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Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2027 en Australie : quelles sont les 7 villes hôtes

William Webb Ellis Cup Australia

Sept villes dans toute l’Australie ont été sélectionnées pour accueillir des matchs de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2027 et les 24 meilleures équipes du monde au cours de six semaines de compétition.

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Les sept villes qui accueilleront les matchs sont (entre parenthèses, le nom aborigène) : Adelaide (Tarntanya), Brisbane (Meeanjin), Melbourne (Narrm), Newcastle (Awabakal-Worimi), Perth (Boorloo), Sydney (Gadigal) et Townsville (Gurambilbarra).

Le match d’ouverture se déroulera à Perth le 1er octobre 2027 et la finale à Sydney le 13 novembre 2027.

Match d’ouverture à Perth

En plus du coup d’envoi, Perth (côte ouest) accueillera également quatre autres matchs de poule ainsi que deux huitièmes de finale. Newcastle (au nord de Sydney) et Townsville (nord du Queensland) verront chacune quatre rencontres de la phase de poule, tandis qu’Adélaïde (sud) en accueillera cinq.

Melbourne sera un acteur majeur du tournoi avec neuf matchs à son programme, dont sept de poule et deux huitièmes de finale, récemment ajoutés au format. Sur la côte est, Brisbane deviendra l’un des épicentres de la compétition avec six matchs de poule, deux huitièmes de finale et deux quarts de finale.

Enfin, Sydney sera le théâtre des grands rendez-vous avec cinq matchs de poule et huit rencontres à élimination directe, y compris les demi-finales et la grande finale, où le futur champion du monde sera couronné.

La répartition exacte connue plus tard en 2025

L’intégralité des sites hôtes ainsi que la répartition des matchs de l’Australie en phase de poules seront confirmées ultérieurement en 2025.

  • Adelaide : 5 matchs de poule
  • Brisbane : six matchs de poule, deux matchs de huitième de finale et deux quarts de finale
  • Melbourne : sept matchs de poule et deux huitièmes de finale
  • Newcastle : quatre matchs de poule
  • Perth : cinq matchs poule (dont le match d’ouverture) et deux matchs de huitième de finale
  • Sydney : cinq matchs de poule, deux matchs de huitième de finale, deux quarts de finale, deux demi-finales, le match pour la 3e place et la finale
  • Townsville : quatre matchs de poule

800 millions d’euros de retombées attendus

Cette 11e édition de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby sera la première à accueillir 24 équipes.

Avec 250 000 visiteurs internationaux attendus sur six semaines, l’événement devrait générer 1,3 milliard de dollars australiens de retombées financières directes dans le pays et les sept villes hôtes (800 millions d’euros). Mais au-delà de l’impact économique, l’objectif est aussi d’inspirer toute une nation à s’approprier le rugby, avec l’ambition d’atteindre 200 000 pratiquants d’ici 2029.

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EllenMoody 4 hours ago
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JWH 6 hours ago
'Matches between Les Bleus and the All Blacks are rarely for the faint-hearted.'

Do you hear yourself? Do you have any concept of world view? Have you tried looking into why people call Ireland ‘arrogant’? Obviously not.


We started calling you arrogant when you called our captain a ‘shit Richie McCaw’. In New Zealand. On our turf. Don’t think that kind of behaviour really calls for respect, does it.


NZ don’t really talk ourselves up, if anything the rugby does it for us. No kiwi goes in the media and says: ‘We are gonna win the RWC’. However, I have found many instance of IRISH media saying that the Irish should win, without a doubt. THAT is disrespectful.


The All Blacks have played good rugby, even some of the best rugby ever, at many points in history, but I don’t think you could find a single instance of one of those players, or the NZ media, saying that they should whitewash their opponents. Ever.


Now, onto your analysis. Ireland DID choke the QF. They beat the champions, they were ranked first coming into it, a lot of players at the peaks of their powers. Its hard to say that they didn’t choke. Obviously, their preparation was just not as good as NZ, and thats all there really is to it.


If Ireland had repsected that ABs team and that QF more, maybe they would’ve prepared properly for it and won. But they didn’t.


Maybe if Ireland had won their QF last RWC, they wouldn’t have to be in the same pool as SA and Scotland. I mean, its called a draw for a reason. NZ got third last RWC, so of course they should get a reasonable pool, and they were ranked pretty highly too. If you want to talk about easy pools, look no further than Pool 3 with England, Australia, Fiji, and Georgia I think?


Now, obviously you don’t remember how that QF ended, so I’ll go ahead and rectify that. Ireland reclaimed the ball off kickoff and marched for 20ish phases into the opposition half. Savea then won a turnover, but the referee refused to give it, so play went on. Finally, at the NZ 22, after not giving up a single penatly in 25 phases of hard defense, Sam Whitelock, the most capped All Black of all time, wins the game with an incredible steal.


Now, NZ players having a go at Ireland. Do you cry when you get hit after making the first swing? We all know Sexton is a prick on the field, its just the truth. And Ioane never backs down from a clash, so he thought he should humble a player who has never won an international knockout game who thought he was all that. Don’t really see the issue, its poetic justice really.

83 Go to comments
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