Sunday 2 January 2022

2023 Rugby World Cup team of the tournament

A quick look at past scratch teams of this nature reveals a tight correlation between the fortunes of teams, and their stars selected.

If your side is knocked out in the pool stage, only tier two standouts get a nod. If a heavyweight fails to make the semi-finals, their men aren’t generally named to the XV. Right or wrong, this is the convention I will seek to follow. rwc live

Thus, selecting a rwc live 2023 all-tourney team requires the observer to make some sense of the car smash on one side of the draw: host France, perennial favourite New Zealand, awkward Ireland, and reigning champion South Africa seem destined to clash in the quarters.

RWC 2023

On recent form, the All Blacks won’t be overconfident against any of that trio. South Africa will prefer to play the home team. Ireland will have to overcome a forever barrier: winning a quarterfinal, ever. I don’t see enough depth in the Irish team to win 5 or 6; history tells me France will thrill, and then falter, perhaps because of a lack of nous.

Therefore, expect more Springboks and All Blacks in this team than French or Irish.On the other side of the draw, I only see Australia and England being capable of making a deep run into the final four. I also am predicting Fiji to finish ahead of Wales in a shock, and Argentina ahead of Japan. My selections will reflect these views.

Ginger successor to the Beast, the Springboks loosehead will be at prop prime in 2023. He is seldom beaten at scrum, but offers far more than that.

The Boks will likely spoil French dreams, and if so, it’ll be a pack battle royale. Angus Bell might be just behind, as the Wallabies challenge for the final. The Irish looseheads will also go well in the five matches they play.

South Africa’s Duane Vermeulen hopes to play in 2023 Rugby World Cup

Springbok number eight Duane Vermeulen is hopeful of representing South Africa, the reigning World champions, at the Rugby World Cup in France next year despite coming towards the end of his career.

The 35-year-old veteran said he believes his recent move to Irish outfit Ulster will be good for his game as he aims to remain in contention for selection for the three-time World champions.

“I still want to play for the Springboks as well. So if I can push towards the next World Cup as well, that’s my marker. That’s a big thing,” Vermeulen was quoted as telling The Ulster Rugby Show.

“If I can play and contribute I want to keep going as long as I can.”

Vermeulen has been capped 60 times for South Africa and is still regarded as the Springboks’ first choice number eight. One of the most influential forwards in e was voted the Player of the Match during the 2019 Rugby World Cup final, which South Africa won 32-12 against England.

While injury prevented him from representing South Africa during the British & Irish Lions series, he played for most of South Africa’s Rugby Championship campaign in addition to the Autumn Nations Series.

He was one of three South African World Cup-winners who were called up to the world-famous Barbarians side to face Samoa for the Killik Cup at Twickenham last month. That match was, however, cancelled just hours before kick-off due to a number of coronavirus cases in the invitational side.

South Africa is in Pool B with Ireland, Scotland, and will be joined by qualifiers from Asia/Pacific 1 and Europe 2.

Thursday 30 December 2021

Rugby Europe Championship 2021 title may have been decided back in June

The fate of the Rugby Europe Championship 2021 title might have been chosen back in June when Georgia lifted the prize for the fifteenth time, yet the opposition possibly reached a resolution last end of the week in Amsterdam when Spain crushed the Netherlands 52-7.

The success lifted Los Leones up to fourth in the Rugby Europe Championship 2021 table and leaves them just two focuses uncontrolled of Romania and Portugal in quest for the Europe 2 spot at Rugby World Cup 2023.

Focuses from the current year's competition will be added to the focuses from the 2022 version of the Rugby Europe Championship when it comes around to figuring out which of the groups will be headed toward France the year after next.

Everything being equal, the odds of any of the groups guaranteeing the Europe 1 spot in front of Georgia are thin, best case scenario, with the Lelos holding an important lead at the midway stage following another Grand Slam-winning effort.

In any case, Romania, who sit second in front of Portugal on focuses contrast, are resurgent under lead trainer Andy Robinson and will want to in any case be in the blend for the area's first programmed capability billet when the Lelos visit Bucharest in the penultimate round of the Rugby Europe Championship 2022 on 12 March.

Romania showed enormous soul to revitalize from their cycle one 18-13 loss to Russia and beat Portugal 28-27 in their subsequent installation, scoring two late attempts to upset a 13-point deficiency. Further successes came against Spain and the Netherlands either side of a 28-17 misfortune to all-overcoming Georgia.

Portugal partook in a fine mission in 2021 under Patrice Lagisquet and furthermore won three matches. Operating system Lobos started with a 29-16 loss to Georgia and were then left kicking themselves in the wake of neglecting triumph from their grip against Romania. Nonetheless, persuading wins against the Netherlands, Russia and Spain set them up pleasantly for a genuine slant at capability one year from now.

Spain started off with a serious presentation against Georgia which presented to them a losing reward point. That 25-19 loss was then trailed by one more close miss against Romania, where the losing edge was again just six focuses. A 43-28 misfortune to Portugal put them in a difficult spot however huge successes over Russia and the Netherlands mean they are still especially in with a yell of coming to France 2023.

A success over Romania looked good for the remainder of Russia's mission however, as it ended up, they could oversee another triumph (35-8 against the Netherlands). All things considered, with nine focuses to their name, Russia are positively not out for the count in the race for capability.

After an intense first season back at this level in quite a while, the Netherlands will be looking more towards Rugby World Cup 2027 than the competition in 2023. The Dutch surrendered a normal of 50 focuses per game in losing each of the five of their installations and neglected to get a solitary point.

WHICH POOLS ARE EUROPE 1 AND EUROPE 2 IN AT RWC 2023?

Wales, Australia and Fiji await the team that qualifies as Europe 1. The Final Qualification Tournament winner will also be present in Pool C. 

The team that finishes third in the combined Rugby Europe Championship 2021 and 2022 table will contest the Final Qualification Tournament alongside teams from Africa, Asia/Pacific and the Americas.

Europe 2 will go into Pool B with reigning world champions South Africa, Ireland and Scotland and the Asia/Pacific 1 qualifier.

WHEN DOES THE RUGBY EUROPE CHAMPIONSHIP 2022 BEGIN?

Fixtures for the second half of the regional qualification process have just been announced. Romania take on Russia and Spain play the Netherlands in the first two fixtures on Saturday 5 February, while Georgia kick off their title defence against Portugal in Tbilisi the following day.

Georgia travel to the Netherlands in round two on 12 February, while Russia play Spain in a game that neither team can afford to lose. Romania against Portugal is the later of the three kick-offs.

Round three kicks off with an encounter between Portugal and the Netherlands on 26 February. A Sunday double bill features Spain against Romania and Georgia against Russia. Victory in that game could guarantee the Lelos of the Europe 1 spot with two rounds to play. RWC 2023 Live

After a two-week break, the Rugby Europe Championship 2022 fixtures resume on the weekend of 12/13 March. Russia are up against the Netherlands and Romania take on Georgia in the Saturday slot with Iberian bragging rights at stake on Sunday as Spain welcome local rivals Portugal to Madrid.

The final set of fixtures take place on the weekend of 19/20 March with the Netherlands and Romania and Portugal and Russia going head-to-head in Saturday’s two fixtures. On Sunday, Georgia and Spain bring the curtain down on the qualification race

Friday 17 December 2021

2023 Rugby World Cup - France RWC Live

The 2023 Rugby World Cup is scheduled to be the tenth edition of the Rugby World Cup, the quadrennial world championship for men's rugby union teams. It is scheduled to take place in France from 8 September to 28 October 2023 in nine venues across the country.

The opening match and final will take place at the Stade de France. The tournament will take place in the year of the 200th anniversary of the "invention" of the sport by William Webb Ellis. Originally, the tournament was scheduled to last the typical six weeks; however, on 23 February 2021, World Rugby announced an additional week to accommodate the additional rest day requirement for player-welfare. 

This means that teams will have a minimum of five rest days for all matches, optimising recovery and preparation for the tournament. It will be the fourth time France has hosted the Rugby World Cup, having previously hosted the 2007 event, the 1999 and as joint hosts in 1991. It precedes the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris and will take place less than a year before the Olympic opening ceremony. Watch Rugby World Cup online

2023 Rugby World Cup Host country

World Rugby requested that any members wishing to host the 2023 event were to submit an expression of interest by June 2015. A total of six unions responded. The Italian Rugby Federation were among the members interested, but withdrew from their bid on 28 September 2016. The Argentine Rugby Union and USA Rugby both expressed their interest in hosting the event but ultimately decided against a formal bid. Three bids were officially submitted to World Rugby by the June 2017 deadline.

rwc 2023

On 15 November 2017, The French Rugby Federation bid was chosen ahead of bids by the South African Rugby Union and the Irish Rugby Football Union. France had launched its bid on 9 February 2017.

20 teams are set to compete. A total of 12 teams gained automatic qualification to the tournament after finishing in the top three of their pool at the 2019 Rugby World Cup, which included France already automatically qualified as host. The remaining eight spaces will be decided by regional competitions followed by a few cross-regional play-offs. The final spot will be decided by a repechage tournament in November 2022.

2023 Rugby World Cup Pool Draw

The pool draw took place on 14 December 2020, in Paris.[5] The draw returned to its traditional place of the year following the previous World Cup, after the end-of-year internationals. Rugby World Cup time

The seeding system from previous Rugby World Cups was retained with the 12 automatic qualifiers from 2019 being allocated to their respective bands based on their World Rugby Rankings on 1 January 2020:

2023 Rugby World Cup team of the tournament

A quick look at past scratch teams of this nature reveals a tight correlation between the fortunes of teams, and their stars selected. If yo...