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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Sarah Rendell

Berthoumieu banned for biting Wafer in blow to France before England clash

Axelle Berthoumieu in action
Axelle Berthoumieu will miss the rest of the Women’s Rugby World Cup. Photograph: Joe Toth/Shutterstock

The France flanker Axelle Berthoumieu has been banned for biting the Ireland back-row Aoife Wafer in their Women’s Rugby World Cup quarter‑final and the flanker will miss the semi‑final against England on Saturday.

Manaé Feleu, the France captain, will also miss the England clash as she has been banned for a high tackle in the Ireland game. Both players are appealing against the sanctions.

The pair were cited on Sunday evening. Berthoumieu was handed a 12-match ban which was reduced from 18, while Feleu was given a three-match suspension which could be reduced to two if she completes the coaching intervention programme. The bans mean they will both miss the rest of the World Cup.

Feleu is appealing against the decision as, while she admitted foul play, she did not think it met a citing threshold. Berthoumieu accepts her actions warranted a red card but is appealing against the length of the ban. Both appeals have been provisionally scheduled for Tuesday. If Berthoumieu’s length of sanction is upheld she will next be able to play on 1 March 2026.

France defeated Ireland 18-13 after pulling off a comeback win. The task of overcoming England, the world No 1 side, has become harder with the suspensions, particularly Feleu’s as she has been one of the team’s best players this competition.

The bite to Wafer was flagged by the player during the match but it was not caught by officials and Berthoumieu did not receive any punishment during the game. The Ireland co-captain Sam Monaghan said post-match: “I spoke to the referee. Aoife told me, I didn’t see it myself, but I spoke to the referee and asked them.”

In the outcome of the hearings it was said: “In reviewing the matter live, the TMO was unable to determine clear and obvious foul play and did not have the benefit of additional evidential submissions to corroborate.”

Before their quarter-final against Ireland, France finished top of their pool after wins against Italy, Brazil and South Africa. England, meanwhile, beat Scotland in their quarter-final to reach the last four and are unbeaten in their past 31 games.

The Red Roses are favourites to win the trophy at a sold-out Twickenham on 27 September. Canada or New Zealand will await either France or England in the final, with their semi‑final taking place on Friday.

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