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How to watch live Guinness Six Nations rugby in Indonesia

England's Dylan Hartley has found missing the World Cup a tough pill to swallow (Photo by Shaun Botterill/Getty Images)

The Guinness Six Nations is available exclusively on RugbyPass in Indonesia. Fans can watch every game of the Guinness Six Nations live and on-demand online via the RugbyPass subscription streaming service. We will be offering 50% off a monthly pass or you can save over $100 by purchasing an annual pass at https://www.rugbypass.com/signup.

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RugbyPass is the official licensee of Guinness Six Nations rugby in the following countries:
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, East Timor, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Laos, Macau, Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

Fans of the Guinness Six Nations outside of these countries can follow all the action in our live match
centres, available at https://www.rugbypass.com/six-nations/matches/2020

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J
JWH 19 minutes ago
The 'one difference' between Boks and the back-to-back All Blacks

The teams in the URC are ... meh. Some good, most slightly below average. I have to say that the Irish front row is not really a good benchmark for great scrummagers (Andrew Porter). Still an impressive feat, don't get me wrong, but doesn't have the same meaning it used to.


Calling Elrigh Louw 'world-class' already severely drops the standard of world-class youngsters like Sititi, Roigard, Suaalii, Albornoz, and more that I can't list off the top. Louw has great potential, like a lot of other young players (Prendergast and McDermott), but to say he is world-class is a stretch. Haven't seen Hanekom so I dunno about him.


SFM just hasn't shown me his capabilities yet. He was okay v the ABs, solid 6.5/10, which is great for such a talented young man. If he can adapt a little better and work on his sharpness at test level he could be a quality 10. AF found his feet really well, and I find him most easily identifiable with Nehe Milner-Skudder. What a find for the Bokke. Just needs a better kicking game, but he is proper class. Haven't seen much of Canan Moodie, would like to see more.


20 years of talent? Are you sure? Even I consider Sam Whitelocks career long, and he played for the ABs for 14 years.


On the subject of latent talent, SA and NZ are certainly on par with each other, but the club competitions in New Zealand are just better. The NPC on its own is just such an excellent competitions, which mixes scouting, experience, and competitiveness all into one. SRP is also back on its feet thanks to Schmidt's revival of the Wallabies and RA. So to say that no other country has talent sitting deep in the back pocket, you are sorely mistaken. You haven't even seen Jamie Hannah, Fabian Holland, Kini Naholo, Noah Hotham, Taha Kemara, Rivez Reihana, Naitoa Ah Kuoi, Christian Lio-Willie, or Riley Higgins. And that is just to name a few.


I think SA have somer rougher, emphasis on er, years ahead. Will definitely still be winning games, but I suspect a few frustrating losses are likely imbound, probs in 2026 and 2027. Is there any depth in PSDT's jersey? What about Mbonambi/Marx? Wingers?


Sorry, but those squads played against NZ were certainly not experimental. Almost fully fit Boks after warmups v AUS, bomb squad, regular forwards lineup, half pairing, and outside backs largely the same. 'Experimental' my arse.


Appreciate the bit at the end there about others not understanding the true depth of the NZ talent pool. The ABs make up the top 1% of SRP players, and SRP players make up the top 0.1% of rugby players in NZ. Lots of depth hidden in the NPC and lower club divisions just waiting to surface in 2025. Sure to be an incredible SRP season now that the Crusaders injury crisis is over.

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