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A closer look at the four groups at the 2023 Rugby World Cup

By PA
World Rugby Chairman Bill Beaumont presents Beauden Barrett of the All Blacks with a cap during the New Zealand welcome ceremony at Cour Haute de l’Hotel de Ville ahead of the Rugby World Cup France 2023 on September 01, 2023 in Lyon, France. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

The 2023 Rugby World Cup in France kicks off on Friday, September 8. With pools for the tournament decided in December 2020, the current leading nations are in the same half of the draw.

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Here, the PA news agency takes a closer look at the four groups and glances ahead to the knockout stages.

Pool A
Hosts France versus three-time champions New Zealand provides a blockbuster opening fixture in Paris. The All Blacks, on the back of winning the Rugby Championship, go into the competition as marginal favourites to lift the Webb Ellis Cup among bookmakers, while Les Bleus are also heavily fancied, particularly with home advantage. Italy will bid to help inflict a shock early exit on one of the pool’s leading nations and can take confidence from 2022 victories over Wales and Australia. Namibia, who have never won a World Cup match, and Uruguay, who have never reached the knockout stages, complete the group.

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Pool B
For the second successive World Cup, Ireland and Scotland have been drawn together, only this time they are in arguably the toughest group alongside reigning world champions South Africa. The Scots begin against the formidable Springboks, who were tournament winners in 1995, 2007 and 2019, before completing proceedings with a potentially pivotal Paris clash against Andy Farrell’s Six Nations champions. Ireland have dominated recent meetings with Scotland, winning 12 of the last 13, including a 27-3 success in Japan four years ago. Romania, who missed out on the 2019 tournament after fielding an ineligible player in qualifying, and Tonga will be out to cause upsets.

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Pool C
Wales and Australia are the favourites to progress, despite turbulent build-ups during which each brought back a former head coach. Warren Gatland rejoined Wales, who have won just three of their last 13 Tests, in December to replace Wayne Pivac and is bidding to better the fourth-placed finishes he achieved in 2011 and 2019. Eddie Jones took Australia to the 2003 final and returned to the role in January shortly after being dismissed by England. Georgia stunned Wales in the autumn and will be looking to do so again, while Fiji also pose a threat. Portugal are seeking a maiden World Cup win.

Pool D
England have endured a rocky ride in Steve Borthwick’s short reign but could not have wished for a kinder draw. The 2019 runners-up, whose underwhelming form from the end of the Jones era has extended into Borthwick’s tenure, face their biggest test first: Argentina in Marseille. Los Pumas pulled off a shock Twickenham win in the autumn and a repeat result, in the absence of suspended pair Owen Farrell and Billy Vunipola, would leave England playing knockout rugby against their other opponents. Samoa, Japan and tournament debutants Chile are ranked 12th, 14th and 22nd in the world respectively and have each never beaten the 2003 champions.

Knockout stages
The lopsided draw means only two of the sport’s five leading countries can possibly reach the semi-finals. Should, as expected, France and New Zealand progress from Pool A then their likely last-eight opponents will be South Africa, Ireland or Scotland. Conversely, opportunity knocks for the likes of England, Wales and Australia. The three nations have been far from convincing in recent times, underlined by coaching alterations for each since the autumn. Yet they will all be eyeing semi-final spots based on their favourable circumstances. Argentina, who finished third at the last World Cup staged in France (2007), are the other side likely to make the last eight.

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Comments

3 Comments
D
David 688 days ago

More of a passing glance than a closer look

J
Joseph 688 days ago

The pools could have been done a lot better , pools A and B will meet in the final don't need the rest of them now ???

F
Flankly 688 days ago

Of the five top ranked teams three are in Pool B, and the other two are in Pool A.


So ... the round of eight (QFs) can include only four of the top five teams. And the round of four (SFs) can only include two of the top five teams.


And ... teams in Pool B will face at least three top five teams to get to the semi-final, four if they are not themselves a top five team. Whereas teams in Pools C&D will face zero top five teams to get to the semi-final.


They could hardly have done worse by getting a five year old to pick the pools.

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Jfp123 29 minutes ago
Why New Zealand learned more from their July series than France

It will be great if Jalibert improves in defence, but unless and until he improves substantially, I think he should be out of the running for the national team. If you look at the French A side, attack is not usually so much of a problem - they scored 200 points in the last 6 nations without MJ on the pitch. Defence however can be an issue, Penaud isn’t the greatest in that area for a start. So a 10 who is solid in defence is badly needed. And given his poor defence record, MJ would be bound to be targeted by shrewd coaches like Rassi and Razor, so he needs to be able to withstand that.

Also, given sufficient improvement in defence, there are still factors which tell against MJ. I think the 7/1 bench has been a very successful experiment, and for that you need flexible backs who can play in more than one position in case of injury. Then there’s how well the 10 plays with France’s best 9, Dupont. And even if you think MJ is better when there’s no Dupont or 7/1 split, stability in a test team is important, so it’s better not to go chopping and changing the 10 needlessly. There’s also the question of temperament - MJ doesn’t shine at his brightest when it really matters, eg WC quarters and Top14 finals, and look at his test record over the past 2 years.

I see Ntamack as by far the best option at 10. Rugby is a team game, and apart from his excellent defence, there’s his partnership with Dupont, his versatility, and all the other skills that go to making a great team player and a great 10. He’s excellent under the high ball, an area where France tend to have a weakness, and has fine strategic and team management skills, great handling skills and so on.

While having star quality is important, it’s not the be all and end all, as illustrated by UBB this season. Imo, though undoubtedly very good, they underperformed. With best wings, best 9, as Dupont barely played in the Top14, with Jalibert and leading centres and 15, plus a strengthened forward pack, they couldn’t match ST in points scored, despite the latter’s huge injury list which left some positions seriously weakened, at least on paper.

For next season, I hope ST are back to their scintillating best with injuries healed, that LBB is back to rude health for UBB, that the exciting promise of La Rochelle’s and Toulon’s new recruits bears fruit, Bayonne continue to defy their budget and we have a cracking, highly competitive Top14 and Les Bleus triumphant in the autumn internationals and six nations!

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