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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>a proposito di biglietti per il
mondiale..............</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>dove si possono fare su internet??? soltanto??
costi?? chi ha notizie da dare anche a me???</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>grazie</FONT></DIV>
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<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial">----- Original Message ----- </DIV>
<DIV
style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black"><B>From:</B>
<A title=p.imperatori@gmail.com href="mailto:p.imperatori@gmail.com">Paolo
Imperatori</A> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>To:</B> <A title=rugbylist@rugbylist.it
href="mailto:rugbylist@rugbylist.it">Rugbylist</A> </DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Sent:</B> Tuesday, March 20, 2007 4:04
PM</DIV>
<DIV style="FONT: 10pt arial"><B>Subject:</B> [RUGBYLIST] il XV di Planet
rugby</DIV>
<DIV><BR></DIV><PRE>tutti i trequarti dell'Irlanda (e di questo, mi sembra che ce ne siamo accorti tutti);<BR>tra titolari e riserve praticamente tutti gli avanti dell'Italia, incredibili le parole di elogio a Bortolami. Notevole.
<SPAN id=intelliTXT><B><SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"><BR><BR><BR></SPAN>15 Girvan Dempsey</B> - The Irish full-back<BR>has entered a renaissance period, rising above a tired-looking Geordan<BR>Murphy in the pecking order. Not the silky runner Murphy is, but he
<BR>brings a little more bite and thrust to his excursions into the<BR>three-quarter line, causing all sorts of problems and making all sorts<BR>of opportunities for those around him. Even took a couple himself...<BR><BR>
<BR><BR><B>14 Sean Lamont</B> - A quiet tournament to begin with, but that<BR>try in Paris was confirmation that his huge stride is back to terrorise<BR>defences everywhere, and he got through a lot of unsung work coming<BR>
into the line off his wing. Imagine what he could do if he had a<BR>genuine playmaker at fly-half.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>13 Brian O'Driscoll</B> - Not a lot to say about BOD that hasn't<BR>already been said. Absolutely no coincidence that Ireland lost the
<BR>crucial game with a try scored through his defensive channel when he<BR>wasn't there. Is so revered in Irish rugby circles that pulled<BR>hamstrings are now actually seen as stigmata... how Ireland must be<BR>praying that his twitchy muscle will relax before September.
<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>12 Gordon D'Arcy</B> - Often overshadowed by the rugby deity<BR>outside him, D'Arcy has bounced back from the injury that robbed him of<BR>the momentum he showed in 2004, and he matched his illustrious partner
<BR>step for step in creative genius and strong running this year once<BR>more.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>11 Denis Hickie</B> - Another Ireland back to bounce back from a<BR>long-term injury, Hickie has carried on the superlative run of form he
<BR>came into at the end of last season and is heading for the Rugby World<BR>Cup peerless throughout his land. Or any other land in the North.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>10 Ronan O'Gara</B> - Remember these words: 'Kiwis know their
<BR>rugby and know a lemon when they see one. O'Gara should have painted<BR>himself yellow and jumped into a gin and tonic. His kicking was duff,<BR>his tackling was duff and he didn't look like he could run a pack of
<BR>girl guides'? Perhaps the author may be asking for the tomato ketchup<BR>right about now... Sadly, we were robbed of the chance to watch Ronan<BR>shoot down his nemesis Jonny Wilkinson, but the way in which the<BR>
fly-half orchestrated the obliteration of England and Italy showed that<BR>Munsterman has come a long way from the timid chap who suffered so in<BR>2005.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>9 Harry Ellis</B> - This was a particularly close call, as
<BR>Alessandro Troncon of Italy merits a mention for the way in which he<BR>marshalled, but Ellis offered a little more than just direction, taking<BR>the initiative and creating stacks of chances for his team. Sadly for<BR>
him, few of his team-mates were on his wavelength.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>8 Sergio Parisse</B> - Another close call, with Denis Leamy<BR>close behind, but Parisse's defensive displays when Italy were being<BR>rocked, as well as strong running going forward ensure that he sneaks
<BR>ahead of the Irishman in the pack.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>7 David Wallace</B> - Evening up the close calls as Italy's<BR>Mauro Bergamasco was a close second. But while the Italian hard man<BR>blotted his copybook with a punch on Stephen Jones and a below-par
<BR>display against France, Wallace stood out all the way through, and kept<BR>it largely clean, to become quite an unsung hero of his team. And he's<BR>fast isn't he!?<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>6 Serge Betsen</B> - Initially, Simon Easterby had this spot all
<BR>sewn up, but a couple of late votes swung it the Frenchman's way. Some<BR>said he may have slowed up and lost his edge over the past season, but<BR>not a bit of it. Every bit the fearless marauding nailsack he was when
<BR>he burst onto the scene by doing 'a job' on Jonny Wilkinson six years<BR>ago.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>5 Paul O'Connell</B> - Even not at his best all the way through,<BR>O'Connell was still ginger head and huge shoulders above the rest.
<BR>Where the line-outs faltered, O'Connell made up for it with his<BR>work-rate in the loose, marauding around the field like a red-headed<BR>yeti.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>4 Marco Bortolami</B> - Italy's captain rarely fails to make the
<BR>cut in these reviews, and this year's effort makes it no exception this<BR>time. How much of Ireland's line-out ball did Italy pinch, never mind<BR>the other teams'? Bortolami will occupy a role in Italian rugby history
<BR>similar to that of Agustín Pichot in Argentina and Waisale Serevi in<BR>Fiji. But he still has a good few years left to lead the new generation<BR>forward yet.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>3 Martin Castrogiovanni</B> - Another shoe-in. Italy are
<BR>building a reputation for having a forward pack every bit as fearsome<BR>as the Pumas, and Castrogiovanni is the bull-bar at the front of the<BR>juggernaut. Caused indescribable damage in the front row.<BR><BR><BR><BR>
<B>2 Raphaël Ibañez</B> - France's captain formidable left all the<BR>other hookers a collective distant second, even if he did have to be<BR>told by Imañol Harinordoquy that his team still had a chance to win<BR>after Scotland had scored with four minutes to go. As with O'Connell,
<BR>it is the loose work that sets him apart from the others more than his<BR>competence in the tight, but France's line-out was the most secure of<BR>all.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>1 Olivier Milloud</B> - The 'man most likely to have been hewn
<BR>from a cliff-face', Bourgoin prop Milloud was magnificent all<BR>tournament; unflinching, unstoppable, <I>incroyable</I>.<BR><BR><BR><BR><B>Benched:</B> 16 Carlo Festuccia, 17 Carlos Nieto, 18 Jérôme<BR>Thion, 19 Mauro Bergamasco, 20 Alessandro Troncon, 21 David Skréla, 22
<BR>Chris Paterson.<BR></SPAN></PRE>
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