Senior International Matches (Men) : Men's International

Sat 29th June 2024   - KO  18:00 - Stade Ernest Wallon, Toulouse , France
  Attendance: 4500
Official: Tom Grant

France

8

FT

40

Half Time
8 - 18

England

Tries

Fouad Yaha (2)

Jack Welsby (20,61)
Tom Johnstone (31,79)
Ash Handley (24,26)
George Williams (73)
Matty Nicholson (57)

Goals

Arthur Mourgue (2/2)

Harry Smith (4/8)

Rookie Roosters called up as France, England name squads

Sydney Roosters rookie Enzo Griffier has been named by France coach Laurent Frayssinous in a 22-man squad to meet England in Toulouse in an international double-header to celebrate the 90th anniversary of French rugby league.

Griffier (left) joined the Roosters last year, along with fellow Frenchman Sacha Kouassi (right), and the 19-year-old outside back made his NSW Cup debut on June 15 after returning to Australia this year to play SG Ball for the club.

A member of the France U19s team that beat England in 2022, Griffier advanced to the Roosters U21s Jersey Flegg team and is now a member of the NSW Cup squad.

After making his international debut against Serbia last year, Griffier has been included in a near full strength French team to face England this weekend, which includes the likes of Théo Fages, Benjamin Garcia, Mickael Goudemand and Arthur Mourgue.

Wigan rookie Tiaki Chan, whose brother Joe plays for Melbourne Storm, has also been included in the French squad, which is expected to form of the nucleus of the team for the end-of-season European RLWC2026 qualifying tournament.

"This group to face England is surely the best group that the French team has known for quite some time and it comes at the perfect time to celebrate the 90th anniversary of French rugby league," Frayssinous said.

"I know that the players are keen to give everything to make the party a great one and to make all the French players proud as well as our 90-year-old heritage, even against one of the best teams in the world.

"We will approach this Test match with the humility that characterises us, but also with this enormous desire to fly the colours of our country and our sport."

England coach Shaun Wane has named several new faces in his 20-man squad, including Castleford centre Sam Wood, Wigan hooker Brad O’Neill, Hull KR loose forward Elliot Minchella, St Helens prop George Delaney, Huddersfield forward Oliver Wilson and Leeds forward James McDonnell.

O’Neill has been almost ever-present for the Wigan over the last two years, playing an integral role in the Warriors’ successful pursuit of all four available trophies – the Betfred Super League, League Leaders’ Shield, Betfred Challenge Cup and World Club Challenge.

Minchella has also impressed Wane in recent seasons, having helped Hull KR to both the Challenge Cup Final and the Super League Play-Offs in 2023.

Delaney, McDonnell and Wilson – in common with several other squad members – are products of the England Pathways programme. McDonnell and Wilson were members of the England Academy side that defeated the Australia Schoolboys back in 2018, while Delaney represented England Knights against Scotland in 2022. 

“I’m pleased with the squad we’ve brought together for this mid-season international and there is a strong balance between some more experienced international players and some newer faces to the England squad," Wane said.

“All of the new players who have come into the squad have impressed me with their performances in the Betfred Super League this season and have earned their spot in this England squad.

“Having travelled to face France back in 2021, we know they will offer us a stern test which is exactly what we need ahead of the two-game series against Samoa this Autumn.”

Both England’s men's and women's team play France on Saturday, as the French Rugby League (FFR XIII) celebrates 90 years of the game in the republic. The matches will be streamed live from Stade Ernest-Wallon on SuperLeague+, Rugby League’s global, direct-to-consumer streaming service.

Kick-off times are 2.30pm BST (women) and 5pm BST (men).

France: Julian Bousquet, Alrix Da Costa, Théo Fages, Benjamin Garcia, Mathieu Laguerre, Franck Maria, Arthur Mourgue, Romain Navarette, César Rouge, Paul Seguier, Fouad Yaha (Dragons Catalans), Mickael Goudemand, Justin Sangare (Leeds Rhinos), Enzo Griffier (Roosters), Hakim Miloudi, Ugo Tison (London Broncos), Tiaki Chan (Wigan Warriors), Pierre-Jean Lima, Maxime Stephani (Toulouse Olympique).

England: Ben Currie (Warrington Wolves), George Delaney (St Helens), Tyler Dupree (Wigan Warriors), Ash Handley (Leeds Rhinos), James Harrison (Warrington Wolves), Tom Johnstone (Catalans Dragons), Matty Lees (St Helens), Mikey Lewis, Jez Litten (both Hull KR), James McDonnell (Leeds Rhinos), Elliot Minchella (Hull KR), Harry Newman (Leeds Rhinos), Matty Nicholson (Warrington Wolves), Brad O’Neill, Harry Smith, Luke Thompson (all Wigan Warriors), Jack Welsby (St Helens), George Williams (Warrington Wolves), Oliver Wilson (Huddersfield Giants), Sam Wood (Castleford Tigers).

Geoffrey Poumes of France and Tom Grant of England have been appointed to referee Saturday’s international fixtures in Toulouse.

Poumes, an experienced official who was a member of the international panel for the Rugby League World Cup in 2022, will take charge of the Women’s International at the Stade Ernest-Wallon, heading up an all-French team with Louis Moreau and Florian Gely as the touch judges, and Lucie Peyre the reserve referee.

Grant, a member of the RFL’s full-time panel of officials who turns 30 next month, and was also a member of the 2022 World Cup panel, has been appointed for the Men’s International.

He will also be supported by two French touch judges – Stephane Vincent and Quentin Boissonade – with Enzo Peyre the reserve referee. (Peyre is the brother of Lucie, making this an unusual family double)

James Vella, another member of the RFL’s full-time panel, will be the video referee for both matches – with France’s Mohammed Drizza observer for the Women’s International, as part of the French Federation’s development plans.

 
 
1 Arthur Mourgue
Full Back
Jack Welsby 1
2 Fouad Yaha
Right Wing
Tom Johnstone 2
3 Mathieu Laguerre
Right Centre
Sam Wood 3
4 Enzo Griffier
Left Centre
Harry Newman 4
5 Hakim Miloudi
Left Wing
Ash Handley 5
6 Cesar Rouge
Stand Off
George Williams 6
7 Theo Fages
Scrum Half
Harry Smith 7
8 Romain Navarette
Prop
Luke Thompson 8
9 Alrix Da Costa
Hooker
Brad O'Neill 9
10 Julien Bosquet
Prop
Matty Lees 10
11 Mickael Goudemand
Second Row
Ben Currie 11
12 Paul Seguier
Second Row
Matty Nicholson 12
13 Benjamin Garcia
Loose Forward
Elliot Minchella 13
14 Ugo Tison
Int 1
Mikey Lewis 14
15 Tiaki Chan
Int 2
James Harrison 15
16 Justin Sangare
Int 3
Tyler Dupree 16
17 Franck Maria
Int 4
Oliver Wilson 17
Reserve 1
George Delaney 18

Ash Handley, Jack Welsby and Tom Johnstone got two tries each as England defeated France 40-8 at Stade Ernest-Wallon in Toulouse;

The match was littered with Super League quality, with a competitive encounter unfolding in the first half.

France, a side heavily consisting of players from Super League side Catalans Dragons, opened the scores through Fouad Yaha, who won the race to the ball after a clever kick from playmaker Arthur Mourgue.

England were on the back foot in the opening quarter, as France continued to apply the pressure early on. Mourgue then successfully converted a penalty goal to extend France’s lead to 8-0, but that was as good as it got for the French as England would soon hit back.

It became a half of two halves as the momentum quickly swung, with a magical burst from the England team to follow.

England soon made up for their slow start, as Jack Welsby broke down the short side fooling the France defenders, before a clever one-two with Tom Johnstone which finished off with Welsby in the corner.

Shaun Wane and Andy Last’s side then continued with quality finishing from the wingers, as Ash Handley then went on to bag a terrific two-minute brace.

Handley’s first try was triggered by Welsby who once again starred and was at the heart of the action, as he sent Newman racing away down the right-hand side and Handley was there in support.

Speedster Tom Johnstone then hit the accelerator he is renowned for, beating multiple France defenders before throwing a looping pass to Newman, who in turn found Handley once more.

Johnstone then joined in on the scoring spree, as he collected a floating pass from George Williams to stroll in at the corner for England’s fourth try.

Just like England Women in the earlier match, it was four tries in the first forty.

The close contest continued in a rather scrappy second half, and it would take almost 20 minutes for England to capitalise again, as France persisted throughout.

Back-to-back tries from Matty Nicholson and Welsby, who became a two-try hero on the day, went on to put England 20 points in front heading into the closing stages of the game.

And the one-way traffic continued when Mikey Lewis produced his trademark magic with a break and a pass away to George Williams, who touched down under the posts.

As the hooter sounded, Harry Smith came up with a perfectly-timed chip kick to find Johnstone who went over in the corner, who also grabbed his second try and rounded off another victory against the France opposition.