2021 Rugby World Cup (Kylaris): Difference between revisions
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The '''2021 Rugby World Cup''' was the eleventh edition of the [[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|Rugby World Cup]], hosted in [[Satavia]] and held from 15 January to 17 March across twelve stadiums in Satavia. The opening match between [[Caldia]] and [[Rwizikuru]] was played at the [[Port Hope|Stadium of the Satavians]], [[Port Hope]] where the final was also held. The tournament marked the second time the tournament had been hosted in [[Asteria Inferior]] (after the [[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|1993 tournament, held in Nuvania]]) and the first time Satavia had hosted. | The '''2021 Rugby World Cup''' was the eleventh edition of the [[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|Rugby World Cup]], hosted in [[Satavia]] and held from 15 January to 17 March across twelve stadiums in Satavia. The opening match between [[Caldia]] and [[Rwizikuru]] was played at the [[Port Hope|Stadium of the Satavians]], [[Port Hope]] where the final was also held. This marked the first time that the openining match of the tournament did not involve the host nation, after the match was postponed due to a flash flood the night before the match was due to be held. The tournament marked the second time the tournament had been hosted in [[Asteria Inferior]] (after the [[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|1993 tournament, held in Nuvania]]) and the first time Satavia had hosted. | ||
The tournament saw 20 nations compete, with two ([[Alsland]] and [[Gapolania]]) making their debuts having succesfully qualified for the first time. [[Garambura]] went on to beat hosts [[Satavia]] 28-17 in the final to claim their second title, whilst defending champions Caldia defeated [[Rizealand]] 17-3 to clinch third place. | The tournament saw 20 nations compete, with two ([[Alsland]] and [[Gapolania]]) making their debuts having succesfully qualified for the first time. 12 nations gained automatic qualification having finished in the top three of their pools from the 2017, whilst the remaning eight slots were filled through qualification processes. [[Garambura]] went on to beat hosts [[Satavia]] 28-17 in the final to claim their second title, whilst defending champions Caldia defeated [[Rizealand]] 17-3 to clinch third place. | ||
== | ==Bids== | ||
[[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|Kylaris Rugby]], the international rugby union governing body, announced the bidding process for the [[2017 Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|2017]] and 2021 tournaments in early 2011. Four bids for the 2021 tournament were entered: [[Masari]], [[Nuvania]] [[Rizealand]] and Satavia. The deadline for entering a bid was December 31, 2012, although this was extended until January 15, 2013 on the request of the Satavian Rugby Football Association (SRFA). Nuvania withdrew their bid in March 2013 in support of the Satavian bid, whilst Masari withdrew their bid later that month with the aim of strenghthening their own bid for 2017 (which would ultimately be awarded to Garambura). On July 14 Kylaris Rugby confirmed that Satavia had won the right to host the 2021 tournament, with venues across eight Satavian cities: Bloemstad, Kingsleigh, Konningstad, Northport, Port Arthur, Port Hope, Windstad, Victoriaburg. | |||
== | ==Venues== | ||
Proposed stadia for the tournament were announced by the SRFA in December 2013, and were confirmed in May 2015. Having originally proposed 12 stadiums, this number was reduced to 9 in the final plan, with two stadiums in the Port Hope/Burnaby region. The SRFA drew significant criticism from politicians and the public in the Central Territory, Diereplek Province and New Borland after all three were excluded from the final plan. | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | |||
|- | |||
! Port Hope International Stadium | |||
! Fort Kinnon Arena | |||
! DePex Stadium <br><small>(Stadium of the Satavians)</small> | |||
|- | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Port Hope]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Port Arthur-Fort Kinnon]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Port Hope]] | |||
|- | |||
| Capacity: 59,373 | |||
| Capacity: 54,211 | |||
| Capacity: 70,758 | |||
|- | |||
| [[File:14-05-2005-dairy farmers at dusk.JPG|200px]] | |||
| [[File:Subiaco Oval.jpg|200px]] | |||
| [[File:Sydney-Galaxy-homebush.jpg|200px]] | |||
|- | |||
! P. J. Van der Herdens Stadium | |||
! Krooksveld Road Stadium | |||
! Satavian Airlines Oval | |||
|- | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Konningstad]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Northport]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Windstad]] | |||
|- | |||
| Capacity: 28,476 | |||
| Capacity: 34,822 | |||
| Capacity: 26,183 | |||
|- | |||
| [[File:Bluetongue CC Stadium.jpg|200px]] | |||
| [[File:Hawthorn v Western Bulldogs - 31st May 2008 181.jpg|200px]] | |||
| [[File:WIN Stadium2.jpg|200px]] | |||
|- | |||
! Victoriaburg City Stadium | |||
! Brooksveld Stadium | |||
! Kingsleigh RFC Park | |||
|- | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Victoriaburg]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Bloemstad]] | |||
| {{flagicon|Satavia}} [[Satavia|Kingsleigh]] | |||
|- | |||
| Capacity: 65,445 | |||
| Capacity: 36,290 | |||
| Capacity: 24,512 | |||
|- | |||
| [[File:Blues vs Hurricanes 2020 Super Rugby Aoteraoa.jpg|200px]] | |||
| [[File:Hamilton 03.jpg|200px]] | |||
| [[File:YarrowStadium20101002.jpg|200px]] | |||
|} | |||
==Qualifying== | |||
The top three teams from each pool of the 2017 tournament recieved automatic qualification, as did Satavia as host nation. The remaining eight places were filled through qualification tournaments around the world. | |||
{| class="wikitable sortable" | |||
|+ Qualifying teams | |||
|- | |||
!Region | |||
!Team | |||
!Qualification<br />method | |||
!Previous<br /> {{tooltip|Apps|appearances}} | |||
!Previous best result | |||
![[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|World<br />Ranking]]¹ | |||
|- | |||
|rowspan=6|[[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|Asterias]] | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Cassier}} | |||
|Asterias 1 | |||
|align=center|8 | |||
|data-sort-value="1"|Quarter-finals <small>(2001)</small> | |||
|align=center|22 | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Gapolania}} | |||
|Repechage | |||
|align=center|0 | |||
|data-sort-value="9"|Debut | |||
|align=center|29 | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Nuvania}} | |||
|Automatic | |||
|align=center|10 | |||
|data-sort-value="9"|'''Champions''' <small>(1981, 1993, 2013)</small> | |||
|align=center|6 | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Rizealand}} | |||
|Asterias 2 | |||
|align=center|10 | |||
|data-sort-value="9"|'''Champions''' <small>(1985)</small> | |||
|align=center|5 | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Satavia}} | |||
|Automatic | |||
|align=center|10 | |||
|data-sort-value="9"|'''Champions''' <small>(1997)</small> | |||
|align=center|2 | |||
|- | |||
|rowspan=2|[[Rugby World Cup (Kylaris)|Coius]] | |||
|- | |||
|{{flag|Garambura}} | |||
|Automatic | |||
|align=center|10 | |||
|data-sort-value="1"|'''Champions''' <small>(2001)</small> | |||
|align=center|3 | |||
|- | |||
|} | |||
¹as of 1 January 2019, when pools were drawn | |||
{| | {| | ||
|valign=top width=200px|'''[[Asteria Inferior]] (3)''' | |valign=top width=200px|'''[[Asteria Inferior]] (3)''' | ||
Line 100: | Line 209: | ||
*{{flag|Galenia}} | *{{flag|Galenia}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 19:50, 3 December 2022
Tournament details | |
---|---|
Host nation | Satavia |
Dates | 15 January – 17 March |
No. of nations | 20 (52 qualifying) |
Final positions | |
Champions | Garambura |
Runner-up | Satavia |
Third place | Caldia |
Tournament statistics | |
Matches played | 48 |
Attendance | 2,581,211 (53,775 per match) |
Top scorer(s) | Jean-Loup Dupuy (93) |
Most tries | Jonty Warwick (9) |
← 2017 2025 → |
The 2021 Rugby World Cup was the eleventh edition of the Rugby World Cup, hosted in Satavia and held from 15 January to 17 March across twelve stadiums in Satavia. The opening match between Caldia and Rwizikuru was played at the Stadium of the Satavians, Port Hope where the final was also held. This marked the first time that the openining match of the tournament did not involve the host nation, after the match was postponed due to a flash flood the night before the match was due to be held. The tournament marked the second time the tournament had been hosted in Asteria Inferior (after the 1993 tournament, held in Nuvania) and the first time Satavia had hosted.
The tournament saw 20 nations compete, with two (Alsland and Gapolania) making their debuts having succesfully qualified for the first time. 12 nations gained automatic qualification having finished in the top three of their pools from the 2017, whilst the remaning eight slots were filled through qualification processes. Garambura went on to beat hosts Satavia 28-17 in the final to claim their second title, whilst defending champions Caldia defeated Rizealand 17-3 to clinch third place.
Bids
Kylaris Rugby, the international rugby union governing body, announced the bidding process for the 2017 and 2021 tournaments in early 2011. Four bids for the 2021 tournament were entered: Masari, Nuvania Rizealand and Satavia. The deadline for entering a bid was December 31, 2012, although this was extended until January 15, 2013 on the request of the Satavian Rugby Football Association (SRFA). Nuvania withdrew their bid in March 2013 in support of the Satavian bid, whilst Masari withdrew their bid later that month with the aim of strenghthening their own bid for 2017 (which would ultimately be awarded to Garambura). On July 14 Kylaris Rugby confirmed that Satavia had won the right to host the 2021 tournament, with venues across eight Satavian cities: Bloemstad, Kingsleigh, Konningstad, Northport, Port Arthur, Port Hope, Windstad, Victoriaburg.
Venues
Proposed stadia for the tournament were announced by the SRFA in December 2013, and were confirmed in May 2015. Having originally proposed 12 stadiums, this number was reduced to 9 in the final plan, with two stadiums in the Port Hope/Burnaby region. The SRFA drew significant criticism from politicians and the public in the Central Territory, Diereplek Province and New Borland after all three were excluded from the final plan.
Port Hope International Stadium | Fort Kinnon Arena | DePex Stadium (Stadium of the Satavians) |
---|---|---|
Port Hope | Port Arthur-Fort Kinnon | Port Hope |
Capacity: 59,373 | Capacity: 54,211 | Capacity: 70,758 |
P. J. Van der Herdens Stadium | Krooksveld Road Stadium | Satavian Airlines Oval |
Konningstad | Northport | Windstad |
Capacity: 28,476 | Capacity: 34,822 | Capacity: 26,183 |
Victoriaburg City Stadium | Brooksveld Stadium | Kingsleigh RFC Park |
Victoriaburg | Bloemstad | Kingsleigh |
Capacity: 65,445 | Capacity: 36,290 | Capacity: 24,512 |
Qualifying
The top three teams from each pool of the 2017 tournament recieved automatic qualification, as did Satavia as host nation. The remaining eight places were filled through qualification tournaments around the world.
Region | Team | Qualification method |
Previous Apps |
Previous best result | World Ranking¹ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asterias | |||||
Cassier | Asterias 1 | 8 | Quarter-finals (2001) | 22 | |
Gapolania | Repechage | 0 | Debut | 29 | |
Nuvania | Automatic | 10 | Champions (1981, 1993, 2013) | 6 | |
Rizealand | Asterias 2 | 10 | Champions (1985) | 5 | |
Satavia | Automatic | 10 | Champions (1997) | 2 | |
Coius | |||||
Garambura | Automatic | 10 | Champions (2001) | 3 |
¹as of 1 January 2019, when pools were drawn
Asteria Inferior (3)
Asteria Superior (2) Coius (4) |
Euclea (11) |
Draw & Pools
The pool draw took place on December 3rd, 2020, with four pools, Pool A, Pool B, Pool C and Pool D being made up of:
- Pool A: Seed 1 and Seed 3, and three other randomly selected nations
- Pool B: Seed 2 and Seed 4, and three other randomly selected nations
- Pool C: Seed 5 and Seed 7, and three other randomly selected nations
- Pool D: Seed 6 and Seed 8, and three other randomly selected nations
Following the random draw, the pools were selected like this:
Pool A | Pool B | Pool C | Pool D |
---|---|---|---|
Pool Stage
Pool A
Team | Pld | W | D | L | BP | Total Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rizealand | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 20 |
Caldia | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 13 |
File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 7 |
Etruria | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 6 |
Montecara | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
15 January 2021 | File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru | 3-7 | Caldia | DePex Stadium, Port Hope |
16 January 2021 | Montecara | 3-35 | Rizealand | Port Hope International Stadium, Port Hope |
17 January 2021 | Etruria | 11-0 | Montecara | Port Edward Arena, Port Edward |
17 January 2021 | File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru | 18-37 | Rizealand | Port Hope International Stadium, Port Hope |
20 January 2021 | Caldia | 21-26 | Rizealand | DePex Stadium, Port Hope |
20 January 2021 | Montecara | 0-10 | File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru | Port Hope RFC Grounds, Port Hope |
23 January 2021 | File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru | 0-0 | Etruria | Satavian Airlines Oval, Adamstown |
23 January 2021 | Caldia | 24-0 | Montecara | Fort Kinnon Arena, Port Arthur-Fort Kinnon |
24 January 2021 | Caldia | 21-0 | Etruria | Northport RFC, Northport |
26 January 2021 | Rizealand | 65-0 | Etruria | Fort Kinnon Arena, Port Arthur-Fort Kinnon |
Knockout Stage
Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Final | ||||||||
29 January – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Rizealand | 19 | |||||||||
5 February – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Azmara | 7 | |||||||||
Rizealand | 12 | |||||||||
29 January – Fort Kinnon | ||||||||||
Satavia | 13 | |||||||||
Satavia | 14 | |||||||||
16 February – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Gapolania | 10 | |||||||||
Satavia | 17 | |||||||||
31 January – Northport | ||||||||||
Garambura | 28 | |||||||||
Garambura | 8 | |||||||||
6 February – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Nuvania | 5 | |||||||||
Garambura | 18 | |||||||||
30 January – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Caldia | 14 | Third place | ||||||||
Template:Country data Estmere | 17 | |||||||||
13 February – Port Hope | ||||||||||
Caldia | 19 | |||||||||
Rizealand | 3 | |||||||||
Caldia | 17 | |||||||||