Five-try France pull through

Canada's Kyle Gilmour (right) and France's Wesley Fofana watch the ball during the Rugby World Cup Pool D match between France and Canada in Milton Keynes, England, on October 1, 2015. Picture: Christophe Ena

Canada's Kyle Gilmour (right) and France's Wesley Fofana watch the ball during the Rugby World Cup Pool D match between France and Canada in Milton Keynes, England, on October 1, 2015. Picture: Christophe Ena

Published Oct 2, 2015

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Milton Keynes, England - France endured some uncomfortable moments before pulling away to beat Canada 41-18 in a entertaining and breathless clash on Thursday and close in on the Rugby World Cup quarter-finals with their third successive Pool D win.

Philippe Saint-Andre's men were in control at 17-0 up but Canada, never afraid to counter-attack at pace or spin the ball wide against the beaten 2011 finalists, refused to fold.

Two quick tries towards the end of the first half gave Canada a sniff of an upset and it was not well until the last quarter that the French finally wrestled back control as the underdogs tired.

Late tries from Pascal Pape and Remy Grosso, on his debut, earned France a bonus-point win that takes them top of Pool D on 14 points, four ahead of fellow group heavyweights Ireland who they face in their finale at the Millennium stadium in Cardiff on October 11.

France had impressed only in parts in sterile wins over Italy and Romania but appeared ready to shake off the shackles when Wesley Fofana burst over the line after three minutes from Frederic Michalak's break.

More magic from Michalak, whose first penalty took him past Thierry Lacroix's record for his country of 124 points in World Cups, almost put in Fofana again soon after but he botched the chance.

Fofana was heavily involved in France's second try, he and fellow midfield battering ram Mathieu Basteraud pinning back the Canucks' defence before a rolling maul sent hooker Guilhem Guirado over.

But Canada, despite losing captain Tyler Ardron to injury, hit back in exhilarating style.

A brilliant take from the restart by centre Ciaran Hearn sparked an attack finished by left wing DTH Van Der Merwe for his third try of the tournament.

Their tails up, Canada attacked the French lines again and pouring forward, Aaron Carpenter picked up from the base of the ruck to score.

Having seen their 17-point advantage whittled down to five, France went back to the driving maul to pile over and restore some order with prop Rabah Slimani the man to emerge with the ball.

Canada held their own for long spells after the break, adding to French frustrations with Nathan Hirayama's two goals closing the deficit to six with 25 minutes left.

Michalak nosed France further ahead again and it was French forward power that finally won the day with Pape scoring from the base of the ruck before good handling allowed Grosso to touch down in the corner.

Coach Philippe Saint-Andre was happy to see his side notch a third win but was never able to completely relax.

“I was a bit stressed because you never know with the French way, what will happen,” he said.

REUTERS

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