Northern Edition

Select Edition

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

WXV 3

Standings

P
W
L
D
PF
PA
PD
BP T
BP-7
BP
3
3
0
0
113
8
105
1
0
1
3
2
0
1
99
40
59
2
0
2
3
1
1
1
41
31
10
1
0
1
Pts
13
12
7
advertising

Latest

WXV tickets and streaming update

WXV reflections: ‘Lessons and experience are the real golden nuggets’

Laura Delgado’s WXV 3 Diary: 'The most important trophy of them all'

‘This is our future’: WXV 3 champions Spain and Samoa heading to World Cup

Wales finish WXV 2 campaign with clinical win over Japan in Cape Town

Rugby World Cup qualification would ‘open the door to many other dreams’

WXV: World Cup tickets and silverware up for grabs in final round

WXV 3: Spain on the verge of World Cup qualification

advertising

Stats

Teams
Players

{{item.title}}

{{stat.pos}}
{{stat.value}}

{{item.player.name}}

{{item.player.team}}
{{item.player.value}}
{{item.title}}
{{stat.pos}}
{{stat.value}}

News

WXV 3 and the most unusual change of rugby position?

WXV 3: Second round team news as Delgado returns to captain Spain

Ashley Marsters set to make history by equalling Wallaroos record

'Now I call the shots': How Linde van der Velden blossomed into Dutch rugby icon

advertising

Dive into the excitement of WXV 3 rugby, the third division of this premier women’s tournament. Launched in 2023, the WXV 3 tournament features six of the greatest international sides, each vying for victory in this competitive annual showdown.

Do you want to enjoy every second of the WXV 3 tournament? Explore this page to find the latest insights, match details and standings from 2024. 

What is WXV 3 Rugby?

The WXV 3 is one of the newest international women’s rugby tournaments in the world. Designed to enhance competition for lower-ranked nations, it is the third tier of the elite WXV competition.

The WXV 3 tournament is contested by six teams. Two spots are given to the winner and the runner-up of the Oceania Women’s Championship, while the third and fourth are secured by the second-placed teams in the African and Asian championships. 

The remaining two places are decided via play-offs. The first is a promotion/relegation match between the sixth-placed team in the previous tournament and the highest-ranked non-participating team. The last spot goes to the loser of the match between the sixth-placed Six Nations side and the winner of the European Championship.


Search