2023 Rugby World Cup

2023 Rugby World Cup
French: Coupe du monde de rugby 2023
We Are Rugby #WeAre2023![1]
Tournament details
Host nation France
Dates8 September – 28 October
No. of nations20 (34 qualifying)
Final positions
Champions  South Africa (4th title)
Runner-up  New Zealand
Third place  England
Tournament statistics
Matches played48
Attendance2,437,208 (50,775 per match)
Tries scored325 (average 6.77 per match)
Top scorer(s)England Owen Farrell (75)
Most triesNew Zealand Will Jordan (8)
Points scored2,610 (average 54.38 per match)
2019
2027

The 2023 Rugby World Cup (French: Coupe du monde de rugby 2023) was the tenth men's Rugby World Cup, the quadrennial world championship for national rugby union teams. It took place in France from 8 September to 28 October 2023 in nine venues across the country. The opening game and final took place at the Stade de France, north of Paris. The tournament was held in the bicentenary year of the purported invention of the sport by William Webb Ellis.[2]

The tournament was scheduled to last six weeks, but in February 2021 World Rugby added a week to provide additional rest days for player welfare. This meant that teams had a minimum of five days' rest for all matches. It was the fourth time France has hosted the Rugby World Cup, having previously done so in 2007 and co-hosted the 1991 Rugby World Cup and 1999 Rugby World Cup with England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. This was the last tournament to feature 20 teams taking part, as the tournament will be expanded to include 24 teams in 2027.

The defending champions were South Africa, who defeated England in the 2019 Rugby World Cup final.[3] South Africa retained their title by defeating New Zealand in the final.[4] In doing so, they became the first team to win the tournament four times and they remain the only team to ever win the World Cup after losing a match in the pool stage, as well as the first team to win successive World Cup titles away from home.[5] The result also marked their second victory over New Zealand in a final (winning 15–12 a.e.t. in 1995), and also their second victory in a final on French soil (defeating England 15–6 in 2007). As well as winning the World Cup after losing a pool game for the second consecutive time, they won each of their knockout games against France, England and New Zealand by a margin of 1 point.

Chile made their first appearance in the tournament. Portugal returned for their second appearance, 16 years after their debut in 2007, also in France.

  1. ^ "The 2023 Rugby World Cup Slogan is Unveiled". us.media.france.fr. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Webb Ellis, William". Rugby Football History. Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  3. ^ "Springboks beat England to win World Cup". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
  4. ^ "New Zealand 11-12 South Africa: Springboks win record fourth Rugby World Cup in dramatic final". BBC Sport. 28 October 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
  5. ^ "Rugby World Cup 2023: Why does victory mean more to South Africa?". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 October 2023.