2021_Women's_Rugby_League_World_Cup

2021 Women's Rugby League World Cup

2021 Women's Rugby League World Cup

Sixth staging of the Women's Rugby League World Cup


The 2021 Women's Rugby League World Cup was the sixth staging of the Women's Rugby League World Cup, and was one of three major tournaments part of the 2021 Rugby League World Cup. The tournament was held in England from 1 November to 19 November 2022.[1] Originally planned for 2021, it was delayed a year along with the men's and wheelchair tournaments due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The tournament featured eight teams, an increase of two from the previous tournament.

Quick Facts Women's Rugby League World Cup (), Number of teams ...

For the first time the tournament had parity with the men's and wheelchair tournaments with all participants being paid the same while all 61 matches across three tournaments will be broadcast live.[2][3]

Teams

Qualification

The competing teams were selected based on criteria including growth and current infrastructure and were announced on 18 July 2019.[4]

More information Region, Team ...
  1. Competed as part of  Great Britain in 2 previous tournaments, finishing as runners-up in 2000.

Draw

The teams were drawn into two groups of four. The two seeded teams were England (Group A) as hosts and Australia as holders (Group B). The draw was made at Buckingham Palace on 16 January 2020. Teams from pool 1 were drawn by Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, pool 2 was drawn by Katherine Grainger and pool 3 by Jason Robinson.[10]

Ahead of the fixture list being announced, the organisers stated that there would be at least four days between a team's games in the interests of player welfare.[11]

The fixtures were announced on 21 July 2020.[12] Following the postponement of the tournament from 2021 to 2022, a revised schedule was published on 21 November 2021.[13] All the games in the tournament were played as double-headers with other games from either the women's or men's tournaments.[14]

More information Seeded, Pot 1 ...

Squads

Each nation announced 24 player squads to compete in the tournament.[15]

Venues

Stadiums

Five venues were used for the women's tournament.[16] Stadiums are referred to by their official name rather than sponsored name, as is International Rugby League policy

More information Manchester, Wigan ...

Team base camp locations

Two locations were used by the eight national team squads to stay and train before and during the World Cup tournament, as follows;[17]

  • Leeds: Brazil, Canada, England and Papua New Guinea
  • York: Australia, Cook Islands, France and New Zealand

Officiating

Match officials

The list of match officials who officiated across both the men's and women's tournaments was published on 5 October 2022.[18]

Warm-up matches

Pre-tournament practice matches took place in the weeks before the first round of group stage matches of the World Cup.

More information York Valkyrie, 0–38 ...

More information Ireland, 8–6 ...
25 October 2022
14:00 BST (UTC+01:00)
Orrell St James Rugby League Club, Wigan[23]

More information England Knights, 14–26 ...
27 October 2022
14:30 BST (UTC+01:00)
Weetwood Sports Park, Leeds

More information Brazil, 4–16 ...

Group stage

Group A

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: rlwc2021

More information England, 72–4 ...
1 November 2022
14:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
Headingley Stadium, Leeds
Attendance: 8,621[26]
Referee: Rochelle Tamarua (New Zealand)
Touch judges: Tom Grant (England), Jack Smith (England)
Player of the Match: Courtney Winfield-Hill (England)
More information England, Position ...

More information Papua New Guinea, 34–12 ...
1 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
Headingley Stadium, Leeds
Attendance: 8,621[26]
Referee: Geoffrey Poumes (France)
Touch judges: Aaron Moore (England), James Vella (England)
Player of the Match: Martha Molowia (Papua New Guinea)
More information Papua New Guinea, Position ...

More information England, 54–4 ...
5 November 2022
12:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
DW Stadium, Wigan
Attendance: 23,179[26][lower-alpha 4]
Referee: Paki Parkinson (New Zealand)
Touch judges: James Vella (England), Liam Rush (England)
Player of the Match: Vicky Molyneux (England)
More information England, Position ...

More information Papua New Guinea, 70–0 ...
5 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
MKM Stadium, Hull
Attendance: 7,080[26][lower-alpha 5]
Referee: Ben Casty (France)
Touch judges: Geoffrey Poumes (France), Dean Bowmer (England)
Player of the Match: Belinda Gwasamun (Papua New Guinea)
More information Papua New Guinea, Position ...

More information Canada, 22–16 ...
9 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
Headingley Stadium, Leeds
Attendance: 5,471[26]
Referee: Michael Smaill (England)
Touch judges: Dean Bowmer (England), Geoffrey Poumes (France)
More information Canada, Position ...

More information England, 42–4 ...
9 November 2022
19:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
Headingley Stadium, Leeds
Attendance: 5,471[26]
Referee: Ben Casty (France)
Touch judges: Rochelle Tamarua (New Zealand), Aaron Moore (England)
Player of the Match: Jodie Cunningham (England)
More information England, Position ...

Group B

All six of the Group B fixtures were played at the York Community Stadium in York.[13]

More information Pos, Pld ...
Source: rlwc2021

More information New Zealand, 46–0 ...
2 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,091[26]
Referee: Ben Thaler (England)
Touch judges: Neil Horton (England), Liam Rush (England)
Player of the Match: Apii Nicholls-Pualau (New Zealand)
More information New Zealand, Position ...

More information Australia, 74–0 ...
2 November 2022
19:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,091[26]
Referee: Michael Smaill (England)
Touch judges: Warren Turley (England), Wyatt Raymond (Australia)
Player of the Match: Sam Bremner (Australia)
More information Australia, Position ...

More information New Zealand, 34–4 ...
6 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,006[26]
Referee: Michael Smaill (England)
Touch judges: James Vella (England), Liam Rush (England)
Player of the Match: Raecene McGregor (New Zealand)
More information New Zealand, Position ...

More information Australia, 92–0 ...
6 November 2022
19:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,006[26]
Referee: Rochelle Tamarua (New Zealand)
Touch judges: Neil Horton (England), Aaron Moore (England)
Player of the Match: Tarryn Aiken (Australia)
More information Australia, Position ...

More information France, 18–26 ...
10 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,370[26]
Referee: Ben Thaler (England)
Touch judges: Belinda Sharpe (Australia), Marcus Griffiths (England)
More information France, Position ...

More information Australia, 10–8 ...
10 November 2022
19:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 3,370[26]
Referee: Todd Smith (Australia)
Touch judges: Paki Parkinson (New Zealand), Robert Hicks (England)

Knockout stage

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
14 November – York
 
 
 Australia 82
 
19 November – Manchester
 
 Papua New Guinea 0
 
 Australia 54
 
14 November – York
 
 New Zealand 4
 
 England 6
 
 
 New Zealand 20
 

Semi-finals

The semi-finals were played as a double-header at the York Community Stadium, York on 14 November 2022.[13]

More information Australia, 82–0 ...
14 November 2022
17:00 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 7,139[26]
Referee: Belinda Sharpe (Australia)
Touch judges: Rochelle Tamarua (New Zealand), Marcus Griffiths (England
More information Australia, Position ...

More information England, 6–20 ...
14 November 2022
19:30 GMT (UTC±00:00)
York Community Stadium, York
Attendance: 7,139[26]
Referee: Kasey Badger (Australia)
Touch judges: Geoffrey Poumes (France), Robert Hicks (England)
Player of the Match: Mele Hufanga (New Zealand)
More information England, Position ...

Final

The final was played at Old Trafford, Manchester on 19 November 2022 as a double-header with the final of the men's tournament.[13]

More information Australia, 54–4 ...
19 November 2022
13:15 GMT (UTC±00:00)
Old Trafford, Manchester
Attendance: 67,502
Referee: Belinda Sharpe (Australia)
Touch judges: Wyatt Raymond (Australia), Darian Furner (Australia)

Team of the Tournament

Between the Semi-finals and final the RLWC2021 organisers announced the team of the tournament.[27]

More information #, Position ...

See also


Notes and references

Notes

  1. Venue of the final in double-header with the Men's final
  2. Smaill is a New Zealander who is currently based in England.[19]
  3. Vella is an Australian who is currently based in England.[20]
  4. Match was a double header with the men's game between England and Papua New Guinea
  5. Match was a double header with the men's game between New Zealand and Fiji

References

  1. "WRLWC Schedule". rlwc2021.com.
  2. Darbyshire, Drew (21 October 2019). "Women and wheelchair players to receive equal pay to men at 2021 World Cup". Love Rugby League. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  3. Ed, Dixon (2 July 2020). "2021 Rugby League World Cup and IRL team up on broadcast production – SportsPro Media". www.sportspromedia.com. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  4. "Nations confirmed for Women's Rugby League World Cup 2021". RLIF. 18 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  5. "Rugby League World Cup 2021: Official women's squads". NRL. 19 Sep 2022. Retrieved 19 Sep 2022.
  6. Davidson, Neil (9 Sep 2022). "Canadian women prepare for second appearance at Rugby League World Cup". RMO Today.com. Retrieved 19 Sep 2022.
  7. "NRLW stars headline Jillaroos World Cup squad". NRL. 3 Oct 2022. Retrieved 3 Oct 2022.
  8. Anderson, Talei (23 Jul 2020). "Cook Islands women brace for Rugby League World Cup". Radio New Zealand. Retrieved 21 Oct 2022.
  9. "Cook Islands Moana named for Rugby League World Cup". Cook Islands News. 6 Oct 2022. Retrieved 21 Oct 2022.
  10. "Rugby League World Cup 2021 draw: England drawn with Samoa, France and Greece". BBC Sport. 16 January 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
  11. "World Cup format revised to give women longer break between fixtures". RL News. 28 October 2019. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  12. "England start against Samoa at World Cup". BBC Sport. 21 July 2020. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  13. Gordon, James (19 November 2021). "List of Rugby League World Cup 2021 fixtures – date-by-date by tournament". LoveRugbyLeague. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  14. "Rugby League World Cup 2021 | Schedule". www.rlwc2021.com. 21 July 2020. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  15. "Full list of host venues revealed". Stadia Magazine. 30 January 2019. Retrieved 16 October 2019.
  16. "Kangaroos to be united in Manchester: World Cup team bases announced". National Rugby League. 10 June 2020. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
  17. "Rugby League World Cup 2021 announces tournament Match Officials". Rugby League World Cup. 5 October 2022. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
  18. "James Vella". rugby-league.com. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  19. "Valkyrie to host Orchids in World Cup warm-up". York RLFC. 18 October 2022. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
  20. "Ireland Women to face Canada Ravens in October". Rugby League Ireland. 3 August 2022. Retrieved 4 August 2022.
  21. Smith, Pater (20 November 2022). "Rugby League World Cup: full list of RLWC2021 results, plus scorers and crowds". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  22. "World Cup Teams of the Tournament announced". NRL. 16 Nov 2022. Retrieved 19 Nov 2022.

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