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With the Rugby League World Cup being held in 2000, the Tri-nations tournament was put on hold indefinitely. Australia was to dominate international rugby league over the next three years, winning the World Cup, defeating Great Britain 2–1 and 3–0 in Kangaroo Tours in 2001 and 2003 , and defeating Great Britain and New Zealand by large ...
The 2025 Rugby Championship [a] is set to be the fourteenth edition of the annual Southern Hemisphere rugby union competition, involving Argentina, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. South Africa are the defending champions [ 2 ] and kick off the tournament against Australia on 16 August.
The fixture list for the 2025 RFL League One was issued on 26 November 2024. [1] The regular season comprised 22 rounds to be followed by the Super 8s for the top four clubs. Each club had 20 fixtures with two bye weeks. All times are UK local time (UTC±00:00 until 30 March 2025, UTC+01:00 thereafter).
The 1996–2011 results were for the Tri Nations; the results from 2012 to the present are for the Rugby Championship. Teams played only four matches in 2007 and 2011, and three in 2015 and 2019, due to the Rugby World Cup. In 2020, the Tri Nations was contested between Argentina, Australia, and New Zealand.
The Tri Nations was created amongst the SANZAR partners (along with the provincial Super 12 competition, now, Super Rugby). The tournament involves three southern hemisphere nations; Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. The series was created to form a similar competition to the Six Nations Championship (then, the Five Nations). [2]
World Rugby Pacific Nations Cup: Fiji, Samoa, Tonga: 2006: 2022: Annually Originally Pacific Five Nations — replaced the Pacific Tri-Nations. The original teams were Australia A, the Junior All Blacks (New Zealand's official "A" side), and the three Pacific Island nations. In 2008, the New Zealand Māori replaced the Junior All Blacks.
England head to Greece for an away clash in the Nations League on Thursday evening, with Lee Carsley hoping for a positive result after suffering a Wembley defeat to the same opponent last month.
Rugby League Park: Christchurch: Unknown 1974 Great Britain: 0 20 Carlaw Park: Auckland: Unknown 1 June 1975 Australia: 8 36 Lang Park: Brisbane: 12,000 1975 World Cup: 15 June 1975 France: 27 0 Rugby League Park: Christchurch: 2,500 21 June 1975 England: 17 17 Carlaw Park: Auckland: 12,000 28 June 1975 Wales: 13 8 Carlaw Park: Auckland: 9,368 ...