Rugby World Cup: Portugal as a whole is depending on you

What Samuel Marques, Portugal’s hero in qualification, heard from Raffaele Storti as he got ready to kick Os Lobos into the Rugby World Cup 2023?

You need steely nerves and a reliable method to be a top-notch goalkicker.When he kicked the last-gasp penalty that secured his team’s place at Rugby World Cup 2023 as winners of the Final Qualification Tournament, Samuel Marques demonstrated that he possesses both attributes.

The scrum-half has been a standard wellspring of focuses for his country with his exact objective kicking since he got back to public group obligations in 2021 following an eight-year break, yet none were a higher priority than the three he kicked against the USA with the clock in the red in Dubai last Friday.

 Rugby fans can book the Portugal Rugby World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices.

A word to the wise

Portugal faced the possibility of missing out on another Rugby World Cup until Marques, 32, came on to level the score at 16-16.

As he lined up the kick, some of his teammates dared not look, while others couldn’t look away from the career-defining moment.It was a mixture of the two feelings for Raffaele Storti, whose try-scoring exploits have been just as influential in guiding Portugal to France the following year, but he was certainly not speechless.

“I couldn’t stop looking for a second. I was so excited and nervous at the same time that I went to Sam and told him the whole of Portugal was counting on him,” the winger revealed.

“Probably it wasn’t the smartest thing to say as he had already enough pressure to handle, but it just slipped out of me, I said it without even thinking.

“Fortunately, he is a player with a lot of experience and knows how to handle the pressure well.”

Capability briefly Rugby World Cup looked impossible when the USA, driving by three, were five meters from the Portugal line with five minutes to go.

Kapeli Pifeleti had stopped Storti from scoring an early try, and USA captain AJ MacGinty had converted three penalties to Marques’ two for a 16-13 advantage.

Yet, Portugal, and Marques particularly, kept their nerve to have their spot in Pool C close by Grains, Australia, Fiji and Georgia at the following year’s competition.

“Personally I am very excited about the World Cup especially because we’ll have the opportunity to compete against the best teams in the world, with a lot of visibility. This will allow us to show all our qualities, individually and as a team, which I am sure it will surprise a lot of rugby fans,” added Storti.

 “To finally have the opportunity to compete against these “giants” in such big stadiums, with a crowd full of Portuguese fans, it is everything we fought for. We’ll have the opportunity to show all our qualities and, hopefully, bring some joy to our supporters with wins.”

Key objective

Storti, who has scored 13 tries in 18 tests, insists that Portugal won’t just go to France to fill in the numbers. The goal is to automatically qualify for the Rugby World Cup 2027 by finishing in the top three pools.

“We are clearly the underdogs of the group since we’re not even a fully professional team. However, we’re not thinking about that, we’ll think match by match, and prepare for each game like it’s a final and give our best.

“We’ve already proven we are a competitive team that can play positive rugby against top teams as well.

“Examples of this were our draw against Georgia in Tbilisi in the Six Nations B (Rugby Europe Championship) in 2022 or the narrow loss against Japan in 2021.

“We are not going to the Rugby World Cup just to have fun, we have objectives and the third place is the main one.”

Qualification for their first Rugby World Cup since 2007 and only their second ever was celebrated long and hard before they returned home to Portugal to receive a heroes’ welcome.

“It was unforgettable, I have never seen the team so happy,” said Storti, about the post-match scenes.

“In Dubai, we all went partying together, staff and players, and it was really funny. It was clear that we had become more than a team throughout the years, but really good friends.”

A new era

Os Lobos were still competing in the second tier of Rugby Europe’s competition structure when Storti joined the senior Portuguese national team in 2019 after being a member of the country’s successful U20 team.

They didn’t get promoted to the Rugby Europe Championship until the following year, when head coach Patrice Lagisquet made them a force again.

Storti attributes Lagisquet’s appointment as a masterstroke to the former France winger’s ability to clearly define the team’s direction and garner support from all parties involved.

“Before Patrice came, the national team wasn’t competitive and there was not a goal ambitious enough to make players forget about their other duties.

“As rugby is amateur in Portugal, players had other jobs and priorities. Also, some of the pro-players playing abroad didn’t want to risk getting injured or being dropped out from their clubs, so chose not to represent Portugal.

“However, with the arrival of the new staff and the promotion of Portugal to the Six Nations B, a new goal and hope emerged – Rugby World Cup 2023 qualification.

“When Patrice came in he not only brought a lot of knowledge and experience to the group but also different rules and demands of the players.

“In my opinion, it was this collective ambition, together with the new expertise brought from the new staff (Lagisquet, Herve Durquety, João Mirra, Luis Pissarra) that were the keys to our success.”

Portugal bid to become 20th Rugby World Cup 2023 team

The ultimate goal of the four teams participating in the Final Qualifier Tournament in Dubai is to secure the last available spot in France for the Rugby World Cup 2023 that will be held in the following year.

The four teams will compete in a round-robin format over three match days, with the team with the most points winning. Hong Kong, Kenya, Portugal, and the United States are all hoping to get into Pool C and become the 20th team in the competition. There, they will face Wales, Australia, Fiji, and Georgia.

Following their participation in the 2007 Rugby World Cup, which was also held in France, Portugal will be looking to win their second Rugby World Cup.

Os Lobos players have been performing well recently while playing for the Lusitanos in the Rugby Europe Super Cup, where their team won the Western Conference.

In the Super Cup, Manuel Cardoso Pinto has scored seven tries and Pedro Lucas has scored six, while Rodrigo Marta (Dax Rugby/Nationale), Raffaele Storti (Béziers-Hérault), and José Madeira (Grenoble Rugby) have all impressed in France.

The first match for Portugal will be against Hong Kong at 4 p.m. local time (3:30 p.m. CET), followed by a 1 p.m. CET match against Kenya on Saturday, November 12, and a 4:30 p.m. CET match against the United States on November 18.

Speaking to World Rugby ahead of the tournament Portugal captain, Tomás Appleton, said: “We feel pretty confident, we have been talking about it for a long time and our objective is to qualify for Rugby World Cup.

We look at these three games as three finals but we have to start with the first game against Hong Kong, we are very focused on that one. Qualifying would mean the world to the rugby community back in Portugal, they have been waiting for it for a long time. We just want to be present.”

The six matches can be watched live on the Rugby World Cup 2023 website or on television in some markets.At the Sevens Stadium, supporters who are already in Dubai can also attend the games for free.

Rugby World Cup 2023 fans can buy Rugby World Cup Tickets from our website

Bundee Aki and Ross Byrne give Ireland a hard-fought victory over Australia

Ross Byrne landed a dramatic late penalty as Ireland overcame the loss of their captain, Johnny Sexton, to cap a stellar year with a rambling 13-10 win over Australia.

The replacement fly-half Byrne nailed a hard kick from wide on the right with three minutes remaining in Dublin to earn Ireland a record-equaling 12th successive home victory.

Rugby World Cup 2023 fans worldwide can book Rugby World Cup tickets from our online platform xchangetickets.com. Rugby fans can book the  Ireland Rugby World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices

Andy Farrell’s men struggled for large parts of an unsatisfactory contest and could easily have ended 2022 with a serious realism check against opponents beaten by Italy now last weekend.

Ireland 13-10 Australia: Autumn Nations Series – as it happened

The Ireland centre Bundee Aki marked his go back from an eight-game ban with the opening attempt but the game remained in the balance in the closing phase after Jordan Petaia crossed for the Wallabies.

A hard evening for the Irish began with the talismanic Sexton withdrawing during injury. His deputy, Jack Crowley, booted five points on his maiden Test start previous to Byrne, who was elevated to the bench at the 11th hour, show to be the match-winner.

Victory for Ireland saw them turn out to be the first nation to beat New Zealand, South Africa and the Wallabies in a calendar year as England in 2002. Sir Clive Woodward’s men went on to lift the Rugby World Cup the year after and those leftovers the ultimate goal for Farrell’s side looking in front to next year’s showpiece tournament in France.

Farrell was distant from pleased with what he observer in last weekend’s underwhelming 35-17 win over Fiji and – Sexton aside – welcomed back a crowd of players from injury as part of eight alteration.

The world coach of the year nominee would have in use little encouragement from a glaringly stop-start encounter littered with sloppy errors, penalties and connections of possession.

Relend defended determinedly in the face of incessant pressure for large parts of the opening era, including at one phase repelling 21 phases which sparked a rousing version of The Fields of Athenry, but offered little from an attacking viewpoint.i3.jpg

Rugby World Cup 2023 fans can buy Ireland Vs Romania Tickets from our website.

Australia thought they had scored a fourth-minute attempt, only for the scrum-half Nic White’s attempt to be disallowed on review since of Dave Porecki’s neck roll on Josh van der Flier. Crowley, wearing the No 10 jersey overstated with Sexton’s name, calmly slotted the only points of the half in the 10th minute.

Wallabies coach

 The Wallabies coach, Dave Rennie, have retained just five of the players who began the awkward 28-27 loss in Florence. The substitute hooker Folau Fainga’a was among the 10 men dropped and, having come on to put back the stricken Porecki, was sent to the peccadillo-bin in the 37th minute after Van der Flier endured another high undertake, before the Irish No 2 Dan Sheehan was held up on the line just before the whistle.

A poor – and, at times, tetchy – Test match was in frantic need of a spark. Ireland scrum-semi Jamison Gibson-Park looked to have provided it seven minutes after the restart other than his score was subsequently chalked off as Canberra-born team-mate Mack Hansen have gone into touch just before a fine relieve of.Australia had briefly been abridged to 13 men at that point owing to the temporary nonattendance of Fainga’a prompting unconcealed scrums.

The Wallabies came through a crucial era in the contest unscathed and were level in the 56th minute thanks to Foley finding his variety with his second penalty. Below-par Ireland finally made a significant dent on the scoreboard 10 minutes later when the substitute Aki came back with a bang by bulldoze over at the end of relentless force which prompted the sell-out crowd to finally discover their voices.

Crowley added the extras other than the joy was swiftly cut short as the Wallabies substitute Petaia broke clear to cross wide on the right, with Foley landing the tricky change.

Ireland looked like they would have to resolve for a rare draw but Byrne remarkably held his nerve as the world’s top-ranked team scraped a ninth win from 11 Tests to round off a memorable year in unconvincing but victorious fashion.

Ronan O’Gara: La Rochelle head coach suspended for 10 weeks, his fourth ban in a year

The French rugby union league said the Ireland legend was balanced for “harming the best wellbeing of rugby”.

It did not state when the incident occurred but the only match O’Gara has coached as completing a previous six-week ban was beside Brave on 5 November. He was fined 15,000 euros (£12,925) with a more 5,000 euros suspended.

The former fly-half, who can plea against the punishment, was cited for remarks criticizing the refereeing and the organization of the championship. The authorize is due to last until 30 January and means that O’Gara will not be obtainable for La Rochelle’s upcoming Heineken Champions Cup pool games against Northampton Saints and Ulster.

In Nov 2021, O’Gara was banned for two weeks for “showing disregard to the authority of an official” during a match against Toulon.

He was afterward suspended for two weeks in April for “indiscipline” and “challenging the decision of officials” in a game beside Racing 92, although that did not stop him from leading La Rochelle to the European Champions Cup name.

Ireland 13-10 Australia: Autumn Nations Series – as it happened

He was replaced with 8 minutes to go, and Ross Byrne showed a hard nerve when he stepped up and slotted the match winning penalty from the correct hand touch.

The Wallabies had a possibility to win in the last moments. They put a kickable penalty into the corner for a lineout, other than the maul was penalized when halfback Jake Gordon joined from the sid

Then in the last seconds, they wrap an Irish throw in inside the 22 only to undergo a dropped pass which left them losing three as the crow flies times to the home side for the first time as 1968.

Australia also lost not on time to France two weeks ago and, as in Paris, under enemy control long periods of a scrappy match. Halfback Nic White had a 4th minute try chalked off following hooker Dave Porecki was caught doing an illegal neck roll.

Crowley then sent during his only penalty kick of the night while complement Bernard Foley missed his first as the Wallabies were all over Ireland apart from on the scoreboard. A gauge was the Irish having to make 155 tackles. The Wallabies only had to make 56 but their regulation kept stalling their ambition.

Just before halftime, replacement hooker Folau Fainga’a was sinbinned for a neckline roll just minutes following being warned. His teammates, notably White, made sure his nonattendance was not exploited when tries were deprived of either side of the break. White got under Ireland hooker Dan Sheehan to hold him up by halftime, and after the interval he went low on Mack Hansen and Foley went high to shove the Australian-raised Irish winger into touch.

Xchangetickets.com is the best website for All Sports events. Rugby World Cup 2023 fans can buy Rugby World Cup Tickets from our website

Romania Rugby World Cup 2023 bid remains alive

Romania Rugby World Cup: The Oaks will take part in the Final Qualification Competition for RWC 2023 in November. Romania’s tenable third place in the Rugby World Cup 2023 European qualifying table after a contented 38-12 win over the Netherlands in Amsterdam on Saturday. The bonus-point win saw the Oaks finish on 28 points crossways the two years of the qualification cycle, from 2021 to 2022, 16 points behind winners Georgia and one fewer than Spain, the region’s two involuntary qualifiers.

Rugby World Cup fans can book Rugby World Cup tickets from our online platform xchangetickets.com. Rugby fans can book the Romania Rugby World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices.

Romania will now contest with three other teams in the Final Qualification Competition for the 20th and final ticket to Rugby World Cup 2023. A place in Pool C alongside Wales, Australia, Fiji and Europe 1 qualifier Georgia awaits the winner of that tournament.

Romania Rugby World Cup

Romania went into the game against the Netherlands as firm favorites having won all eight preceding meetings against the bottom team in the division. Tries from Gabriel Rupanu, Ionut Dumitru, Hickley Vaovasa, and Ovidiu Cojocaru ensured Romania had the bonus point in the bag just past the half-hour mark, with Ionel Melinte fruitful with all bar one of the changes for a 26-0 lead.

But the Dutch put in a forceful display in the latter stages of the first half at the National Rugby Centre, counting tries through Spike Salman and Christopher Raymond just before the intermission, turning around 26-12 up, Romania kept their line intact in the second half as well as adding a couple more tries for a 38-12 win.

It wasn’t pending the 71st minute

It wasn’t pending the 71st minute that the Dutch resistance was broken again, Nicolas Onutu crossing the line before Captain Mihai Macovei additional sixth five minutes later. After the game, Romania head coach Andy Robinson said: “We were 26-0 up and then let the Netherlands back into things. When we play well we are good, but we switch off at times and it is an example for us.

“Now we will build towards the repechage with some games in the straw hat and then it will come around in November – as a squad we need to be fitter, but we can grow from here and we will get better.”

The Netherlands has yet to win in nine outings since recurring to the second tier of European rugby for the first time in 19 years in 2021. But head coach Zane Gardiner is self-assured that they will continue to grow as a team with continued contact with higher-ranked teams. “We just need time at this level, we can contest just now in patches of games, but need to compete for 80 minutes at a time,” he said.

Georgia secure a fifth straight title

Meanwhile, Georgia motorized their way to a fifth consecutive Rugby Europe Championship title, beating fellow European Rugby World Cup 2023 finalists Spain 49-15 in Tbilisi.

The match was on a knife edge with half an hour to play and Georgia only leading 21-15, but the Lelos turned on the style to score four rehabilitated tries in the final quarter. To know more about Ireland Vs Romania Tickets click here.

Scrum-half Vasil Lobzhanidze got the scoring underway at the Dinamo Stadium in the third minute with the first drop goal of his 64-test vocation. The respective fly-halves, Tedo Abzhandadze and Manuel Ordas then dealt penalties before Spain, who went into the match as the Rugby Europe Championship 2022 leaders, counted the first try through hazardous winger Jordi Jorba.

RWC 2023

Fellow number 14, Akaki Tabutsadze soon hit back for Georgia with his 11th try in as many competitions and flanker Otar Giorgadze added additionally to make the half-time score 18-8 to the hosts. Spain needed to score first to get back in the argument and they did that nine minutes into the second half when hooker Santiago Ovejero rumbled over, Ordas adding the extras to make it a three-point game.

However, Spain failed to worry the scorers thereafter and Georgia stepped up a gear to finish as convincing winners. An Abzhandadze consequence made it 21-15 before Captain Merab Sharikadze raced under the posts to put further daylight between the teams. Tabutsadze and Giorgadze both got their next tries of the match soon after and it was left to hooker Giorgi Chkoidze to round off an excellent win.

“We played well when it mattered in this game and it means everything to win the trophy again. Spain is a good side, they played well, but we played better and now we start building up to the World Cup next year,” said Georgia head coach Levan Maisashvili.

Spain’s head coach Santiago Santos was phlegmatic in defeat. “We have to congratulate Georgia, they performed better and deserve to be champions,” he said.

“It is disappointing to lose this game, but the bigger picture is that we are going to the Rugby World Cup and we cannot wait to grow the sport in our country.”

Romania could face exclusion from Rugby World Cup 2023 due to an ineligible player

Spain had originally fit for next year’s Rugby World Cup through the European pathway, but after they were found to have fielded an unentitled player in two matches, they were docked 10 points. As a result, Romania is fit for the World Cup, while Portugal will play in a final qualification tournament, as Spain dropped from second to fourth place in the European requirement table. To know more about 
For Scotland Vs, Romania Tickets click here.

 However, the Spanish book El Mundo believes Jason Tomane, a New Zealand-born Romania international, played for his adopted country in World Cup finalists without being eligible to do so.

Jason Tomane may have been ineligible to play for Romania.

Tomane made his debut for Romania in June 2021 and played in competitions against the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, and Georgia in European World Cup qualifiers. According to an Instagram post made by Tomane’s wife, the Romanian international lived in Hungary for three months in 2019.

This would make Tomane unentitled to play for Romania, as it was during his three-year residency qualifying period, in which players must not spend more than 60 days outside of the country they are aiming to become qualified for each year.

As Tomane played in four Rugby World Cup finalist matches for Romania, the country could be docked 20 points, which would see Portugal qualify directly for next year’s competition in France, while Spain would progress to a final qualifying tournament.

Spain is currently appealing World Rugby’s decision.

Spain has docked points for a very alike reason, as South African-born Gavin van der Berg was deemed ineligible to play for Spain as he spent a lengthy period outside the country throughout his three-year residency qualifying period.

The Romanian Rugby Federation brought Van der Berg’s suitability to World Rugby’s attention after they had originally been unsuccessful to qualify directly for the 2023 Rugby World Cup. Spanish rugby officials are appealing to World Rugby over Van der Berg’s case, and have referenced New Zealand-born Ireland stars Bundee Aki and James Lowe in their appeal.

They are now likely to also bring Tomane’s situation to World Rugby’s attention, as the messy European World Cup qualification saga rumbles on.

We are offering Rugby World Cup Tickets admirers can get World Cup Tickets through our trusted online ticketing marketplace xchangetickets.com and hospitality is the most reliable source to book Rugby World Cup tickets. Sign up for the latest Tickets.

How Qatar wound up facilitating the Football World Cup

Many people are wondering how a small Gulf country with little football history ended up hosting the sport’s biggest event, which is currently underway in Qatar.

Qatar became the first host nation to lose the tournament’s opening match, losing 2-0 to Ecuador on Sunday. The nation had never played in a World Cup tournament before, let alone hosted one.

It took the nation 12 years to make its World Cup debut, during which time Qatar’s status as host nation sparked controversy within the football community and beyond.

‘New lands’

In 2010, Qatar was chosen ahead of bids from the United States, South Korea, Japan, and Australia to host the 2022 World Cup.

It encountered a number of challenges during the bidding process because FIFA, the governing body of football, raised concerns in technical reports. These included the region’s extreme heat during the summer, when World Cup tournaments are typically held, and the absence of any existing infrastructure.

Even though the reports called Qatar’s bid “high risk,” the country still won the final round of voting with 14 votes to eight from the United States.

At the time, Qatar promised to make the world “proud of the Middle East” as the first country from the region to host the tournament, while then-FIFA President Sepp Blatter welcomed the prospect of football’s showpiece event going to “new lands.”

“I’m a happy president when we speak of the development of football,” he said.

Twelve years later, Blatter is more critical.

Earlier this month, he told Swiss newspaper Tages Anzeiger: “Qatar is a mistake … the choice was bad.

“It is too small of a country. Football and the World Cup are too big for it.”

Blatter said FIFA amended the criteria it used to select host countries in 2012 in light of concerns over the working conditions at tournament-related construction sites in Qatar.

“Since then, social considerations and human rights are taken into account,” he said.

With a population of three million, smaller than that of Connecticut, Qatar has invested billions in its football infrastructure in preparation for the 2022 tournament.

However, there are still concerns regarding how Qatar obtained the right to host the World Cup.

In a statement to CNN, Qatari officials called the US Department of Justice’s claim that high-ranking officials accepted bribes as part of the voting process to select Russia and Qatar as the tournament hosts for the 2018 and 2022 events “false.”

For a number of years, the DOJ has been looking into allegations of corruption in international soccer, including FIFA. More than two dozen people have been found guilty, and some cases are still pending.

In April 2020, FIFA issued a statement in which it stated that it “supports all investigations into alleged acts of criminal wrongdoing regarding either domestic or international football competitions and will continue to provide law enforcement officials investigating such matters with full cooperation.”

“FIFA is closely following these investigations and all related developments in the legal processes ongoing in the United States and other parts of the world.

“It is important to point out that FIFA has itself been accorded victim status in the US criminal proceedings and senior FIFA officials are in regular contact with the US Department of Justice.”

US prosecutors gave FIFA the status of a victim because they thought the world governing body of football had been almost taken over by a few corrupt people.

Human rights criticism

Prior to the World Cup, Qatar’s human rights record was also in the news, particularly in relation to the well-being of migrant workers.

Seven new stadiums, new hotels, and expansions to the country’s airport, rail networks, and highways have all been built in preparation for the World Cup, despite the country’s lack of infrastructure when it was given the hosting rights.

Amnesty International says that this has made Qatar’s migrant workers, who make up 90% of the workforce, more important.

Beginning around 2010, numerous traveler laborers have separately confronted deferred or neglected compensation, constrained work, extended periods in sweltering climate, boss terrorizing, and a powerlessness to give up positions occupations as a result of the country’s sponsorship situation, common freedoms associations have found.

However, Qatar’s Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy (SC) said the health, safety and dignity of “all workers employed on our projects have remained steadfast,” with “significant improvements” made around workers’ rights.

The International Labor Organization has noted Qatar’s labor reforms, such as a non-discriminatory minimum wage, which Qatar is the first country in the region to implement. FIFA president Gianni Infantino also stated to CNN Sport’s Amanda Davies that he has observed “great evolution” in Qatar’s labor reforms.

In the years leading up to the World Cup, Qatar’s state-backed discrimination against LGBTQ people has also been criticized.

In the country, men-to-men sex is against the law and can result in up to three years in prison. A Human Rights Watch report that came out last month documented instances of Qatari security forces arbitrarily arresting LGBT people and giving them “ill-treatment in detention” as recently as September.

A statement issued on behalf of the SC and distributed to CNN stated that the nation was committed to “an inclusive and discriminatory-free” World Cup and cited the country’s hosting of hundreds of international and regional sporting events since winning the competition in 2010.

“There has never been an issue and every event has been delivered safely,” the statement read.

“Everyone is welcome in Qatar, but we are a conservative country and any public display of affection, regardless of orientation, is frowned upon. We simply ask for people to respect our culture.”

The decision to stage the World Cup in November and December rather than June and July, as is typical, is perhaps the most obvious indication that this tournament differs from others.

Although temperatures are still expected to rise above 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) later this week, the switch has been forced by Qatar’s scorching summer heat.

Other changes to the tournament’s structure have been made more recently.

On Monday, captains from seven nations were informed that they would receive yellow cards if they wore armbands advocating for inclusion and opposing discrimination. FIFA made the announcement on Friday that no alcoholic beverages would be sold in the stadiums.

“All 32 captains will have the opportunity to wear this armband” during the World Cup, FIFA stated earlier on Monday, announcing that it had brought forward its “No Discrimination” campaign, which also features a branded armband.

FIFA’s hardware guidelines express that “for FIFA last contests, the skipper of each group should wear the commander’s armband given by FIFA.”

The legacy of this World Cup will only become clear over time, but if the past few days, months, and years are any indication, it is likely to be complicated and contentious.

Book Online Tickets for Qatar Football World Cup 2022

Xchangetickets.com is the best website for All Sports events. Football World Cup 2022 fans can buy Qatar World Cup Tickets from our website

England Rugby World Cup

Next England Rugby coach After Rugby World Cup 2023

Crusaders’ Scott Robertson says he wants to replace Eddie Jones after the Rugby World Cup, Scott Robertson, the serially fruitful coach of Crusaders in Super Rugby, is in London to help lead the Barbarians in their yearly autumnal fun. But he is deadly serious about the next ladders in his career: they must be in international rugby, and they will start amid the coaching shake-up that always happens after a World Cup.

Rugby World Cup fans can book Rugby World Cup tickets from our online platform xchangetickets.com. Rugby fans can book the England Rugby World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices.

The 48-year-old Kiwi, who goes by the self-created nickname “Razor”, wants to take two sides to a World Cup in the upcoming. One would be his native New Zealand, obviously enough, but what about the other?

“I’ve said many times that the All Blacks is my preferred choice but if it didn’t work out that way, you know, England’s got so much potential, it’d be a pretty special job,” Robertson said.

“There is potential to any international job, I’ll make that clear because a few are coming up [after the 2023 World Cup]. My first choice is to be at home. And then what other potential, if it is England, Scotland or Australia or any other team that’s out there, you’ve got to look at it.”

England Rugby World Cup

Eddie Jones will be sendoff the England head coach’s job at the end of next year, and in the Rugby Football Union’s search for an heir, it would be no surprise if they have already sounded Robertson out.

Indeed, RFU chief decision-making Bill Sweeney has recently rowed back on his suggestion that he wanted an Englishman to replace Jones, opening the door for the likes of Robertson and Ronan O’Gara, the Irish head coach of European champions La Rochelle.

Robertson has been aided by O’Gara in London for the past week as the Barbarians are ready for their match with an All Blacks XV at ­Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday and he is residual for the hastily decided games with Harlequins and Bath. To know more about England Vs Samoa Tickets click here.

“I’m in constant interaction with the NZRU,” said Robertson, who has one more period to run with the Crusaders, “but you consider any chance in international football because there’s not many of them and it’s a four-year cycle.”

He says he admires coaches who have handled a second team in adding to their own, name-checking Graham Henry, Steve Hansen – and a certain Australian. “Eddie’s a prime example,” Robertson said – and he met Jones in Sydney in July when England was on tour and ­Robertson released in for the weekend. “He [Jones] asked me 10 queries and I ­managed about one,” Robertson said. “We talked a bit of footy.”

England could be looking for an entirely new coaching panel in 2024

Robertson is a stated fan of ­former England assistant coaches Steve Borthwick and Mike Catt, now with Leicester and Ireland correspondingly. And while he fights the offer to appraise England in detail, he said: “Oh, god there’s massive ­potential and some great young players coming through.”

Rwc 2023

He sees the Six Nations as an arena to put your job on the line every week. “I went to Cardiff on the weekend,” he said, “and the passion and the hype and everything behind it and – how am I going to put this very diplomatically – there’s a lot of opportunity to be successful.”

If the RFU chooses it needs ­charisma as well as rugby nous, post-Jones, this surf-loving Kiwi could provide it. Robertson left his home in laid-back Mount Maunganui on New Zealand’s North Island to make his vocation in Christchurch, ­learning from coaches Wayne Smith, Robbie Deans, and Hansen.

He did the foreign travel thing, playing for clubs in Northern Ireland, Scotland, France, and Japan. He had 23 caps in New Zealand’s back row from 1998 to 2002.

“Well, you’ll get me,” Robertson said when asked what he would bring to international rugby. “I like to bring energy every day and I enjoy what I do. My job is to create a situation everyone loves coming to, and get the best out of themselves.”

‘It’s entirely my fault – Jones admits England was unfocussed against Argentina

Eddie Jones trusts England’s loss to Argentina was partly down to being too focused on next year’s Rugby World Cup as he accepted full accountability for the defeat.

England was on the end of a surprise 30-29 reverse at a packed Twickenham on Sunday – only their second-ever home overthrow to Argentina. To know more about England Vs Chile Tickets click here.

The sides will encounter again in their opening match of the 2023 World Cup next September, which Jones already had one eye on heading into last weekend’s battle in London.

“When your team doesn’t play to the potential you want, there is always somewhat in the message that you’re giving the team that’s not fairly clear,” he said.

“We’ve been looking at several long-term strategies to get ourselves set for the World Cup. Maybe our focus wasn’t tight enough on the Argentina game.

“Maybe we were overthinking a bit, and that’s entirely my fault.”

England reached the final in 2019

England Rugby World Cup Team reached the final in 2019 and is among the pets to lift the trophy next year, alongside New Zealand, Ireland, hosts France, and reigning champions, South Africa.

The Red Rose endured another unsatisfactory Six Nations campaign earlier this year, but they recovered with a battling 2-1 series win in Australia before losing to Argentina.

With less than a year to go before the World Cup begins, Jones is hoping to additional develop his squad in time for the tournament.

“There is a cluster of teams at the top of world rugby,” he said. “We want to break that cluster. To do that we have to have several different ways to play the game.

“This next 11 months is to get enough equipment in our armoury to play anyway.

“England rugby is traditionally about power rugby, winning the set-piece, smashing down the gain-line, but we have to learn from the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

“In the final, we came up against a side with more power than us, and we could not beat them at that game.”

England has made three changes to their 36-man team for Saturday’s showdown with Japan at Twickenham, which is followed by Tests against New Zealand and South Africa.

We are offering Rugby World Cup Tickets admirers can get World Cup Tickets through our trusted online ticketing marketplace xchangetickets.com and hospitality is the most reliable source to book Rugby World Cup tickets. Sign up for the latest Tickets.

Argentina eye Rugby World Cup success as Agustin Creevy insists no grudge with Jamie Ritchie ahead of Scotland game

Having beaten New Zealand and England away, and defeated Scotland over the route of a Test series, it has been a momentous year for Argentina, one they will seek to end on an elevated with victory at Murrayfield on Saturday.

Argentina, one they will seek to end on an elevated with victory at Murrayfield on Saturday.

Rugby World Cup 2023 fans worldwide can book Rugby World Cup tickets from our online platform xchangetickets.com. Rugby fans can book the  Argentina Rugby World Cup Tickets on our website at exclusively discounted prices

But their ambitions make bigger beyond isolated triumphs and veteran hooker Agustin Creepy sees no reason why they can’t be real challengers at next year’s rugby World Cup in France.

Once international rugby’s outliers, the Pumas’ contribution in the Rugby Championship over the past decade has known them exposure to the world’s best and under the new tutelage of Michael Cheika they have found a coach who knows how to win significant Test matches. All that’s missing, suggests Creevy, is a small consistency.

We believe in us, we consider in our team and players,” said the 37-year-old, speaking at the University of Edinburgh’s playing fields at Peffermill. Obviously they played attractive well against New Zealand and they are a rough team. But we will see on Saturday.

We want to be the champions, to be truthful, in the next rugby World Cup. We want to improve on our play. We are in a procedure – we are changing our state of mind. We want a winning attitude and with Michael Cheika we are doing that. And if we can be champions, why not?”

Cheika’s qualifications are top notch. The former Wallabies boss is the only coach to win together the Heineken Cup and Super Rugby. Asked anywhere Cheika has made the biggest dissimilarity, Creevy points to his head. “It’s confidence, I believe.

Argentine forward was send off for head butting the Scotland captain as playing for London Irish against Edinburgh in previous season’s Challenge Cup

He puts the focus on our winning mentality, to believe in our team and to imagine we can win every game. And that is the most important thing – since in terms of physicality I think we are at the same level as the top teams.

Because arriving in Europe the Pumas have beat en England 30-29 at Twickenham and lost 20-13 to Wales, and Creevy knows they require putting together a run of results if they are to imitate or surpass their achievement of 2007 and 2015 when they reached the rugby World Cup semi-finals.

We win a really significant game, against New Zealand for example, and then the next weekend we lost against New Zealand by 40 points. Or perhaps we won against England other than lost against Wales when we might have won. So, these types of things we must center on as a team, to be more consistent.

Saturday’s match at Murrayfield will see Creevy security device horns with Jamie Ritchie for the first time as the Argentine forward was send off for head butting the Scotland captain as playing for London Irish against Edinburgh in previous season’s Challenge Cup. Creevy doesn’t expect to meet any residual bad feelings. “No, but it is alright. It was an action in the game, it clearly was not appropriate, of course. Emiliano Boffelli tells me he is a good guy and I do not have a problem with anybody.

Creevy says Argentina will bend on Boffelli’s inside knowledge this week. He does not know precisely what is going to happen, but he perhaps has some details and small things we can pay notice to,” said Creevy, who rates the Edinburgh winger as one of the most excellent in world in terms of aerial aptitude and goal kicking.

Rugby World Cup 2023 fans can buy England Vs Argentina Tickets from our website.

World Rugby Men’s Rankings powered by Capgemini given major shake-up

Argentina has been rewarded for their 30-29 win over England at Twickenham on Sunday with a two-put rise in the World Rugby Men’s Rankings powered by Capgemini.

Los Pumas have climbed from eighth to sixth following receiving 1.80 points for the victory – only their second at Twickenham – and have overtaken Australia and Wales in the procedure.

New Zealand and Scotland were the additional top 10 teams to improve their positions in victory, with the All Blacks moving up one put to third at South Africa’s expense following their persuasive 55-23 win against Wales in Cardiff.

South Africa had left to Dublin looking to knock Ireland off their rest on at the top of the rankings, but the home side edged an marathon test 19-16 and stay at number one.

Wales’ defeat joint with Argentina’s Twickenham triumph and Scotland’s 28-12 win in excess of Fiji have sent Wayne Pivac’s side downward to ninth, with the Scots moving in the opposite way up to eighth.

Italy’s imposing 49-17 win over Samoa saw their rating boosted by 1.42 points, which was sufficient to send them up to 12th, on top of their beaten opponents and also Georgia, whose total leftovers unchanged as their 34-18 win over Uruguay did not come with any extra points.

Their opening matches in the Final Qualification Tournament for Rugby World Cup 2023

Fiji climbed a place still in defeat as their revised rating of 74.85 points is motionless higher than Samoa’s.

Samoa’s serious defeat at the hands of the Azzurri cost them 1.42 points which gives them a novel score of 74.33 points.

A 40-6 win for Tonga over Spain saw the sides swap seats with the ‘Ikale Tahi now the highest ranked of the two teams in 15th, one put below Samoa.

With Portugal and the USA together winning their opening matches in the Final Qualification Tournament for Rugby World Cup 2023, Os Lobos are now ranked on top of the Eagles in 19th.

Hong Kong’s 42-12 defeat to Portugal caused them to fall one put to 23rd with Canada the side to advantage.

Several matches also took place in the unlike tiers of Rugby Europe’s competition arrangement.

The most important from a rankings viewpoint was Switzerland’s opening match in the 2022/23 Trophy, which ended in a 69-12 win for the Swiss and a five-place go up to 29th.

Eddie Jones: ‘Individual’ mistakes to blame for England loss to Argentina

Eddie Jones said he does not sense there are fundamental evils in the England ranks after their shock 30-29 defeat to Argentina but in its place said the loss was down to “individual” and “elemental” mistakes.

Jones have labelled England’s four-Test autumn schedule a mini-World Cup, additional than their campaign got off to a deprived start on Sunday at Twickenham as they were given a enormous wake-up call by the Pumas with the Rugby World Cup just 10 months away.

It was as much a realism check for Jones’ side as it was a magnificent afternoon for this history-making group of Argentina players. But with together teams meeting in the pool stages of the rugby World Cup next year, it is Argentina who has the bragging rights in front of that meeting on Sept. 9 in Marseille.

Jones said it was firm to single out exactly why the match gets away from England, but said it was “trying,” bemoaning “person mistakes, and elemental mistakes.”. We don’t have to worry about

Santiago Carreras scored Argentina’s additional try in the 51st minute with a breakaway attempt as they secured their first victory over England since 2009

Confidence – it is about repeating things well. We did some good belongings, some silly things — sometimes which happens when you try too firm.

On a historic afternoon for the Pumas, winger Emiliano Boffelli finished with a 25-point haul, which included a magnificent try to finish off a sweeping move in the 47th minute, six penalties, and a conversion. Santiago Carreras scored Argentina’s additional try in the 51st minute with a breakaway attempt as they secured their first victory over England since 2009, and their first win at Twickenham in 16 years.

England stutter in attack and managed a try in also half, with Joe Cokanasiga crossing in the 25th minute and Jack van Poortvliet scoring within 29 seconds of coming on from the worktable in the 55th minute. Owen Farrell was perfect from the tee to bring up a 19-point haul but England fell short as together teams exchanged penalties and the guide in the final quarter of the match.

Jones said there was dullness around the game but he now turns his notice to welcoming Japan to Twickenham next weekend, previous to they face New Zealand and South Africa. I am not thinking we have physically powerful problems in the team — most of the part we under enemy control the game,Jones said. I don’t need to fight today — I feel the team go out and played how they wanted to play, other than we made some silly mistakes. They’re all convenient, we can fix them.

Xchangetickets.com is the best website for All Sports events. Rugby World Cup 2023 fans can buy Rugby World Cup Tickets from our website