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Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup

Wheelchair Rugby League competition

Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup

Summary

Wheelchair Rugby League competition

FieldValue
current_season2026 Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup
seasontagUpcoming tournament
founded2008
countrytagRegion
countryInternational
gov_bodyIRL
championEngland (2nd Title)
season2021
most_champsEngland, France
count2
related_comps
  • 2008
  • 2013
  • 2017
  • 2021
  • 2025
  • 2026
  • 2030 The Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup is an international wheelchair rugby league tournament contested by the top national teams. The tournament was first held in Australia as part of the 2008 Festival of World Cups and was upgraded to a centrepiece event in 2021.

History

The inaugural tournament took place as part of the 2008 Festival of World Cups and was held in Sydney, Australia. The four teams participating were Australia, England, France and a Barbarians V Pacific Islands team. The fourth team were a replacement for New Zealand who withdrew before the start of the competition. England were the first winners, defeating hosts Australia 44–12 in the final.

In 2013 the tournament was held in Gillingham, England. The six teams that took part were Australia, England, France, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. France won the competition, defeating England 42–40 in the final. Wales won 16–12 against Australia in the third-place play-off and Ireland defeated Scotland 36–14 to finish fifth.

France hosted the 2017 tournament and won 38–34 in the final against England to retain the title. Seven teams took part in the tournament with the semi-finalists from 2013 placed in Group A and Italy, Spain and Scotland in Group B. Australia, who had intended to host the tournament, finished third after defeating newcomers Italy 58–45. Spain, who were also making their first appearance at the world cup, lost 45–66 to Wales in the fifth-place play-off match.

The 2021 tournament (played in 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic) saw the United States compete at the world cup for the first time. It was the first time that the wheelchair tournament was played simultaneously with the men's and women's competitions. The hosts England defeated France 28–24 in the final in front of a wheelchair rugby league world record crowd of 4,526 at Manchester Central.

Format

The tournament has been played using different formats depending on the number of teams participating. In 2013 the six teams were divided into two groups. Each team played the two teams in their group and one team from the other group. This determined the qualifiers for the semi-finals which were followed by the play-off matches and final. In 2017 the seven teams were also divided into two groups, but this time Group A contained the four top ranked teams and Group B was made up of the lower ranked teams. The top two from Group A qualified for the semi-finals and were joined by the winners of play-offs between the top two Group B teams and the remaining Group A sides.

Trophy

2022

In November 2019 a new trophy for the wheelchair tournament was unveiled. It shares a similar overall appearance to the men's and women's trophies and features imagery of wheelchair athletes in action.

Results

Ed.YearWinnerScoreRunner-upNo. of teams12345
AUS 2008ENG England44–12AUS Australia4
ENG 2013FRA France42–40ENG England6
FRA 2017FRA France (2)38–34ENG England7
ENG 2022ENG England (2)28–24FRA France8
AUS 2026TBATBATBA8

Participating teams

TeamAUS
2008ENG
2013FRA
2017ENG
2022AUS
2026NOR NorwayRefs
2nd4th3rdSFQ
1st2nd2nd1stQ
3rd1st1st2ndQ
5thGQ
4th
WQ
W
6th7thGQ
6thG
GQ
3rd5thSFQ
url=http://www.rlef.eu.com/results.php?s=2008title=Results: 2008publisher=RLEFurl-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090724132857/http://www.rlef.eu.com/results.php?s=2008archive-date=24 July 2009}}url=https://www.ffr13.fr/classement-final-coupe-du-monde-les-10-meilleurs-joueurs/title=Classement Final Coupe du Monde – Les 10 meilleurs joueurstrans-title=World Cup Final Standings – Top 10 Playerslanguage=frwebsite=FFRXIIIdate=29 July 2017access-date=7 March 2024}}url=https://www.rlwc2021.com/report/68title=France Wheelchair 24 – 28 England Wheelchairwebsite=RLWC2021access-date=1 December 2022archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230314144936/https://www.rlwc2021.com/report/68archive-date=14 March 2023}}

;Legend

  • = Champions
  • = Runners-up
  • or = Third place or semi-finalist
  • = Fourth place
  • G = Group stage
  • W = nation invited but withdrew beforehand
  • – = nation did not enter competition.
  • = Hosts
  • Q = Qualified/Invited for upcoming tournament

Notes

References

References

  1. (17 November 2008). "England Wheelchair Rugby League win the World Cup". Sport Focus.
  2. (13 October 2022). "Story of the 2008 World Cup".
  3. (9 November 2008). "Wheelchair Rugby League tournament".
  4. "wheelchair".
  5. (14 July 2014). "Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup final: England 40-42 France". BBC Sport.
  6. "Match Report: Wheelchair World Cup Final".
  7. (11 October 2022). "Story of the 2013 World Cup".
  8. "Wheelchair World Cup".
  9. "Match Report: 2013 Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup Third-Place Play-Off".
  10. (28 July 2017). "Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup: England lose to France in final".
  11. "Match Report (France v Wales 24 July 2017)".
  12. "2017 WHEELCHAIR RUGBY LEAGUE WORLD CUP".
  13. (10 October 2022). "Story of the 2017 World Cup".
  14. "Match Report: 2017 Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup Fifth-Place Play-Off".
  15. (28 February 2022). "Ireland to replace Norway in Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup".
  16. (25 November 2019). "New Rugby League Wheelchair World Cup Trophy Revealed".
  17. (18 November 2022). "Wheelchair Rugby League World Cup final: Tom Halliwell late try secures trophy for England". BBC Sport.
  18. "2013 WHEELCHAIR RUGBY LEAGUE WORLD CUP".
  19. "Wheelchair tournament".
  20. "Rugby League World Cup 2021: Four reasons to follow the Wheelchair Rugby League tournament".
  21. "Results: 2008". RLEF.
  22. (29 July 2017). "Classement Final Coupe du Monde – Les 10 meilleurs joueurs".
  23. "France Wheelchair 24 – 28 England Wheelchair".
  24. "Standings".
  25. (15 April 2025). "Six countries have places confirmed for Wheelchair World Cup".
  26. (8 September 2025). "Ireland, Scotland secure remaining IRL Wheelchair RLWC26 berths".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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