations 2012: France team for Ireland clash

Harinordoquy back in as France shake up pack for Ireland clash

France have promoted Imanol
Harinordoquy to their starting line-up as one of four changes for
Saturday's RBS 6 Nations clash with Ireland.

Harinordoquy was named on the bench
for last weekend's 30-12 victory over Italy, but has been selected ahead
of Julien Bonnaire due to his line-out presence.

Promoted: Imanol Harinordoquy (right)

Promoted: Imanol Harinordoquy (right)

FRANCE TEAM

M Medard (Toulouse); V Clerc (Toulouse), A Rougerie (Clermont Auvergne), W Fofana (Clermont Auvergne), J Malzieu (Clermont Auvergne); F Trinh-Duc (Montpellier), D Yachvili (Biarritz); J-B Poux (Toulouse), D Szarzewski (Stade Francais), N Mas (Perpignan), P Pape (Stade Francais), Y Maestri (Toulouse), T Dusautoir (Toulouse, capt), I Harinordoquy (Biarritz), L Picamoles (Toulouse).

Replacements: W Servat (Toulouse), V Debaty (Clermont Auvergne), L Nallet (Racing Metro), J Bonnaire (Clermont Auvergne), M Parra (Clermont Auvergne), L Beauxis (Toulouse), M Mermoz (Perpignan).

All four changes have been made to the pack with two of them taking place in the front row.

Jean-Baptiste Poux comes in for Vincent Debaty at prop while hooker Dimitri Szarzewski replaces William Servat.

In the second row, Yoann Maestri has been given the nod ahead of Lionel Nallet.

Coach Philippe Saint-Andre has opted to retain the same back line after they scored all four tries against Italy.

World Cup finalists France are favourites to win the 2012 Six Nations and are expected to beat Ireland, who have triumphed in Paris just once since 1972.

The Irish, who were dispatched 23-21 by Wales on Sunday, name their team on Thursday.

Six Nations 2012: France not taking Italy lightly

France not treating Italy lightly despite earning favourites tag

France coach Philippe Saint-Andre has warned his players not to take Italy for granted as the favourites open their RBS Six Nations campaign in Paris on Saturday.

Italy are again expected to struggle while France, beaten finalists in the World Cup in New Zealand, start as the tournament’s fancied team.

But Saint-Andre refuses to get carried away by his side’s billing and prefers to adopt a cautious approach, reflecting on last season’s embarrassing 22-21 Six Nations defeat in Rome.

Main man: Philippe Saint-Andre (centre) looks on during a training session

Main man: Philippe Saint-Andre (centre) looks on during a training session

‘We shouldn’t believe that the match against Italy will be easy,’ said Saint-Andre. ‘We will play with a lot of humility and desire. We will try to do anything to start well in this competition.’

Saint-Andre has relied on the basis of the squad which took France to the final in Wellington, but will bring in three players who have starred for Clermont Auvergne this season.

With the club second in the Top 14 and having qualified for the quarter-finals of the Heineken Cup, Wesley Fofana, Julien Malzieu and Vincent Debaty have been added to the side. For Fofana it will be a Test debut as he comes in at centre in place of Perpignan’s Maxime Mermoz.

Taking nothing for granted: France expect a tough time against Italy

Taking nothing for granted: France expect a tough time against Italy

New Italy coach Jacques Brunel hopes the national side can leave behind past failures and begin a new dawn for the Azzurri.

Brunel takes charge of Italy for the first time since succeeding Nick Mallett, who signed off from the role with a 36-6 defeat to Ireland in October which saw them eliminated from the World Cup.

The Frenchman said: ‘I believe in the potential of this team. I am sure they have a future. France’s goal is to win the Six Nations. Ours is to produce a different type of rugby from the past.’