South Wales Evening Post

World Rugby reveals plans to start global women’s tournament

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WORLD Rugby has announced a new “landmark” global women’s tournament designed to accelerate the growth of the game.

The world governing body is investing £6.4million in the WXV tournament, which will launch in 2023 and feed into the expanded 2025 Rugby World Cup.

The competitio­n will include 16 teams split into three tiers, with qualificat­ion based on regional tournament­s including the Six Nations.

World Rugby chairman Sir Bill Beaumont said: “This is a landmark moment for the sport. Today’s announceme­nt of a new global internatio­nal 15s calendar will underpin the future success and accelerate the developmen­t of the women’s game.”

The tournament will be played every year with the exception of World Cup years, with a window between September and November in the calendar.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt comes a week after the 2021 World Cup was pushed back to 2022 due to delays in the qualificat­ion process as a result of the pandemic.

From 2025, the World Cup will expand from 12 teams to 16, with this new competitio­n intended to provide more Test rugby to aid developmen­t.

“By establishi­ng a unified internatio­nal 15s calendar and introducin­g WXV we are creating a platform for the women’s internatio­nal teams to compete in more consistent, competitiv­e and sustainabl­e competitio­ns at regional and global level,” Beaumont added.

The top three teams from the 2023 Six Nations will go into the first division of the new tournament, where they will face three nations drawn from Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United States (Oceania/ran).

The second tier will include two European nations, the fourthplac­ed team from Oceania/ran, plus one team from each of Oceania, Asia, and Africa, with a fourteam third tier formed of two European teams, one team from Asia and the winner of an Africa v South America play-off.

Each tier will play a tournament in a single venue, with the top two tiers using a cross-pool format and the third tier using a round-robin format.

There will be promotion and relegation of regional positions between the tiers based on results, although there will be no promotion or relegation involving the top tier for the first year of the competitio­n.

World Rugby hopes the new competitio­n will not only boost opportunit­ies for Test-level rugby but also grow interest and investment into the women’s game to help its future developmen­t.

With the announceme­nt coming so soon after the postponeme­nt of this year’s World Cup, general manager of women’s rugby Katie Sadleir said it showed investment in the game was continuing.

“Cash is tight everywhere, but I can honestly say we’re investing more money in women’s rugby than ever before,” Sadleir said.

“It’s the area we have not cut and we have urged unions to do the same.”

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