Springboks, All Blacks dominate Rugby World magazine's World Cup XV
Rugby World magazine have named a Rugby World Cup team of the tournament dominated by last month’s finalists South Africa and New Zealand, along with host nation France. These three countries account for 12 of the available positions, with Ireland, Wales and Tonga filling the remaining three spots.
The Springboks had just a single player – Eben Etzebeth – included in the World Rugby dream team for the 2023 calendar year, but Rugby World magazine confined its choices to performances at the World Cup in France and it resulted in the inclusion of five South Africans.
Four picks were in the pack – loosehead Ox Nche, second rows Etzebeth and Franco Mostert and World Cup final player of the match Pieter-Steph du Toit. Winger Cheslin Kolbe was their sole back to gain recognition.
The runner-up All Blacks dominated the backline with three picks – out-half Richie Mo’unga, centre Jordie Barrett and winger Will Jordan – with Ardie Savea, the World Rugby player of the year for 2023, named upfront at No8.
France had three players picked, hooker Peato Mauvaka, scrum-half Antoine Dupont and full-back Thomas Ramos. Irish centre Bundee Aki, Welsh openside Jac Morgan and Tongan tighthead Ben Tameifuna completed the line-up.
Test-level newcomer Morgan was named the team of the tournament’s captain with Portugal’s Patrice Lagisquet named as coach.
Regarding its half-back selection of Mo’unga and Dupont, Rugby World explained: “Richie Mo’unga’s triple threat boosts any side and his form over the entire tournament edges out Handre Pollard, who didn’t miss a kick for the Boks.
“Antoine Dupont’s ability to bounce back from a fractured cheekbone and still hit the heights that others simply cannot completes the half-back pairing.”
Switching to the front row, Rugby World added: “At loosehead is bomb squad extraordinaire Ox Nche. It’s no exaggeration to say that South Africa would not have won without his scrum supremacy against France and England.”
Rugby World Team of the Tournament:
15. Thomas Ramos (France); 14. Will Jordan (New Zealand), 13. Bundee Aki (Ireland), 12. Jordie Barrett (New Zealand), 11. Cheslin Kolbe (South Africa); 10. Richie Mo’unga (New Zealand), 9. Antoine Dupont (France); 1. Ox Nche (South Africa), 2. Peato Mauvaka (France), 3. Ben Tameifuna, 4. Eben Etzebeth (South Africa), 5. Franco Mostert (South Africa), 6. Pieter-Steph du Toit (South Africa), 7. Jac Morgan (Wales, captain), 8. Ardie Savea (New Zealand). Coach: Patrice Lagisquet (Portugal).
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While we were living in Belgium, French rugby was very easy to watch on tv and YouTube. Given the ghastly weather, riding indoors on a trainer and watching French rugby was a very passable experience. I became quite a fan.
Interestingly, last week in Buenos Aires I shared a table with a couple from Toulouse, who were at the Toulon game themselves, and were curious how much I knew about French club rugby. I explained the Brussels weather. They smiled and understood.
Now back in CA, biking again.
Go to commentsTotally agree.
It could be that Australia may not have top Coaches coaching at the elite level around the world? Only the ARU can answer that question. My prediction is Australia will beat Scotland and Ireland. Schmidt has now got the right players and tools to develop Australia into a formidable XV.
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