France have devalued the most eagerly awaited World Cup game for four years and blown an enormous raspberry at the IRB.
Coach Marc Lievremont has chosen virtually a second string forward pack for the clash with the All Blacks at Eden Park on Saturday. It is a match that the rugby world has been waiting to see since the draw was made. Ever since France put New Zealand out of the 2007 Rugby World Cup in Cardiff, All Black fans have waited for the chance for revenge. But Saturday's re-match has been downgraded close to an irrelevance by the deliberate French selection.
Lievremont's choices scream just one thing - "the last thing we want is to win this match and finish as group winners. We want to lose, finish runners-up and stay in what now looks destined to be exclusively the Northern Hemisphere side of the draw".
The French clearly believe they can beat the likes of Ireland or England and could reach the World Cup final. However, if they finished as group winners they would almost certainly have to play either an improved South Africa or the Australians in the other semifinal. The trouble with this strategy is the IRB has sold 60,000 tickets for a match always seen as one of the highlights of the tournament. Now, it is completely devalued and should be dominated by the All Blacks.
And it may set a precedent. Ireland's upset win over Australia may have been disastrous for the Wallabies but it was a nightmare for the South Africans. They are now looking at a likely route to the final barred first by the Australians in the quarter-final and then the All Blacks in the semifinal.