- 1 Legend and French Flair: the Top 5 France Matches for the Ages
- 2 5. France 40-25 New Zealand (November 2021) — The Masterclass
- 3 4. France 20-18 New Zealand (2007 quarter-final) — The Cardiff Wall
- 4 3. France 25-13 England (March 2022) — The Grand Slam of Maturity
- 5 2. New Zealand 20-23 France (July 1994) — The Try at the End of the Earth
- 6 1. France 43-31 New Zealand (1999 semi-final) — The Unreal at Twickenham
Legend and French Flair: the Top 5 France Matches for the Ages 
French rugby is not just a pile of stats or silverware gathering dust in a cabinet. It is, above all, a story of raw emotion, wild swings and moments of genius where logic gets shoved aside by instinct. To trace the history of the Bleus is to pass through peaks of high drama, often against the same old mythical foes. Here are the five games that forged the legend of the France team and left an indelible mark on the imagination of rugby fans everywhere.
5. France 40-25 New Zealand (November 2021) — The Masterclass 
Before the 2022 triumph, there was this earthquake at Stade de France. That night, the Bleus did not just beat the All Blacks; they outplayed them physically and technically. The moment everyone remembers is Romain Ntamack launching a counter from his own in-goal area, a play that summed up the end of France’s inferiority complex. This was the unofficial birth of a golden generation, proof that French rugby could combine rock-solid defence with devastating attacking invention.
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4. France 20-18 New Zealand (2007 quarter-final) — The Cardiff Wall
It was not the prettiest game, but it was a masterclass in resilience. In a seething Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, the French stared down the Haka and did it in that famous dark blue shirt. What followed was a lesson in defensive sacrifice. Pinned in their own half, Bernard Laporte’s side threw themselves into desperate tackles to snuff out the New Zealand thunder. It was a win built on guts, sealed by a try from Yannick Jauzion that sent France to the summit of their courage.
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3. France 25-13 England (March 2022) — The Grand Slam of Maturity 
Twelve years of waiting for a nation mad about its rugby. This final Crunch game for the Grand Slam showed a France side at complete ease. Under the pressure of a Stade de France desperate for the release, Antoine Dupont and company served up rugby of clinical purity. No panic, no pointless decoration: perfect field position and cold-blooded finishing. This match still stands as the symbol of a team that went from dazzling outsiders to a well-drilled war machine.
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2. New Zealand 20-23 France (July 1994) — The Try at the End of the Earth
Winning a Test series in New Zealand is the Everest of any rugby player. Doing it in style borders on the miraculous. That day in Auckland, the French pulled off the impossible. Trailing late on, they launched a move from deep inside their own 22 that went the length of the pitch. Nine players touched the ball, with sharp offloads and relentless support runs, until Jean-Luc Sadourny finished the move. The phrase “French Flair” found its purest definition in that moment of instinct.
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1. France 43-31 New Zealand (1999 semi-final) — The Unreal at Twickenham 
This is the match that comes up in every conversation, the one that laughs in the face of logic. Down 24-10 to an All Blacks side led by the unstoppable Jonah Lomu, France looked done for. What happened in the second half belongs in sport’s mythbook. In thirty minutes, the Bleus poured in 33 points, slicing through the Kiwi defence with pinpoint Christophe Lamaison chip kicks and Christophe Dominici’s wild bursts of pace. A total-rugby storm that left the game stunned. That day, France did not just win a match; it walked into eternity.
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Photo by JEAN-LOUP GAUTREAU / AFP


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