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The Cheslin Kolbe reason to cheer new Japan Rugby League One season

Cheslin Kolbe (right) with Richie Mo’unga last season in Japan (Photo by Japan Rugby League One)

Fresh from some fancy footwork at Allianz Stadium Twickenham, Springboks ace Cheslin Kolbe will dive back into club action when Japan Rugby League One kicks off next week.

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The 31-year-old is one of eight members of this year’s Rugby Championship-winning South Africa squad – Kurt-Lee Arendse (Sagamihara Dynabors), Jesse Kriel (Yokohama Eagles), Damien de Allende (Saitama Wild Knights), Jasper Wiese (Urayasu D-Rocks), Pieter-Steph du Toit (Toyota Verblitz), Malcolm Marx (Spears Funabashi Tokyo Bay) and Kwagga Smith (Shizuoka Blue Revs) are the others – who are lacing up their boots as the league gets under way on December 21.

They are joined in the Far East by Test-level teammates Faf de Klerk, Lood de Jager and Franco Mostert as well as an All Blacks contingent which includes recent European tourists Sam Cane and TJ Perenara, alongside the likes of Aaron Smith, Brodie Retallick, Ngani Laumape, Richie Mo’unga and Shannon Frizell. The latter pair, on debut last term, helped Brave Lupus Tokyo to their first title since 2010.

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    At a time when many of its global contemporaries are losing teams due to financial pressures, League One begins its fourth edition having expanded by three teams. The new entries join Division Three, which upsizes to six, with Division Two increasing to eight.

    While Division One will again comprise 12 sides, a top six format has been adopted for the play-offs, which will now be held over three weeks, leading into the final on June 1. Extending the finals will further increase spectator numbers, which surpassed a million for the first time last year.

    Fixture
    Japan Rugby League One
    Tokyo Sungoliath
    12 - 33
    Full-time
    Saitama Wild Knights
    All Stats and Data

    This included 56,486 at Tokyo’s National Stadium for the final, a whopping 14,692 more than those who had attended the corresponding match a year earlier. As well as the big names, they were drawn by the exciting and fast nature of the games, which saw a try scored for every nine minutes of play on average.

    Kolbe and Cane are among the big names for 2024/25. They have returned to a Sungoliath outfit that have been flying in pre-season, unbeaten under the guidance of rookie coach Kosei Ono. Sungoliath’s new boss is one of two ex-internationals on a maiden coaching journey, with former Scotland skipper Greig Laidlaw taking charge of newly promoted Urayasu D-Rocks.

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    Such is Division One’s competitiveness, its first three editions have been won by different clubs. Japan have also produced the closest combined play-off scores of any professional club championship across the last five years, with 4.25 points the average gap in elimination games.

    It is testament to the league’s tight margins that its inaugural champions, Saitama Wild Knights, have missed out since, despite winning 48 of 54 outings from when the league was inaugurated.

    While southern hemisphere internationals dominate the three positions each club is allowed for foreign capped Test players, the north’s presence is rapidly growing as players use the league to either re-start careers, or as a more settled and financially secure home.

    The success of Leicester fly-half James Shillcock two seasons ago, and his Northampton counterpart James Grayson last term, has not gone unnoticed with the arrival of Gallagher Premiership players such as Manu Vunipola (Saracens), Elliot Stooke (Bath), Ollie Stoneham (Saracens), Ed Holmes (Bristol) and Tom Hendrickson (Exeter) for the new season.

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    Championship players Brendan Owen (Jersey Reds) and Andrew Davidson (Ealing Trailfinders) have also found their way to Japan. They add to the arrival of Scottish Test pair George Turner (Kobe) and Richie Gray (Toyota), as well as ex-Wales fly-half Rhys Patchell (Green Rockets), who have each landed at Japanese clubs.

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    Comments

    1 Comment
    J
    JW 90 days ago

    Awesome, really exciting league to watch as your second favourite, you can just sit back and enjoy the rugby, especially the local Japanese style.

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    R
    RedWarriors 30 minutes ago
    How Dupont-less France tossed a grenade into Ireland's Grand Slam celebrations

    We conceded 42 we lost by 15. The intercept was a 14 pointer. Ramos doesn’t do that its a try under the posts. But France can do that. The victory over Italy did not get the credit it deserved in my opinion. That was less about Italy reverting to bad old days and more about French brilliance.

    I just think credit is due to France for keeping Ireland scoreless in the first 20.

    Ireland had chances but we haven’t been clinical inside opponents 22.

    The disparity in lineout success was also huge.

    Not only are France ahead of Ireland in lineout stats but in that stat is a lot of their throws to the back of the lineout. Ireland have had problems since before the world cup. Something is wrong there and we need a new lineout coach: there I said it.

    In all the set pieces and in every stat, France were better than Ireland leading into the match. I had hoped home advantage or coming up against a quality team might show an equalization of those numbers but that didn’t happen.

    France’s defense and clinicalness were immense and the latter heaped major pressure and scoreboard pressure on Ireland. When the 2nd LBB try went in it was clear to all that the match was out of reach. The Dynamic Toulouse forwards were on, Ireland were tired from chasing the match.

    I think without the Lowe injury it might have become more of a classic match, but really only one winner. Even the first try, Atonio and a friend take a step out beyond the maul. Means Nash has to go around them to cover the blind side. Not illegal, just accurate and clever. A lot of Irish accuracy in their match.


    Lastly a stat i’d love to see is tries per line break in a match. Toulouse were above the 50% against Leicester. France are not far off that this year barring the outlier England match. What France/Toulouse are doing after a line break now ti achieve such a high conversion rate bears more looking at.

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