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World Rugby U20 Championship: The RugbyPass team of the tournament

England No7 Henry Pollock after his team's title win in Cape Town (Photo by Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images via Getty Images)

Now that the dust has settled on the 2024 edition of the World Rugby U20 Championship, it’s time to name the RugbyPass team of the tournament. Reporting live from the competition had its traditional difficulty of each match day being split between two venues, so it was only possible to watch live three of the six matches in every round in the Cape Town region.

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That meant being in person at only 15 of the 30 scheduled fixtures and the slack was brilliantly taken up by RugbyPass TV live streaming on its platform which ensured we could keep tabs on the games we couldn’t physically attend.

England flew out of South Africa last Saturday evening to Heathrow as the rightful champions, the consistency of their potent scrum and manipulative defence helping them to a deserved first title since 2016.

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HITS, BUMPS AND HANDOFFS! | The biggest collisions from the 2023 U20s World Championships

A showcase of the most ferocious collisions from the 2023 U20s World Championships all in one place!

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HITS, BUMPS AND HANDOFFS! | The biggest collisions from the 2023 U20s World Championships

A showcase of the most ferocious collisions from the 2023 U20s World Championships all in one place!

That denied France a fourth title in succession; Les Bleuets essentially played their final in their swashbuckling semi-final win over New Zealand which was by far the most creative attacking display by any team across the tournament.

Elsewhere, the Baby Blacks’ third place was their best at the tournament since winning in 2017, fifth place Argentina were unfortunate not to have made the semi-finals as the standard of their pack play was immense, while Spain must be commended for keeping their heads up in their first-ever Championship appearance and eventually getting a sudden death reward.

It would have been easy for the Iberians to be demoralised by the chunky pool scores suffered against France, Wales and New Zealand. But they reacted excellently to give Italy a run for their money before taking part in a rankings final classic at Athlone that ended with a 93rd-minute try to relegate Fiji to the 2025 Trophy.

Fans of other countries will naturally disagree but we have selected a ‘Best XV’ containing nine England players. It’s always very hard to look beyond the title winners in assembling these types of theoretical teams as the champions have the shiny medals proudly dangling around their necks.

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New Zealand (two), Spain, Argentina, France and Wales also have representatives while there are very honourable mentions of certain players from other countries. Here is the RugbyPass team of the 2024 World Rugby U20 Championship:

1. Asher Opoku-Fordjour (England)
A world star in the making. Ask any professional-level prop and they will say it is difficult to pack down both sides of the scrum consistently well but this fella – a gentle giant who is an excellent interviewee – makes it look so easy and the set-piece dominance he helped to perfect was integral to England’s title win. A good start to next season at Sale and Steve Borthwick must surely call him for senior England training.

2. David Gallego (Spain)
Vernon Bason and Craig Wright can feel hard done by but legacy moments are worth their weight in gold and the sudden death Spanish try-scorer from the maul spectacularly jumped the queue with his 93rd-minute winner which relegated Fiji, igniting an incredible outpouring of captivating joy. A 47th-minute sub, he was effective in digging his team out of a precarious 5-19 situation, making 17 carries.

3. Billy Sela (England)
Wasn’t around for the knockouts as he limped away on crutches following the match day three win over South Africa in Athlone. However, he was terrific when extricating England from of their most adverse situation at the tournament, the opening day 0-14 start versus Argentina. There were 14 carries, nine tackles and an all-important 44th-minute lead-taking try that afternoon when Jack Bracken’s hat-trick nabbed the headlines.

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4. Efrain Elias (Argentina)
The Championship was blessed with multiple brilliant captains and this graduate of the Dogos franchise in South America, who is switching to Toulouse for 2024/25, was exceptional in the engine room, leading with a cop-on and playing with an enviable work rate that included five starts, three tries, 59 carries, 72 tackles and 10 turnovers won. Left his best until last, smashing Australia with 18 tackles and four turnovers.

5. Junior Kpoku (England)
We jest that he should have been cited for the injury over-reaction when winning the final turnover penalty in the semi-final win over Ireland. Went from that suggested dislocated shoulder to bossing the French in the row in the final. Showcased himself as an infectious character in a RugbyPass interview and in contributions to the Embedded documentary. Now set to accelerate at Racing in the coming months. Also eligible for 2025 U20s selection.

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6. Finn Carnduff (England)
France’s Joe Quere-Karaba was a delight, but Carnduff was the first name we inked on this XV list. Numerous U20s named him as their hardest-working teammate. Has all the attributes to be a Leicester legend and so mature was his all-round play in South Africa, we predict he will be part of the England Rugby World Cup 2027 squad. Ultra serious but with rapid wit. His quip about Friday night recovery before the long-haul flight home was classic.

7. Henry Pollock (England)
We have gone with the Duracell Bunny of the England op, a loud and proud energy giver who runs the talk. We twigged he got game during the Six Nations when he pushed back on praise and instead criticised himself for not being consistent enough in his performances. If there was an issue, he certainly fixed it at the Championship where his carrying contribution culminated in the French yellow card that was crucial in the final.

8. Arthur Green (England)
This was Mathis Castro-Ferreira’s jersey to lose and he spectacularly lost it with that costly second-half sin-binning in the final. Unlike the England stars already mentioned, Green, the son of ex-Test prop Will, is essentially a super sub inclusion similar to Spanish hooker Gallego. Only a final half-time introduction, the RugbyPass match centre credited him with 19 carries – including that crucial 52nd-minute try off a five-metre scrum. That’s impact!

9. Dylan Pledger (New Zealand)
There were plenty of scrum-halves with bright moments such Leo Carbonneau of France, Ireland’s Oliver Coffey and both England No9s, the starting Ollie Allan and his 17-year-old accomplice Lucas Friday. We have gone with Pledger, though, who was the lighter fuel for the New Zealand attack when it fired. You’ll see why if you look at his moments in the second-half comeback pool win over the French in Stellenbosch.

10. Hugo Reus (France)
Class act who embodied the French spirit of blooding players young in the Top 14. The La Rochelle orchestrator’s level of confidence was enchanting, his skills frequently the stuff of highlights reels. Check out his no-look, out-the-back pass versus Spain or his poetic leap and sublime offload when staying out of touch to assist a semi-final try against New Zealand. As for his crosskicks, he has written the go-to book on perfect execution.

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11. Macs Page (Wales)
Stanley Solomon was looking a very good shout until his semi-final red card. Once you went beyond the Kiwi, though, you were struggling for an out-and-out left-wing star as France’s Mathis Ferte was more effective at full-back. That got us thinking and we have utilised the jersey to solve a selection bottleneck in another backline position, namely outside centre. Macs Page, take a bow. A gutsy operator who refused to take no for an answer.

12. Sean Kerr (England)
New Zealand’s Xavi Taele was excellent. So too Robin Taccola of France. But we couldn’t ignore the contribution that Kerr had with the title-winning England. He was an immensely tidy operator for the most part and when it came to knocking over points from the kicking tee or manipulating space by making the right decision, his delivery produced exactly the go-forward reward his team needed at critical times across their joyous campaign.

13. Aki Tuivailala (New Zealand)
We were tempted to pencil in Jurenzo Julius, the standout South African player in their disappointing tournament, but Tuivailala’s array of skills demanded recognition. He was to the fore in New Zealand’s comeback pool win over the French, and the way he delivered two powerful killer blows in the third-place play-off after his team were down a yellow-carded man to the Irish was clinical. That’s how you stand up and be counted.

14. Jack Bracken (England)
It was a shame Ben Redshaw cried off late for the final; Newcastle really do have a back-three gem on their hands. His absence versus France, though, left us considering an impact-moment player to fill this jersey and we picked Bracken, the 18-year-old son of Kyran, who conjured a day-one hat-trick on his England U20s debut. For someone so young to be so confident in their skills was a life lesson: always back your talent regardless of the odds.

15. Ioan Jones (England)
Started as his team’s 23rd man versus Argentina but went on to become England’s defensive line calling card in both semi-final and final. His try-ruining shot out of the line on a two-versus-one to spoil France’s biggest chance to get back into the decider was so smart. Was also intelligent when joining their attack, making some lovely interventions. France’s Xan Mosques and Ireland’s Ben O’Connor also had their full-back moments.

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Replacements:
16. Vernon Bason (New Zealand)
Similar to England’s Wright, this guy was a proper scrapper in difficult moments. Had wheels and a nose for the try line. Honourable mention to Argentina’s Juan Greising-Revol who enjoyed maul tries versus South Africa, scoring three in two appearances versus the hosts.

17. Lino Julien (France)
As with England’s Opoku-Fordjour, this guy can play both sides of the scrum which was very useful for the French. Also had decent handling skills. Italy’s Sergio Pelliccioli deserves kudos for his effort in their pool ambush of Australia, as does Barnabe Massa of France.

18. Afo Fasogbon (England)
No mean feat for Fasogbon to superbly fill the vacancy left by the injured Sela and see England continue scrum time dominance. South Africa’s Zachery Porthen also had good moments as did Georgia’s Davit Mchedlidze, Argentina’s Tomas Rapetti and New Zealand’s Joshua Smith.

19. Joe Bailey (England)
There were plenty of contenders for this spot, including Georgia’s Davit Lagvilava, South Africa’s JF van Heerden, France’s Corentin Mezou and Australia’s Toby Macpherson, but Bailey got the nod for his consistent level of grunt work and that first-half finish in the final.

20. Mathis Castro-Ferreira (France)
As with lock, you could fill your boots here with a wealth of options. We liked England’s Nathan Michelow for his massive work rate, Ireland’s Brian Gleeson, South Africa’s Bathobele Hlekani, Morgan Morse of Wales, Argentina’s Juan Penoucos, Georgia’s Nika Lomisze, Australia’s Dane Sawers, Jeremiah Avei-Collins’ cameo versus the Irish for New Zealand, and French pair of Quere-Karaba and Geoffrey Malaterre, but Castro-Ferreira’s semi-final hat-trick makes him the pick.

21. Ollie Allan (England)
The merits of the back-up nines to Pledger were discussed above and we have gone for Allan on the basis that we love a comeback story. He was made redundant in June 2023 after the London Irish collapse and he also missed the entire Six Nations through injury, but his year had a glorious Hollywood script ending.

22. Benjamin Coen (England)
Similar to Allan, this guy wasn’t on track to start for England at the Championship but he took his chance brilliantly and efficiently contributed. Ireland’s Jack Murphy was another notable operator, while in terms of a standout moment, Rico Simpson’s composure to slot the win-clinching kick for New Zealand to beat France in the pool stages was neat.

23. Xavi Taele (New Zealand)
As with lock and back row, you could spend an age coming up with the final name on the match day team sheet. If we were to go with a moment, the likes of Finn Treacy, the 83rd-minute Ireland match-winner versus Georgia, would be a contender, while Ferte of France was a classy finisher numerous times. However, Taele gets the vote for the calibre of his all-action game.

Head Coach: Mark Mapletoft (England)
The 52-year-old very much gets it. Numerous age-grade coaches don’t understand the generational differences of the kids they are coaching, but Mapletoft is a different breed and his personability created an environment that allowed the England ‘brotherhood’ to thrive.

Such was his confidence in the way the English go about their player development business, he even allowed RugbyPass TV to film a behind-the-scenes documentary of their campaign which is a great heirloom for the class of 2024.

Then there was his lack of vanity coaching. His natural instinct is ball-in-hand play but he curbed that MO to ensure England played to scrum and defence strengths.

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Comments

5 Comments
D
Dbsjsiksjdjdjd 133 days ago

How has Georgian number 12 Giorgi Khaindrava not made this team or even gotten a mention when he made 209 metres, 25 defenders beaten (2nd highest of tournament only behind Jurenzo Julius), 2 clean breaks, 1 try, 1 try assist, 59 tackles, 98% tackle success (highest of tournament), 11 dominant tackles (joint second highest in tournament with it only being Georgian players with 10 or higher dominant tackles)

O
Onulf the Sailorman 145 days ago

How can you include so many english backs in that team when their gameplan doesn’t go beyond number 10 ?

D
DS 145 days ago

One-out rugby is winning tournaments currently. Utterly boring to watch and play but if you have the bigger bodies difficult to counter.

S
SadersMan 145 days ago

Fair call except for Hooker which was a feel good selection.

f
fl 146 days ago

Billy Sela is a really incredible talent. I’ve been seeing lots of hype for Fasogbon, but Sela is younger and even better. For England to have three tighthead props in a squad that only has two spots for tightheads is obviously incredible though, and a really positive sign.


Henry Pollock is also extremely exciting, but I do disagree with the characterisation of him as a “duracell bunny”. He’s incredible in attack and at the breakdown, but he's lazy in defence. Perhaps he could bulk up and move to 8?

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JW 5 hours ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

Yep, that's exactly what I want.

Glasgow won the URC and Edinburgh finished 16th, but Scotland won the six nations, Edinburgh would qualify for the Champions Cup under your system.

It's 'or'. If Glasgow won the URC or Scotland won the six nations. If one of those happens I believe it will (or should) be because the league is in a strong place, and that if a Scotland side can do that, there next best club team should be allowed to reach for the same and that would better serve the advancement of the game.


Now, of course picking a two team league like Scotland is the extreme case of your argument, but I'm happy for you to make it. First, Edinbourgh are a good mid table team, so they are deserving, as my concept would have predicted, of the opportunity to show can step up. Second, you can't be making a serious case that Gloucester are better based on beating them, surely. You need to read Nicks latest article on SA for a current perspective on road teams in the EPCR. Christ, you can even follow Gloucester and look at the team they put out the following week to know that those games are meaningless.


More importantly, third. Glasgow are in a league/pool with Italy, So the next team to be given a spot in my technically imperfect concept would be Benneton. To be fair to my idea that's still in it's infancy, I haven't given any thought to those 'two team' leagues/countries yet, and I'm not about to 😋

They would be arguably worse if they didn't win the Challenge Cup.

Incorrect. You aren't obviously familiar with knockout football Finn, it's a 'one off' game. But in any case, that's not your argument. You're trying to suggest they're not better than the fourth ranked team in the Challenge Cup that hasn't already qualified in their own league, so that could be including quarter finalists. I have already given you an example of a team that is the first to get knocked out by the champions not getting a fair ranking to a team that loses to one of the worst of the semi final teams (for example).

Sharks are better

There is just so much wrong with your view here. First, the team that you are knocking out for this, are the Stormers, who weren't even in the Challenge Cup. They were the 7th ranked team in the Champions Cup. I've also already said there is good precedent to allow someone outside the league table who was heavily impacted early in the season by injury to get through by winning Challenge Cup. You've also lost the argument that Sharks qualify as the third (their two best are in my league qualification system) South African team (because a SAn team won the CC, it just happened to be them) in my system. I'm doubt that's the last of reasons to be found either.


Your system doesn't account for performance or changes in their domestic leagues models, and rely's heavily on an imperfect and less effective 'winner takes all' model.

Giving more incentives to do well in the Challenge Cup will make people take it more seriously. My system does that and yours doesn't.

No your systems doesn't. Not all the time/circumstances. You literally just quoted me describing how they aren't going to care about Challenge Cup if they are already qualifying through league performance. They are also not going to hinder their chance at high seed in the league and knockout matches, for the pointless prestige of the Challenge Cup.


My idea fixes this by the suggesting that say a South African or Irish side would actually still have some desire to win one of their own sides a qualification spot if they win the Challenge Cup though. I'll admit, its not the strongest incentive, but it is better than your nothing. I repeat though, if your not balance entries, or just my assignment, then obviously winning the Challenge Cup should get you through, but your idea of 4th place getting in a 20 team EPCR? Cant you see the difference lol


Not even going to bother finishing that last paragraph. 8 of 10 is not an equal share.

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