MATHIEU BASTAREAUD EASILY lends himself to any amount of descriptive prose a writer cares to delve into.
But sometimes, the cold hard numbers are more than enough to convey the power and influence he possesses.
At an even six foot, Toulon’s centre may be on the short side of modern outside backs in rugby, but at 120 kilogrammes (almost 19 stone) he is breaking new ground.
There’s another number that makes Bastareaud an even more impressive figure. On Saturday, he will run out for his fifth European final in five consecutive years.
He hasn’t won them all, but he has won the ones that matter.
After losing the 2011 Challenge Cup final to Harlequins, cash-strapped Stade Francais were forced to let him leave. Many felt the Parisiennes had struck a good deal in getting shot of him. At the time, the centre’s international career looked to be in tatters.
The above is the statement Bastareaud made after ‘L’Affaire de Wellington’. The incident involved a 20-year-old drinking too much. The same person then made the mistake of feeling ashamed, and so he lied to say his injury was the result of a five-man assault.
Most 20-year-old men make mistakes after drinking more than their fill, Bastareaud found himself at the centre of a full on diplomatic incident after New Zealand Prime Minister John Key apologised for a Wellington city assault that was purely an invention from Bastareaud’s mind.
Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
Forget his career, because Bastareaud’s very existence came precariously close to an early end when, following the revelations of the summer tour to New Zealand, the kid from Créteil made an attempt on his own life.
Thankfully, it was an unsuccessful one.
At the age of 20 Mathieu Bastareaud was pulled out of the Seine and lived to fight, to break lines, obliterate tackles and dominate rugby games another day.
Six months later, Les Bleus called on the unique centre again, but the 2010 Grand Slam was the last time the international arena would be treated to Bastareaud for two years as troubled mind followed him onto the field.
By 2011, Bastareaud was 22. And his star was on the rise again. His beautifully struck drop-goal in the Challenge Cup final defeat may not have stopped Harlequins triumphing, but it gave Toulon more confidence that there was more talent than trouble in that enormous frame.