The ultimate guide to 2022 Rugby League World Cup: Everything you need to know for festival of footy

By Danielle Smith / Editor

After the official 2021 Rugby League World Cup kick-off was postponed 12 months ago, players, coaches, officials and especially fans are ready for the tournament to finally begin.

From team lists to match times, referees to rule changes, we have everything you need to know right here.

There will be 20 nations represented across the three tournaments with 61 matches over the course of the next month.

Australia will go into the men’s tournament as the raging hot favourites while the Jillaroos are also expected to triumph in the women’s event but with the rise of so many other nations in recent years, the green and gold sides will not have it all their own way.

There are 16 teams in the men’s competition, eight women’s nations and there is also a wheelchair rugby league trophy up for grabs with eight teams participating.

The Rugby League World Cup men’s captains. (Photo by Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images)

Rugby League World Cup 2022

History

The first RLWC was held in France in 1954. There have been 14 tournaments since then held around the world, with Australia holding the record for the most wins with 11.

Past Winners

2017 – Australia
2013 – Australia
2008 – New Zealand
2000 – Australia
1995 – Australia
1989-92 – Australia
1985-88 – Australia
1977 – Australia
1975 – Australia
1972 – Great Britain
1970 – Australia
1968 – Australia
1960 – Great Britain
1957 – Australia
1954 – Great Britain

(Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

The Pools

The 16 nations are spread across four pools, with every team from each pool playing each other once.

Pool A
England, France, Greece, Samoa

Pool B
Australia, Fiji, Italy, Scotland

Pool C
Ireland, Jamaica, Lebanon, New Zealand

Pool D
Cook Islands, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Wales

Fixtures and format

Australian viewers can watch every match live on Foxtel/Kayo.

In the men’s tournament, the top two nations from each pool will progress to the finals. With 48 pool games, four quarter-finals, two semi-finals, and of course the Grand Final, there is plenty of sensational footy coming our way.

All of Australia’s pool games fall on weekends which is handy, but you will need to set your alarm clocks for the early starts.

Australia vs Fiji – Sunday 16th October, 5.30am
Australia vs Scotland, Saturday 22nd October, 5.30am
Australia vs Italy, Sunday 30th October, 5.30am

Check out the full list of fixtures for every game here

Game Locations

The pool matches, quarter-finals, and semi-finals will be played between 16 venues across England, with the Grand Final to be held at Old Trafford, Manchester

St. James’ Park, Newcastle
Emerald Headingley Stadium, Leeds
Kingston Park, Newcastle
Halliwell Jones Stadium, Warrington
Eco-Power Stadium, Doncaster
Totally Wicked Stadium, St Helens
Leigh Sports Village Stadium, Leigh
Coventry Building Society Arena, Coventry
University of Bolton Stadium, Bolton
MKM Stadium, Hull
Bramall Lane, Sheffield
Riverside Stadium, Middlesbrough
John Smith’s Stadium, Huddersfield
DW Stadium, Wigan
Elland Road, Leeds
Emirates Stadium, London
Old Trafford, Manchester

(Photo: Fiona Goodall/Getty Images)

Referees

NRL Grand Final referee Ashley Klein will lead a team of NRL officials heading over to take charge of the men’s and women’s World Cup matches.

Along with Klein, the NRL has sent Gerard Sutton, Grant Atkins, Kasey Badger, Darian Furner, Adam Gee, Wyatt Raymond, Belinda Sharpe, and Todd Smith to England.

Grant Atkins, (NRL), Kasey Badger (NRL), Dean Bowmer (RFL), Ben Casty (FFRXIII), James Child (RFL), Darian Furner (NRL),  Adam Gee (NRL), Tom Grant (RFL), Marcus Griffiths (RFL), Robert Hicks (RFL), Neil Horton (RFL), Chris Kendall (RFL), Ashley Klein (NRL), Aaron Moore (RFL), Liam Moore (RFL), Paki Parkinson (NZRL), Geoffrey Poumes (FFRXIII), Wyatt Raymond (NRL), Liam Rush (RFL), Belinda Sharpe (NRL), Michael Smaill (RFL), Jack Smith (RFL), Todd Smith (NRL), Gerard Sutton(NRL), Rochelle Tamarua (NZRL), Ben Thaler (RFL), Warren Turley (RFL), James Vella (RFL). 

Squads

Each country has named a 24-man squad, with Australia selecting 13 debutants to wear the green and gold.

You can check out the list of every squad here

Betting

The Aussies are overall favourites to take out back-to-back titles, but the Kiwis price has shortened considerably after naming such a strong squad.

If you are looking to have a dabble on the tournament, all the odds thanks to Play Up can be found here

Rule changes

The matches will be played under International Rugby League Rules, with a mix of current Super League and NRL interpretations coming into play.

Field goals will only be worth one point no matter where they are kicked from.

There will be no penalties for ruck infringements, they will all receive a set restart regardless of where they take place on the field.

Captain’s challenges have been introduced for the first time at a World Cup. The NRL is the only competition that currently has them.

If a player cannot return to the field after a failed HIA, they are automatically ruled out for 11 days.

Women’s World Cup

This is the sixth installment of the Women’s Rugby League World Cup since it began in 2000. New Zealand holds the record for the most tournaments with three, and reigning champions Australia has claimed the other two.

With the popularity and participation of women’s rugby league through the roof, this World Cup sees the largest number of nations competing with eight, with Brazil the newest addition to the fold.

Ruan Sims, Steph Hancock and Renae Kunst of the Jillaroos (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Previous Winners

2017 – Australia
2013 – Australia
2008 – New Zealand
2003 – New Zealand
2000 – New Zealand

Group A
England, Brazil, Canada, Papua New Guinea

Group B
Australia, Cook Island, France, New Zealand

Pool stage
Date Fixture Time (AEDT) Venue
Wed Nov 2 England vs Brazil 1:30am Emerald Headingly Stadium, Leeds
Wed Nov 2 Papua New Guinea vs Canada 4:00am Emerald Headingly Stadium, Leeds
Thu Nov 3 New Zealand vs France 4:00am LNER Community Stadium, York
Thu Nov 3 Australia vs Cook Islands 6:30am LNER Community Stadium, York
Sat Nov 5 England vs Canada 11:00pm DW Stadium, Wigan
Sun Nov 6 Papua New Guinea vs Brazil 4:00am MKM Stadium, Hull
Mon Nov 7 New Zealand vs Cook Islands 4:00am LNER Community Stadium, York
Mon Nov 7 Australia vs France 6:30am LNER Community Stadium, York
Thu Nov 10 Canada vs Brazil 4:00am Emerald Headingly Stadium, Leeds
Thu Nov 10 England vs Papua New Guinea 6:30am Emerald Headingly Stadium, Leeds
Fri Nov 11 France vs Cook Islands 4:00am LNER Community Stadium, York
Fri Nov 11 Australia vs New Zealand 6:30am LNER Community Stadium, York
Tue Nov 15 Semi Final 1 4:00am LNER Community Stadium, York
Tue Nov 15 Semi Final 2 6:30am LNER Community Stadium, York
Sun Nov 20 Final 12:15am Old Trafford, Manchester

Wheelchair World Cup

There have been three Wheelchair Rugby League World Cups since its inception in 2008, but this is the first time it will be played as part of the traditional RLWC.

Australia, England, Ireland, Scotland, Spain, USA, Wales, and France will all battle it out for the title, with the French team eager to take out three consecutive World Cup wins.

Previous Winners

2017 – France
2013 – France
2008 – England

Date Fixture Time (AEDT) Venue
Fri Nov 4 Spain vs Ireland 4:00 am The Copper Box Arena London
Fri Nov 4 England vs Australia 6:30 am The Copper Box Arena London
Fri Nov 4 France vs Wales 10:00 pm The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Sat Nov 5 Scotland vs USA 12:30 am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Sun Nov 6 England vs Spain 11:00 pm The Copper Box Arena London
Mon Nov 7 Australia vs Ireland 1:30 am The Copper Box Arena London
Tue Nov 8 France vs Scotland 4:00 am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Tue Nov 8 Wales vs USA 6:30am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Wed Nov 9 Australia vs Spain 10:00pm The Copper Box Arena London
Thu Nov 10 England vs Ireland 12:30am The Copper Box Arena London
Thu Nov 10 France vs USA 10:00pm The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Fri Nov 11 Wales vs Scotland 12:30am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Sun Nov 13 Semi Final 1 12:30am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Mon Nov 14 Semi Final 2 1:30am The EIS Sheffield, Sheffield
Sat Nov 19 Final 6:30am Manchester Central, Manchester

Roar coverage

For all of your World Cup needs, look no further than right here at The Roar. We will have our very own Mike Meehall Wood and Mary Konstantopoulos on the ground covering the men’s and the women’s tournaments, as well as the rest of the team in Australia keeping you up to date with the lastest RLWC news.

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-07T02:45:34+00:00

Grant Parker

Guest


Anybody got any idea why the semi final draw has resulted in England playing Samoa again? Surely that shouldn't have been possible. Fair enough for the final but not for the semis. Seems to always be an issue with the draw at Rugby League World Cups. No doubt driven by trying to give England the best chance of making the final.

2022-10-13T03:47:11+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


hopefully it will be an Australia England final, and the Aussies smash them

2022-10-12T11:32:54+00:00

GWSingapore

Roar Rookie


Thank you. I will try BBC. Seems reading this that there is no free-to-air in Australia. I thought rugby league internationals involving Australia would be covered by the anti-siphoning legislation.

2022-10-12T10:51:59+00:00

Dionysus

Guest


Don't be silly, Our partners are CH9 you know the home of Rugby League, of course there in no FTA

2022-10-12T08:41:40+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Is that all? I would have thought more. And the same from Queensland. I just checked the team from Lebanon and they are worse than the Queensland Origin team for pinching players! Remember the song, ‘That’s in Queensland?’ Well, where is Parramatta, St Marys, Wentworthville, etc? They’re in Lebanon!

2022-10-12T07:09:38+00:00

Reality bites

Guest


Try fite.tv in Asia. They are covering it.

2022-10-12T07:04:20+00:00

Daily truths

Guest


The plastic paddy Ewic returns!

2022-10-12T06:56:58+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


No FTA?

2022-10-12T06:07:57+00:00

Birdy

Roar Rookie


Hia playing a big part.

2022-10-12T05:07:13+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


Enjoy the games mate. I know you can't wait.

2022-10-12T03:44:28+00:00

jimmmy

Roar Rookie


All games are live on BBC and are available on BBC I player. You will need a VPN and when you sign up for iplayer you will need an area code . I use Kingston upon Hull, 01482. Enjoy.

2022-10-12T03:23:32+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Is Kayo available there ?

2022-10-12T03:21:57+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Eric??

2022-10-12T03:09:48+00:00

Go Warriors

Guest


I am not sure you can call Australia raging hot favorites with the quality of the NZ, Samoan and Tongan teams. Also the poms on their turf will be tough to beat. It is going to be a cracking tournament though, expect some upsets.

2022-10-12T02:29:10+00:00

R. Burrow

Guest


35% of players involved are born and bred in NSW. That's the best stat.

2022-10-12T02:28:35+00:00

GWSingapore

Roar Rookie


Any ideas if or where the games might be streamed into South-East Asia? The pay sports networks here don't seem to be covering it.

2022-10-12T02:19:38+00:00

ALL ABOUT BALLS

Roar Rookie


That is interesting with the failed HIA, 11 days off, ...maybe its 2 days in Roman numerals, :happy: So the Quarts..Aussies play Lebanon and NZ play Fiji, winners meet in semis, and England .maybe play PNG and Samoa play Tonga and winner meets in the semi.

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