The Women’s Rugby World Cup‘huge challenge' 8 OCT - 12 NOV 2022
The Women’s Rugby World Cup is a women's rugby union world championship organized by World Rugby. The first Women's Rugby World Cup was held in 1991, but it was not until the 1998 tournament that the tournament received official backing from the International Rugby Board (IRB, now World Rugby); by 2009, the IRB had retroactively recognized the 1991 and 1994 tournaments and their champions.
The tournament is currently held every four years and was most recently held in Ireland in 2017. The next tournament was to be held in 2021 in New Zealand but has been postponed to 2022 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Three countries have won the women's Rugby World Cup since its establishment, with New Zealand having won the tournament a record five times.
The championship was previously branded as the Women's Rugby World Cup. As part of an effort to promote greater parity between the championship and its men's counterpart, the Rugby World Cup, World Rugby announced in 2019 that the women's championship would be officially marketed under the title Rugby World Cup, with no gender designation, beginning in 2021.
Taking place over five weeks, the tournament's ninth edition is being hosted by reigning champions New Zealand for the very first time.
Australia's Wallaroos will feature on an opening day against arch-rivals New Zealand in front of a predicted record-breaking Eden Park crowd of 40,000 or more.
The wait for Rugby World Cup 2021 is finally over. The delayed showpiece tournament kicked off this weekend as six enthralling matches were contested at Eden Park and the Northland Events Centre.
A record crowd of 34,235 were treated to an awesome day of rugby in Auckland on Saturday as New Zealand, England and France opened their campaigns with victories.
On Sunday, Whangārei played host to wins for Canada, Italy, and Wales which leave RWC 2021 perfectly poised heading into next weekend.
The action will return to the Northland Events Centre this Saturday before the tournament continues at Waitakere Stadium on Sunday.
The tournament is made up of three pools consisting of four nations. All pool
stage and knockout matches will take place on weekends. The 2021 Women's.
The Rugby World Cup tournament playing in 2022 will feature quarter-finals for the first time, with other editions featuring only semi-finals and a final.
The top two in each pool and the two best third-placed teams will advance to the quarter-finals. The winners of the four quarter-final matches will continue to the semi-finals with the two semi-final winners advancing to the final. The two semi-final losers will compete in a bronze final.
And on this occasion, you must be ready for this cup, present products that refer to it and present the visitor with this form