The Roar
The Roar

Advertisement

"A landmark moment": New global competition announced for women's rugby, WXV

Autoplay in... 6 (Cancel)
Up Next No more videos! Playlist is empty -
Replay
Cancel
Next
16th March, 2021
7

With three spots up for grabs, the Australian women’s rugby team will have to compete against New Zealand, Canada and the US to be in tier-one of a new global tourney.

The Wallaroos will have to finish in the top three against Canada, New Zealand and the United States to qualify for tier-one of World Rugby’s new three-level rugby world tournament.

Organisers are hoping a new annual three-tier global women’s tournament will create a more competitive international landscape and grow the Women’s Rugby World Cup to 16 teams.

WXV will start in 2023 and has initially been supported by a STG6.4-million pound ($A11 million) investment from the global governing body for the first two years.

It will be hosted in a September-October international competition window, except in a World Cup year.

“This is a landmark moment for the sport. Today’s announcement of a new, global international 15s calendar will underpin the future success and accelerate the development of the women’s game,” World Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont said in a statement.

“By establishing a unified international 15s calendar and introducing WXV we are creating a platform for the women’s international teams to compete in more consistent, competitive and sustainable competitions at regional and global level.”

Entry into the competition will be via regional qualifiers. WXV 1, the top tier, will consist of six teams – the leading three sides from the European Six Nations and the top three from Australia, Canada, New Zealand and USA.

Advertisement

There will initially be no relegation from this tier, with the finals tournament played in a single location.

WXV 2 will comprise the next two teams from the Six Nations, the fourth-placed team from the cross-regional tournament featuring Oceania and North American teams, and another side each from Oceania, Asia and Africa.

It will also be in a single location and the bottom team will be relegated.

WXV 3 will be made up of four teams and include two more from Europe, one from Asia and the winners of an Africa versus South America playoff. The top side will be promoted to WXV 2.

“This is an ambitious, long-term commitment to make the global game more competitive, to grow the women’s game and support the expansion of Rugby World Cup to 16 teams from 2025 and beyond,” Beaumont added.

The 2021 Women’s Rugby World Cup, to be staged in New Zealand and featuring 12 teams, was postponed by a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

© AAP

close