Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

WXV 2: All the opening round team news as Malinga returns for Springbok Women

CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - SEPTEMBER 24: Hannah Jones of Wales, Elisa Giordano of Italy, Nolusindiso Booi of South Africa, Michaela Leonard of Australia, Rachel Malcolm of Scotland and Iroha Nagata of Japan during the Captain's Photocall ahead of WXV 2 on September 24, 2024 in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photo by Johan Rynners - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

WXV 2 2024 will get underway this Friday as hosts South Africa take on Japan at DHL Stadium (kick-off 16:00, GMT+2).

ADVERTISEMENT

On Saturday, Australia and Wales – who both competed in WXV 1 in 2023 – meet at the same stadium, kick-off 12:30, before defending champions Scotland take on the team they edged on points difference last year, Italy at 15:00.

Get all the team news for the opening WXV 2 matches below as and when it drops.

South Africa v Japan

Ayanda Malinga will make her first Test appearance in more than two years when South Africa get their WXV 2 campaign underway against Japan on Friday.

Video Spacer

‘This Energy Never Stops’ – One year to go until the Women’s Rugby World Cup

With exactly one year to go until Women’s Rugby World Cup England 2025 kicks off
in Sunderland, excitement is sweeping across the host nation in anticipation of what
will be the biggest and most accessible celebration of women’s rugby ever.

Register now for the ticket presale

Video Spacer

‘This Energy Never Stops’ – One year to go until the Women’s Rugby World Cup

With exactly one year to go until Women’s Rugby World Cup England 2025 kicks off
in Sunderland, excitement is sweeping across the host nation in anticipation of what
will be the biggest and most accessible celebration of women’s rugby ever.

Register now for the ticket presale

Sevens star Malinga last featured in a Test in August 2022 when she scored two tries to help the Springbok Women to a 44-5 defeat of Spain in Johannesburg.

Fixture
WXV 2
South Africa Womens
10:00
27 Sep 24
Japan Womens
All Stats and Data

That performance took her tally to 10 tries in only eight appearances for South Africa but she has since focused her energies on the sevens circuit, where she has been a regular in the green jersey.

Malinga made her 15s return earlier this month in a non-cap match against Barbarians Women in Cape Town and she has earned selection for the opening match of WXV 2, coming in for the injured Shaunique Hess.

Experienced prop Babalwa Latsha is the only other change to the starting XV that beat Spain 36-19 at the same venue last Thursday. Azisa Mkiva drops to the bench.

ADVERTISEMENT

Related

Japan coach Lesley McKenzie, meanwhile, has made four personnel changes from her side’s warm-up defeat to Italy in Piacenza earlier this month.

Tighthead prop Wako Kitano comes into the front row, while there is a start at number eight for Japan’s most-capped woman Seina Saito.

In the backs, Ayasa Otsuka is back at fly-half having started against Italy at inside centre, while Haruka Hirotsu takes the number 12 jersey and Misaki Matsumura is selected on the right wing.

South Africa: 15. Libbie Janse van Rensburg, 14. Jakkie Cilliers, 13. Eloise Webb, 12. Chumisa Qawe, 11. Ayanda Malinga, 10. Nadine Roos, 9. Tayla Kinsey, 1. Sanelisiwe Charlie, 2. Lindelwa Gwala, 3. Babalwa Latsha, 4. Nolusindiso Booi (captain), 5. Vainah Ubisi, 6. Sizophila Solontsi, 7. Sinazo Mcatshulwa, 8. Aseza Hele.
Replacements: 16. Micke Gunter, 17. Yonela Ngxingolo, 18. Azisa Mkiva, 19. Danelle Lochner, 20. Catha Jacobs, 21. Anathi Qolo, 22. Unam Tose, 23. Zintle Mpupha.

ADVERTISEMENT

Japan: 15. Sora Nishimura, 14. Misaki Matsumura, 13. Mana Furuta, 12. Haruka Hirotsu, 11. Komachi Imakugi, 10. Ayasa Otsuka, 9. Moe Tsukui, 1. Sachiko Kato, 2. Kotomi Taniguchi, 3. Wako Kitano, 4. Yuna Sato, 5. Otoka Yoshimura, 6. Masami Kawamura, 7. Iroha Nagata (captain), 8. Seina Sato.
Replacements: Asuka Kuge, 17. Manami Mine, 18. Nijiho Nagata, 19. Kyoko Hosokawa, 20. Jennifer Nduka, 21. Megumi Abe, 22. Rinka Matsuda, 23. Kanako Kobayashi.

One year to go until the Women’s Rugby World Cup!
With exactly one year to go until Women’s Rugby World Cup England 2025 kicks off in Sunderland, excitement is sweeping across the host nation in anticipation of what will be the biggest and most accessible celebration of women’s rugby ever. Register now for the ticket presale.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

LONG READ
LONG READ Australia comeback highlights tale of two Bledisloe benches Australia comeback highlights tale of two Bledisloe benches
Search