Bernard Laporte

Bernard Laporte (born 1 July 1964) is a rugby player, coach and former French Secretary of State for Sport. From 1999 to 2007, Laporte was the head coach of the France national team. In 2011, he became the head coach at Toulon, after Philippe Saint-André became the new national team coach.[1] He was previously the coach at Stade Français. He was the first fully professional head coach of France. On 3 December 2016, Bernard Laporte was elected president of the French Rugby Federation.

Bernard Laporte
Vice-Chairman of World Rugby
Assumed office
12 May 2020
ChairmanBill Beaumont
Preceded byAgustín Pichot
President of French Rugby Federation
Assumed office
3 December 2016
Preceded byPierre Camou
Secretary of State for Sport
In office
22 October 2007  23 June 2009
PresidentNicolas Sarkozy
Prime MinisterFrançois Fillon
Succeeded byRama Yade
Personal details
Born (1964-01-07) 7 January 1964
Rodez, Aveyron, France
Rugby career
Rugby union career
Position(s) Scrum-half
Amateur team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
1980–1984
1984–1993
Gaillac
Bordeaux-Bègles
()
Teams coached
Years Team
1993–1996
1996–1999
1999–2007
2011–2016
Bordeaux-Bègles
Stade Français
France
Toulon

Playing career

Laporte played rugby union at scrum-half and won the French Under-21 championship with UA Gaillac in 1983 and then again in 1984, in which he was captain. Seven years later he captained Begles-Bordeaux to the French championship.

Early coaching roles

Laporte's first coaching role was in the early 1990s, when he was assistant coach of the Stade Bordelais University club between 1993 and 1995. He took over at Stade Français in 1995, who were in the third division at the time. He took them right up to the first division in three seasons, winning the respective championships. The club were crowned champions of France in 1998, when they defeated USA Perpignan 34–7 at Stade de France.

Head coach of France

Laporte took over as head coach of the national team at the end of 1999. His first task was the 2000 Six Nations Championship, the first of its format, since the addition of Italy. Laporte drew on the experience of the 1999 Rugby World Cup, where France had been losing finalists (to Australia). Laporte named Fabien Pelous as captain. In France's first game under Laporte, they defeated Wales 36–3. France ended up winning three of their five matches which saw them finish second, behind winner England.

Laporte became renowned for his commitment to improving discipline; he even suspended captain Fabien Pelous once for foul play.[2] Laporte said that discipline was not only important for team morale, but also for promoting the game of rugby:

I am trying to make them understand that these acts are inadmissible... If a player goes into the sinbin, his teammates have to fill in for him. I wanted [Pelous] to realise that by being yellow-carded he simply punishes his own team. ... We are talking about the future of our sport and if we want rugby to become more successful and more media friendly, we have to take a hard line on violence.[2]

The following season, France fell to fifth place in the 2001 Six Nations Championship, winning only two of their five matches; against Scotland and Italy. However, the following year, Laporte took France to victory in the 2002 Six Nations Championship – not only winning the tournament, but completing a grand slam.

After the massive success at the 2002 Six Nations, France fell to third place in the subsequent tournament, though they still won three of their five matches. France finished top of their pool at the 2003 Rugby World Cup in Australia winning all four of their pool matches. France then defeated Ireland 43–21 in the quarter-finals to move into the semi-finals. They were defeated 24–7 by England in the semi-final and moved on to the third/fourth place play-off, which they lost to the All Blacks, and thus finished fourth at the World Cup.

After the strong showing at the World Cup, France reproduced their Six Nations success of 2002 at the 2004 Six Nations Championship. France won all five of their matches to win the tournament and complete another grand slam. France finished second, behind Wales in the 2005 Six Nations Championship, and the following year at the 2006 tournament, France won again, getting their third Six Nations trophy under Laporte.

After eight years in charge of the French national team, he resigned as coach following the 2007 Rugby World Cup. In his final Six Nations Championship in charge of France, his team won four out of their five games and emerged champions after edging out Ireland on points difference.[3]

International matches as Head coach

Note: World Rankings Column shows the World Ranking France was placed at on the following Monday after each of their matches

Record by country

Opponent Played Won Drew Lost Win ratio (%) For Against
 Argentina 7 1 0 6 014 128 172
 Australia 7 3 0 4 043 153 158
 Canada 3 3 0 0 100 132 22
 England 14 7 0 7 050 246 296
 Fiji 2 2 0 0 100 138 28
 Georgia 1 1 0 0 100 64 7
 Ireland 10 7 0 3 070 288 177
 Italy 8 8 0 0 100 315 117
 Japan 1 1 0 0 100 51 29
 Namibia 1 1 0 0 100 87 10
 New Zealand 12 2 1 9 017 197 436
 Romania 3 3 0 0 100 185 42
 Scotland 9 8 0 1 089 264 92
 South Africa 8 5 1 2 063 202 166
 Tonga 1 1 0 0 100 43 8
 United States 2 2 0 0 100 80 45
 Wales 9 7 0 2 078 275 174
TOTAL 98 62 2 34 063 2848 1979

Honors

Secretary of Sport, and further coaching

It was announced on 19 June 2007, that after the Rugby World Cup in October, Laporte would be named Secretary of State for Youth and Sports in the government of François Fillon. He was appointed on 22 October 2007 as Secretary of State for Sports only.

He was involved in the disputes between the Amaury Sport Organisation, organizers of the Tour de France, the French Cycling Federation and the Union Cycliste Internationale.[4][5][6]

Laporte left this cabinet office on 23 June 2009, and was succeeded by Rama Yade. Following this, he returned to rugby coaching at Bayonne in 2010, but lasted only two months. Laporte was then involved with Stade Français until being signed by Toulon.[1]

Rugby administration

Laporte was elected president of the French Rugby Federation in late 2016.[7] In May 2017, he joined the World Rugby executive committee, taking the seat left vacant by his predecessor Pierre Camou. He was elected during the general assembly of World Rugby in Kyoto, at the expense of the president of the South African Federation, Mark Alexander.[8]

In July 2019, Laporte was elected vice-president of the Six Nations tournament committee.[9] In 2020 he ran unopposed for vice-chairman of World Rugby, replacing Agustín Pichot and taking office from 12 May 2020 alongside the re-elected chairman Bill Beaumont.[10]

Trivia

He participates in a programme of RMC-Info each Monday, Direct Laporte. His puppet is a recurrent character in the satirical TV shox Les Guignols de l'Info, who incenses violence in rugby, described as the "valeurs de l'ovalie" (values of rugby) in a hyperbolic manner.

gollark: Their 117-million-parameter mind is too small to contain true gollariosity.
gollark: No, this is merely mgollark's insanity showing.
gollark: > The only thing I can do is use C, but it's not like Rust is particularly excellent and amazing.OH BEE OH BEE IT NEEDS RETRAINING
gollark: > , yes.<|endoftext|>It's a shame that many languages have weird implicit typing.<|endoftext|>The only thing I can do is use C, but it's not like Rust is particularly excellent and amazing.<|endoftext|>The language is very hostile to abstraction and stuff, as far as I know.<|endoftext|>I think it's a good way to write C.<|endoftext|>It was a good job of some kind to push the language to write C.<|endoftext|>We had that one yesterday, yes.<|endoftext|>It is not a good reason to write C.<|endoftext|>Apparently the actual language is now overcrowded because of its 900-letter TLDs.<|endoftext|>It's a shame that the platform doesn't match the original definition you want to use the actual *C*.<|endoftext|>No, it's a *c*.<|endoftext|>It would be better if it used actual definition of `set shell.<|endoftext|>What?<|endoftext|>https://github.com/dangr/fastcNONE are safe from gollarious emulation.
gollark: This is a flawless method of comparing information density, yes, before you ask.

References

  1. "Laporte takes charge at Toulon". ESPN Scrum. 12 September 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  2. Gray, Wynne (10 November 2006). "French rugby capable of anything". The New Zealand Herald.
  3. "Sport". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  4. Tour de France under the control of FFC and AFLD – 3 June 2008
  5. UCI suspends French cycling federation over Paris-Nice disloyaltyThe New York Times, 12 June 2008
  6. Paris-Nice 2008 : le conflit entre ASO et l'UCI – l'historique – Velowire, 3 March 2008
  7. "Elections FFR Bernard Laporte est le nouveau président de la Fédération". rugbyrama.fr (in French). 3 December 2016.
  8. "Bernard Laporte élu au comité exécutif de World Rugby à la place de Pierre Camou". lequipe.fr (in French). 9 May 2016.
  9. "FFR : Bernard Laporte élu vice-président du comité du Tournoi des Six Nations". rugbyrama.fr (in French). 10 July 2019.
  10. "Bill Beaumont re-elected World Rugby chairman for a second term". ESPN. 2 May 2020.
Awards
Preceded by
Rod Macqueen
IRB International Coach of the Year
2002
Succeeded by
Clive Woodward
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Jean-Claude Skrela
French National Rugby Union Coach
1999–2007
Succeeded by
Marc Lièvremont
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