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Coupe des Nations : partage des richesses plus favorable à l’hémisphère Nord

LONDRES, ANGLETERRE : Vue générale de Twickenham, en Angleterre. C'est là que devraient se dérouler les finales des deux premières éditions de la future Coupe des Nations en 2026 et 2027. (Photo by Bob Bradford - CameraSport via Getty Images).

World Rugby l’avait annoncé alors que la Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2023 touchait à sa fin. À partir de 2026, une nouvelle compétition mondiale viendra occuper tous les deux ans les fenêtres de juillet et novembre du rugby international masculin, de façon à créer des opportunités pour toutes les fédérations sous la houlette de Six Nations Rugby, la SANZAAR et World Rugby.

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Depuis cette officialisation, les négociations vont bon train pour savoir, entre autres, où les phases finales de la compétition seront organisées. Selon le Midol dans son édition du 23 septembre, les premières finales en 2026 et 2027 devraient se dérouler à Londres. Pour l’année suivante, en 2028, Doha et Abu Dhabi seraient déjà sur les rangs.

Toujours selon le Midi Olympique, les différentes parties prenantes seraient tombées d’accord sur un juste système de répartition des recettes issues des droits de retransmission TV, de la billetterie, du merchandising…

Ainsi, l’hémisphère Nord bénéficierait de 58% des recettes et l’hémisphère Sud de 42% ; une différence qui s’explique par le plus grand nombre d’équipes de l’hémisphère Nord qui participeraient à cette nouvelle compétition destinée à donner plus de sens et d’enjeux à un calendrier mondial harmonisé.

Related

Visionnez gratuitement le documentaire en cinq épisodes “Chasing the Sun 2” sur RugbyPass TV (*non disponible en Afrique), qui raconte le parcours des Springboks dans leur quête pour défendre avec succès leur titre de Champions du monde de rugby

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J
JW 20 minutes ago
How can Scott Robertson revive the All Blacks’ playmaking ‘triple threat’?

Love how you stoke up the fire with these slow burners Nick, great time to let the air into this one too coming into Jordies new home for a few months.


Razor (and possibly Cullen?) is the perfect coach to keep fueling Jordies own flame. Foster on the other hand has to be a people person because he's always trying to douse everyones due to his own lack of enterprise.


I didn't want to nark on the man but we still have Reiks waiting to be ignited as well. His own play when he first moved to center was full of threat and tact. He could cut in just as easily as swing out and had some great ball handling to put people away with. While we haven't seen much more of that since, I think he has at least been working hard on his defence and his books under Foster and Schmidt, and could turn into a Conrad (or even Nonu) one day. I'm not quite so sure Jordie has been making the same progress in the meantime.


I've been really happy with Jordies workons this year however, but that Final was a big learning curve and I've not really sure I've seen the calmness required to pull off Nonu type plays through his career so far. In fact he has often been the opposite and been a bit ropey when he was in more of a playmaker role at 15, I do think he has all the skills and desire to make these sorts of plays though, just having such a wide scope as a 'triple' threat put's a big demand on being able to read the game. So perhaps I might not go too much further than trying to use that big boot, and keeping it simple really. Like Nonu did.


I'm happy with all those 10 and 15 pictures myself, especially the ones where Jordan is playing more of a hand. He is someone who certainly could do with some sort of 'double' threat to help his line breaking ability and I certainly think he has some sort of innate skill to do the right thing. Sadly it's not going to happen in conjunction with Beaudie I don't think. This is going to be retirement. 2nd start back playing with his old courage (he actually did run the ball after all) and he's concussed again, not good.


Trouble is for this team, it could be a completely different 10, 12, 13. That shouldn't stop Razor from encouraging all the options the All Blacks have in those positions, right now. Also looking forward to Perofeta coming into fullback late instead of BB or Dmac going there.

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