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The August 2023 announcement of the Pacific Rugby League Championships, by the NRL and Australian Government, indicated that Fiji and Australia would co-host the tournament in 2024. [3] [4] In May 2024, Fiji National Rugby League chief executive Don Natabe announced that Fiji were expected to host five national teams in a month-long Rugby ...
Where a player's 2024 club is outside the Super League, NRL or NRLW it is shaded in the table. Matches - Tally of games played in club competitions T1 — Tier 1 club competitions. For men: Super League and National Rugby League; For women: National Rugby League Women's Premiership. This is the tier 1 competition for women in Australia.
The Rugby League Pacific Championship is a rugby league tournament for national teams in Oceania.Its inaugural tournament was in 2019 as the "Oceania Cup".. The tournament replaced the Anzac Test Series (1997–2017), which solely featured Australia and New Zealand as a single match annual test.
Australia said it would commit A$7 million for a Pacific rugby league championship, in a "football diplomacy" move seen as boosting Australia's soft power amid competition for influence with China.
A two-match tour to France by Lebanon was announced in early September 2024 with two tests to be played in Pamiers and Albi. [12] The test series was cancelled five days later. The French Rugby League Federation initially stated that the series had been cancelled due to the NRL not released any Lebanese players. [13]
The Pacific Rugby League Championships was announced August 2023, as part of a $7 million investment by the NRL and Australian Government to develop rugby league in the surrounding countries. The tournament serves a continuation of the Oceania Cup which had one edition in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic .
On 27 November, Samoa re-engaged talks about the potential test series, [8] [9] and on 13 June 2024 the tour was confirmed, but with only a two-match test series (one short of a traditional tour), [1] [2] with the hope that the reduced schedule would allow Samoa to compete in the 2024 Rugby League Pacific Championships as well. [10] [11]
This page was last edited on 6 November 2024, at 09:43 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.