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Rugby League Pacific Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Oceania Cup
Current season or competition:
2024 Rugby League Pacific Championships
SportRugby league
Instituted2019
Inaugural season2019
Number of teams7
RegionOceania (APRL)
Holders New Zealand (2023)
Most titles Australia
 New Zealand (1 title)
Broadcast partnerNine Network
Fox League
Sky Sport
Related competitionPacific Cup

The Rugby League Pacific Championship is a rugby league tournament for national teams in Oceania. Its inaugural tournament was in 2019.

History

[edit]

The tournament was created in 2019 as the Oceania Cup with a two tiered format.[1] The top tier (cup) consisted of Australia, New Zealand and Tonga and the second tier (shield) consisted of Fiji, Samoa and Papua New Guinea. Australia won the Cup in the inaugural season while Fiji won the shield and got promoted for the 2020 competition.

For the 2020 edition, Cook Islands were scheduled to take Fiji's place in the shield.[2] No team was relegated from the cup as Australia were going to go on a tour of England that year. The competition was scheduled to begin in June and conclude in November, but was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[3]

The tournament returned in 2023, following the pandemic and postponed 2021 Rugby League World Cup, under the name Pacific Championships. The tournament came as part of a $7 million investment by the NRL and Australian Government to develop rugby league in the surrounding countries,[4][5] in addition to forming part of the International Rugby League new seven year international calendar.[6]

2024 saw the introduction of the women's competition.[7][8] Note women's games were held in 2023, but as a series of friendlies and in no structured competition.[6] The 2024 Women's Bowl will also be the Asia-Pacific qualification tournament for the 2026 Women's Rugby League World Cup.[9][10]

Format

[edit]

The Pacific Rugby League Championship is a competition for men's national teams of the seven full member of International Rugby League (IRL) located in Oceania:

The tournament currently is divided into two divisions of three teams based on IRL rankings, while the seventh team tours a European Rugby League nation.

Each team plays three matches in a single round robin with the top two advancing to the division final.


The women's competition, introduced in 2024, followed a very similar format and similarly is for women's national teams of the Oceanian IRL full members:

Like the men's, the tournament is divided into two divisions. Though, unlike the men's, the lower tier contains four teams as no regular touring schedule has been planned for the women's sides.

Men's Tournaments

[edit]
Cup Shield/Bowl Team on Tour
Year Champions Runners-up Third place Year Champions Runners-up Third place
AustraliaNew Zealand
2019

Australia

New Zealand

Tonga
AustraliaNew Zealand
2019

Fiji

Samoa

Papua New Guinea
None[b]
AustraliaNew Zealand
2020[c]
 New Zealand,  Tonga, and  Fiji AustraliaNew Zealand
2020
 Samoa,  Papua New Guinea, and  Cook Islands Australia Kangaroo tour of England
AustraliaNew Zealand
2023

New Zealand

Australia

Samoa
Papua New Guinea
2023

Papua New Guinea

Fiji

Cook Islands
Tonga Tonga tour of England
AustraliaNew Zealand
2024
 Australia,  New Zealand, and  Tonga Fiji
2024
 Cook Islands,  Fiji, and  Papua New Guinea Samoa Samoa tour of England[d]

Results by team

[edit]
Team / Year 2019 2023
 Australia 1st 2nd
 Cook Islands 6th
 Fiji 4th 5th
 New Zealand 2nd 1st
 Papua New Guinea 6th 4th
 Samoa 5th 3rd
 Tonga 3rd Tour

Women's Tournaments

[edit]
Cup Bowl
Year Champions Runners-up Third place Year Champions Runners-up Third place Fourth place
AustraliaNew ZealandPapua New Guinea
2024
 Australia,  New Zealand, and  Papua New Guinea Fiji
2024
 Cook Islands,  Fiji,  Samoa, and  Tonga

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The Cook Islands did not participate in the inaugural 2019 edition
  2. ^ New Zealand and Papua New Guinea hosted a tour by Great Britain in which Tonga also played, however all teams still participated in the 2019 Oceania Cup.
  3. ^ Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  4. ^ It was expected that Samoa would also play in the Pacific Championships having reduced the length of their tour from three games to two.[11][12] However, following an announcement from New Zealand Rugby League regarding the tournament, Samoa was omitted from the fixture list.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "RLIF Oceania Cup confirmed for 2019". rlif.com. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  2. ^ "Oceania Cup is back with three cracking Double Headers". Asia Pacific Rugby League Confederation. 2020-02-25. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  3. ^ "Oceania Cup cancelled for 2020". Asia Pacific Rugby League Confederation. 2020-09-04. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  4. ^ "Pacific Rugby League Championships". Prime Minister of Australia. 16 Aug 2023. Retrieved 13 Aug 2024.
  5. ^ Evans, Kyle (18 Aug 2023). "Pacific State of Origin: PNG and Fiji to co-host to new international rugby league tournament". ABC. Retrieved 13 Aug 2024.
  6. ^ a b https://www.intrl.sport/news/australia-new-zealand-png-to-host-2023-pacific-championships/ [bare URL]
  7. ^ a b "2024 rugby league Pacific Championships schedule announced with three Tests in Aotearoa". NZRL. 23 Aug 2024. Retrieved 23 Aug 2024.
  8. ^ https://www.intrl.sport/article/226/kiwis-to-host-pacific-championships-fixtures [bare URL]
  9. ^ "Rugby League World Cup 2026 women's qualifying process announced". Rugby League International Federation.
  10. ^ "2026 Rugby League World Cup: Women's qualification process announced, with four nations' places already secured". LoveRugbyLeague. December 15, 2023.
  11. ^ "Venues revealed for England-Samoa rugby league Test series". Love Rugby League. June 13, 2024.
  12. ^ McHugh, Robert (June 13, 2024). "Revealed: England set to confirm end-of-season opponents for historic Test Series".