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Le tirage de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby féminine 2025 se tiendra le 17 octobre

Le tirage de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby féminine 2025 se tiendra le 17 octobre

Organisé au siège de la BBC, le tirage au sort de la Coupe du Monde de Rugby féminine 2025 se tiendra le jeudi 17 octobre 2024 à partir de 20h20.

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Ce tirage au sort sera diffusé gratuitement en direct sur RugbyPass TV. Si vous n’avez pas encore de compte, vous pouvez en créer un gratuitement ici.

Il s’agit d’une étape importante pour cette compétition qui promet d’être le plus grand événement sportif de l’année en Angleterre.

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WXV 1
New Zealand Womens
39 - 14
Temps complet
France Womens
Toutes les stats et les données

Pour l’heure, dix équipes – le Canada, la France, le Brésil, l’Irlande, l’Afrique du Sud, le Japon, les États-Unis, les Fidji, la Nouvelle-Zélande (tenante du titre) et l’Angleterre (pays hôte) – sont assurées de participer à la compétition. Il reste six places à attribuer lors du WXV 2024.

Le calendrier, le programme des matchs ainsi que les lieux des rencontres seront ensuite connus le mardi 22 octobre.

Sur le plan de la billetterie, cette Coupe du Monde est déjà un succès puisque 60 000 billets ont déjà été vendus pour le match d’ouverture, qui se tiendra au Stadium of Light de Sunderland, ainsi que la finale pour le bronze et la finale qui se joueront à Twickenham.

Le reste des matchs de poules se joueront à Northampton et Brighton and Hove. Vous pouvez acheter vos billets ici.

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La demande de billets pour la Coupe du Monde de Rugby Féminin 2025 en Angleterre sera ouverte à partir du 5 novembre (dès le 22 octobre pour les titulaires de cartes Mastercard). Inscrivez-vous dès maintenant !

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H
Hellhound 41 minutes ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

I mean overall talent, not that they will all play 20 years. That is impossible with rugby. The younger players like Elrigh is of course not world class yet. With more experience they will become world class. They are already exceptional players. Not even Eben and the current boys was world class when they started. They were exceptional yes, but not world class. Only experience brings that.


Generational players is very few and far inbetween who is world class from the off. The younger players can only become world class with the proper training and experience isn't something that can be bought. It's something they have to earn through their careers.


As for SRP being a good competition, I disagree. It's slanted in NZ favour and always has been. It's not what it used to be. The URC is now rated as the top club competition in the world next to the top 14 outside of the CC, and I didn't make up that rankings. You feel SRP is better because of our bias towards the NH, but it simply is not.


Yes, I don't know all the young Bucs of NZ coming through, but most of those you named I've seen and they are very good players but not exceptional nor world class. Just as with SA youngsters, that is something that will come with experience and they will become world class and is definitely the future for them.


NZ and Australia don't have the player pool depth that SA have. NZ's are bigger than most, but then most of their stars came from the Island nations like Fiji, Samoa and Tonga. If you count them, then maybe yes, they have as big a pool.


NZ will always be a top 3 team, as will SA. At least for the next 2 decades. That doesn't mean that other countries don't have some world class youngsters coming through either.


I don't claim that SA will win everything for the next 20 years. Nor that they will win the next 5 WC's. A lot depends on players, coaches, law changes and how the game keeps changing. There is too much variables. SA do have a bright future for the next 20 years , players who will hold the flag high. Same with NZ.


Nothing and no one can stop the Rivalry. I know the Irish is trying to replace the Boks with themselves as the main rivals. Everyone tunes in to watch the Boks vs AB's, all over the world. Every year. That is the most anticipated Tests by everyone every year.

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