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Oradea, David

David Auradou ( born David Auradou , born November 13, 1973 in Harfleur ) is a French rugby player who played in the second line at the castle, and is currently the coach of the youth team Stad Montois. He spent most of his playing career with Stud France, with which he won the French championship five times. With the French national team in 1999, he became the silver medalist of the World Cup, and in 2002 and 2004 he also won the Six Nations Cup with her and won the Grand Slam.

Rugby
David Oradeu
Auradou.JPG
general information
NicknameRusk ( Fr. Biscotte ), Bibi ( Fr. Bibi )
Date of BirthNovember 13, 1973 ( 1973-11-13 ) (aged 45)
Place of BirthHarfleur , France
Citizenship France
Growth200 cm
Weight110 kg
PositionCastle
Club Information
ClubFlag of france Stud Montois
Positionyouth team coach
Career
Club career *
1993-1995Flag of france Cahors
1995-1996Flag of france Grohlet
1996-1997Flag of france Stud France
2007-2008Flag of france Racing Metro 9216 (0)
2008-2009Flag of france Stud France9 (0)
National team**
1999-2004France France41 (0)
Coaching career
2011-2012Flag of france Sarla
2012—2013Flag of france Stud Francepier trainer
2014 - n. at.Flag of france Stud Montoispier trainer

* The number of games and points for a professional club is considered for the national league, Heineken Cup and Super Rugby.

** The number of games and points for the national team in official matches.

Awards
France for France
World Championships
SilverWales 1999

Content

Career

Club

He began his career with the Cahors team in 1993, in 1995 left it and moved to Grohl, from where he left for Stud France in 1996. As part of the Parisians, he spent 11 seasons and won 5 champion titles. In Stud France, David Oradeu was known by the nicknames “Rusk” ( French Biscotte ) and “ Bibie ” ( French Bibie ), and he received the second nickname from Serge Simon , which contrasted seriously with the manner of playing Oradu [1] . In 2007, he switched to Racing Metro 92 for one season and then returned to Stud France, where he ended his career after the 2008/2009 season.

Team

In the national team he played the first game on March 20, 1999 against England . He spent only 41 games for the French national team, did not score points. In 1999, he became the silver medalist of the World Cup, having spent one game against Argentina (victory 47:26) [2] . In 2003, he took 4th place at the World Cup in Australia, having played three matches there (against Japan , the United States and New Zealand ). In 2002 and 2004, the main trophy along with the Grand Slam won the Six Nations Cups. In 2007, he played for the Barberryans France international team, playing matches against Argentina in 2007 and against Canada [3] .

Coaching career

Since 2009, he began to obtain a trainer license. In the 2011/2012 season he coached the Sarla team in the Third Division [4] , in the 2012/2013 season he led the Stud France youth team under the current coach Richard Poole-Jones : the team took 10th place and did not qualify for European competition [4 ] , and until the end of the season Oradu did not finish. Since 2014, he has led the youth team of Stud Montois under Christophe Lossuc [5] .

Beyond Rugby

He is the owner of an enterprise selling building materials [4] .

Achievements

In the club

  • Champion of France: 1998, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2007
  • Vice Champion of France: 2005
  • French Cup Winner: 1999
  • Heineken Cup Finalist: 2001 , 2005

Team

  • Vice World Champion: 1999
  • Six Nations Cup Winner and Grand Slam Holder: 2002, 2004

Notes

  1. ↑ Midi Olympique Magazine No. 4847, December 8, 2006, p. 41.
  2. ↑ IRB RUGBY WORLD CUP. Argentina (20) 26 - 47 (27) France (FT )
  3. ↑ Profile on the Barbarians France website Archived January 19, 2015 on Wayback Machine (Fr.)
  4. ↑ 1 2 3 Top 14: Auradou nouvel entraîneur des avants du Stade Français . Le Parisien , June 4, 2012 (French)
  5. ↑ Pro D2, transferts - Mont-de-Marsan: David Auradou arrive comme entraîneur des avants . Rugbyrama , March 6, 2014 (Fr.)

Links

  • Profile on ESPN (English)
  • Profile at European Professional Club Rugby (English)
  • Profile on ItsRugby (fr.)
Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Oradu,_David&oldid=101187535


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