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Filling in the gaps in the draw for the 2019 World Cup

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and World Rugby chairman Bill Beaumont at the draw for the 2019 World Cup

There are a few holes in the draw for the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan. James Harrington has done his best to fill them.

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There you have it – the draw for the 2019 World Cup in Japan is complete.

At least, most of it. Eight teams have yet to qualify. And the last vacant slot in Pool B won’t be filled until November 2018, following a four-team repechage competition.

However, to offer a hint of how the pools may look two years and four months from now, teams from each of those ongoing qualifying tournaments are listed in brackets, selected from their respective tournaments according to current World Rugby rankings.

So, this is how the pools could look in 2019, and what fans could look forward to in each of the four pools:

Pool A – The Party Pool

Teams: Ireland, Scotland, Japan, Europe 1 (Romania), Play-off winner (Samoa)

If you’re going to Japan 2019 and want to have a good time, this is the pool to follow. The on-field entertainment will be pretty good, but the craic in and around the grounds will be off the scale.

The most serious rugby-related issue for those sides looking to qualify for the knockout phase will be avoiding New Zealand in the quarter-finals. As the world champions don’t do group-phase tactics beyond win all their games, that’s relatively simple. Whoever finishes second in Pool A will face an All Blacklash in the last eight. Of course, whoever tops Pool A and avoids New Zealand can expect to face South Africa, who must have improved by September 2019, surely.

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At this stage, everyone expects two of Ireland, Scotland and hosts Japan to qualify. But two difficult sides could fill those vacant slots.

Pool B – The Foregone Conclusion Pool

Teams: New Zealand, South Africa, Italy, Africa 1 (Namibia), Repechage winner (Spain)

Much has been made of the fact that Japan 2019 will be the first time that New Zealand and South Africa have ever met in the pool phase of a World Cup. But, let’s be honest, it’s not as if they never meet.

Beyond the Rugby Championship sides, the only question is: which side will finish third and qualify for the 2023 World Cup in Ireland, or France, or even South Africa? This far out from the tournament, Italy have to be very early favourites.

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Pool C – The Official Pool of Death™

Teams: England, France, Argentina, Americas 1 (USA), Oceania 2 (Tonga)

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England coach Eddie Jones doesn’t like the ‘Pool of Death’ cliche – “Nobody’s going to die,” he said when the question was put to him soon after the draw was made. Which is all the more reason to use it, even though it is a cliche. Besides, the consensus of opinion is that Pool C was not the World Cup draw that England, Argentina or France were looking for.

No wonder. Three tier one sides with knockout-phase ambitions, and just two quarter-final slots up for grabs equals disappointment for one of them. England know all about that, after 2015. Not that it gets much easier later on in the competition. Whoever wins this pool is on a semi-final collision course with New Zealand.

That’s before considering the two unfilled slots. Oceania 2, in particular, could cause a few problems.

Pool D – The Pool of Wince

Teams: Australia, Wales, Georgia, Oceania 1 (Fiji), Americas 2 (Uruguay)

Oceania 1 could make this pool tougher than it would otherwise be for tier one sides Australia and Wales. Fiji are currently the highest-ranked of the Pacific Island sides, but there’s not much between them, Samoa (who, we’ve got as Play-off winners in a shootout match between the third-placed side from Oceania and the second-ranked team in the Rugby Europe Championship – based on World Rugby’s current rankings) and Tonga. Any one of those three could give the early knockout-phase favourites a serious run for their money.

After the Pools

The knockout phase of the 2019 World Cup looks like this:

Quarter-finals

QF1: Winners Pool B v runners up Pool A

QF2: Winners Pool C v runners up Pool D

QF3: Winners Pool D v runners up Pool C

QF4: Winners Pool A v runners up Pool B

Semi Finals

SF1: Winner QF1 v Winner QF2

SF2: Winner QF3 v Winner QF4

We’ll leave you to work out the permutations that end with your preferred country lifting the Webb Ellis trophy.

And, in case you want to know, here’s how those eight empty slots will be filled.

Europe 1 qualifier: The highest-ranked team from the Rugby Europe Championship (excluding already qualified Georgia)

Oceania 1 and 2 qualifiers: Two teams qualify from a Pacific Nations Cup tournament played on a home-and-away basis during June 2016 and 2017

Play-off qualifier: The third-placed team from the Pacific Nations Cup play a two-leg home-and-away play-off against the second-ranked team in the Rugby Europe Championship (excluding already qualified Georgia). The winner on aggregate will join Pool A at the World Cup in Japan.

Americas 1 and 2 qualifiers: Canada and USA will play home-and-away, with the winner on aggregate qualifying for Japan 2019. The loser will then play home-and-away against the top-ranked South American team (excluding Argentina) with the winner on aggregate qualifying. The loser of this match qualifies for a four-team repechage tournament.

Africa 1 qualifier: The winner of the Rugby Africa Championship will qualify. The runner-up qualifies for the repechage tournament

Asia/Oceania play-off for repechage place: The highest-ranked team from the Asia Rugby Championship (excluding Japan) will play home-and-away against the winner of the Oceania Cup, with the winner on aggregate qualifying for the repechage tournament

Repechage qualifier: The repechage tournament will feature four teams playing in a round-robin format with the winners qualifying for that Pool B slot at the 2019 World Cup.

Watch every match of the Lions Tour of NZ streaming live on rugbypass.com, home of the best online rugby coverage including news, highlights, previews & reviews, live scores, and more!

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MelodyKaitlyn3 4 hours ago
Blues lose All Black for season ahead of Hurricanes derby

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Mzilikazi 5 hours ago
Matt Faessler: ‘To be involved in a home World Cup would be just next level’

Thanks for the article, Brett. I must say I am disappointed that the Reds have lost both games against the two top teams from NZ they have played so far this year. I feel they should be more advanced under Les Kiss and his coaching team in what is now the second year of tenure.


The lineout, which you highlight in the article, is an obvious standout. Matt Faessler is shaping as a standout finisher of mauls, but that ability is wasted if the throw/lift/catch element is a shambles.


Also very disappointing so often is the ability to spread the ball wide using the “out the back” type passes well. Just watch Scotland, even currently weak Wales, to see the level of sophistication in this area that can be achieved.


In the final analysis, the breakdown work is not as good as all the NZ sides achieve with apparent ease. Their scrum halves so often have an “armchair ride” compared to our 9’s, who deal with slow and often scrappy ball. And I would say this applies to all our Australian sides, not only the Reds.


Not being one eyed on Qld, I am also disappointed to see the Waratahs not performing as one would have hoped, given the strength of their roster now. Ofc, one must also look at the injury toll effect on all teams.


And there is no question, on the positive side of this years competition, how very competitive all teams can be on their day. Mona Pacifica are looking more than just competitive now, but the Highlanders are are much better team than last year, as are the Force.


I find the background bits on players great reading always. and your recounting of Matt Faessler’s grandfather’s exploits is just up my street. Keep writing for us, please !!

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