Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

World Cup year all set for February take-off

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THE Springboks are heading into a four-week break and the Vodacom United Rugby Championsh­ip is getting less busy while not quite stopping completely, but in some senses the month of February looks set to feel like what it used to be — the start of the rugby year.

In between the clutch of crucial derbies that will have a big impact on the respective Shields in the URC, and the continuati­on of the HSBC World Sevens Series, which heads to Los Angeles at the end of this month, February sees the start of the Six Nations in the northern hemisphere as well as the local Varsity Cup and Shield competitio­ns.

And while way down south there is no longer participat­ion from South Africa in Super Rugby, the southern hemisphere season will start for Australia and New Zealand in the same way it has for the last nearly 30 years — with the renamed Pacific Super Rugby tournament.

For the players and fans in the Antipodes it is the start of the World Cup season. There will be no break to their season before the start of RWC 2023 in France in September, and everything will be focussed on rugby's global showpiece.

There will be a break in the northern season, with almost all the teams using a substantia­l part of the time off for training camps, as the 2022/2023 season in the UK and Europe, like the profession­al season in South Africa now, officially ends in June.

However, with the number of games before the World Cup now in single digits, this Six Nations will form a huge part of the preparatio­n for France, Ireland, Wales, England, Scotland and Italy.

The South African profession­al season has shifted to align with the northern competitio­ns, the URC and the Heineken Champions Cup, but you could say the domestic season starts with the Varsity Cup, which this year kicks off slightly later than in the past, on 20 February.

Apart from providing great weekday summer evening entertainm­ent for rugby followers in South Africa, the Varsity Cup is now an important feeder to the profession­al franchises and will be watched eagerly by those responsibl­e for talent identifica­tion and succession planning.

Six Nations

It all starts this Saturday, with Wales hosting Ireland and Scotland visiting Twickenham, while champions France are off to Rome on Sunday to play Italy.

There will be particular interest in the England and Welsh performanc­es as both teams are under new coaches.

Wayne Pivac was sacked by Wales after the autumn internatio­nal series and Eddie Jones suffered the same fate with England.

The new Welsh coach is only new in a sense, for Warren Gatland was at the helm for many years before relinquish­ing the position after the 2019 Rugby World Cup to focus on his job as coach of the 2021 British and Irish Lions as well as return for a stint to his native New Zealand to head up the team he represente­d as a player, the Chiefs.

Steve Borthwick is also not entirely new to England as he did serve as Jones' forwards coach up until 2019, and his star has been on a steady rise in English rugby circles ever since due to the success he achieved as head coach of the Leicester Tigers.

It is a big call to replace a coach so soon before a World Cup though, so it is going to be an interestin­g time for both Wales and England.

The Six Nations has been given new impetus and added status by the rise of the top two teams from last year's competitio­n, France and

Ireland, to the top of the World Rugby Rankings.

Ireland are currently top, but France won the Six Nations last season and many think of them as the best team in the world.

France got full points from their five games last year to end on 25, with Ireland second on 21. Then there was a yawning gap to the third placed team, England, who won just two of five games and ended on 10 points.

That was the same number of log points as Scotland, but England had a superior points difference.

Super Rugby Pacific

The Brumbies were the outlier in an otherwise all Kiwi last four in the 2022 edition of the competitio­n, and Australian­s will be hoping that not only the Brumbies produce a repeat performanc­e, and maybe even go a bit further by making the final, but also that one of the other teams joins them in the semifinals.

Crusaders start the 2023 competitio­n as champions — who else? — and as it has been for much of the past eight years, it is all about breaking the hegemony of the team from New Zealand's south island.

However, last year they were pushed, and it was in fact the Blues from Auckland that ended up as league winners.

The final was played between the Blues and Crusaders in Auckland, with the Blues spitting the dummy a bit in their biggest game for several seasons, with Crusaders ending up deserved 21-7 winners.

The final wasn't quite as one-sided as that scoreline might appear, but it was a chastening night for Auckland and they will be looking to make up for it by going all the way this year. — supersport.com

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