List of international rugby union teams

The following is a list of international rugby union teams:

Multinational teams

Combination sides

  • The British and Irish Lions, perhaps the most famous multi-national rugby team.
  • Established in 1950, East Africa has conducted seven tours between 1954 and 1982 and has played against incoming international, representative and club touring sides including twice against the British Lions; perhaps the only example of representative (as opposed to invitational) multinational teams playing against each other. They have also played against the Barbarians.
  • A similar development in 2004 has been of a Pacific Islanders XV.
  • The South American Jaguars were a combination team who played South Africa during the early 1980s.
  • The African Leopards are a development side drawn from across Africa, they have played representational rugby union against South African students.
  • The Arabian Gulf rugby union team combined various teams from Arab countries in the Persian Gulf and competed in World Cup qualification. The Arabian Gulf Rugby Union has now been dismantled and responsibility for the game devolved to each of the member nations, although the team may be revived in the future.
  • There is also a West Indies side, which first toured when the Caribbean Rugby Union sent a team (managed by Gavin Clark) to tour England in 1976. Their last tour was also to England in October and November 2000.
  • The Commonwealth of Independent States also played during the early 1990s.
  • World XV sides have also been fielded nine times between 1977 and 2014.

Invitation sides

Other invitational sides past and present include:

  • President's Overseas XV, selected for the hundredth anniversary of the RFU
  • Overseas Unions rugby union team
  • Rest of the World XV
  • Four Home Unions XV
  • Rest of Europe XV
  • In the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami a Northern hemisphere side took on a Southern hemisphere side in the IRB Rugby Aid Match:
    • Northern Hemisphere XV
    • Southern Hemisphere XV

National teams – tier classification

The sport's international governing body, World Rugby (formerly the International Rugby Board), organises its member unions into three tiers.[1] All Tier 1 and 2 nations have competed in the Rugby World Cup (RWC).

Tier 1

NationRank range
(best–worst)
Competition
 Argentina 3–12 Rugby Championship
 Australia 2–7 Rugby Championship
 England 1–8 Six Nations
 France 2–10 Six Nations
 Ireland 1–9 Six Nations
 Italy 8–15 Six Nations
 Japan 6-20 none
 New Zealand 1–3 Rugby Championship
 Scotland 5–12 Six Nations
 South Africa 1–7 Rugby Championship
 Wales 1–10 Six Nations

Tier 2

European
countries
North-South American
countries
African
countries
Oceanian
countries
 Georgia
 Portugal
 Romania
 Russia
 Spain
 Canada[2]
 United States[2]
 Uruguay[3]
 Namibia Fiji
 Samoa
 Tonga

Tier 3

Development One

European
countries
North-South American
countries
African
countries
Asian
countries
 Belgium
 Germany
 Brazil[3]
 Chile[3]
 Ivory Coast
 Kenya
 Zimbabwe
 Hong Kong
 Malaysia
 South Korea

Development Two

European
countries
North-South American
countries
African
countries
Asian
countries
Oceanian
countries
 Andorra
 Armenia
 Austria
 Azerbaijan
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Bulgaria
 Croatia
 Czech Republic
 Denmark
 Finland
 Greece
 Hungary
 Israel
 Latvia
 Lithuania
 Luxembourg
 Malta
 Montenegro
 Moldova
 Monaco
 Netherlands
 Norway
 Poland
 Serbia
 Slovenia
 Sweden
  Switzerland
 Ukraine
 Bahamas[2]
 Barbados[2]
 Bermuda[2]
 British Virgin Islands[2]
 Cayman Islands[2]
 Colombia[3]
 Costa Rica[3]
 Curaçao[2]
 Dominican Republic[2]
 Ecuador[3]
 El Salvador[3]
 Guatemala[3]
 Guyana[2]
 Honduras[3]
 Jamaica[2]
 Martinique[2]
 Mexico[2]
 Nicaragua[3]
 Panama[3]
 Paraguay[3]
 Peru[3]
 Saint Lucia[2]
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines[2]
 Trinidad and Tobago[2]
 Turks and Caicos Islands[2]
 Venezuela[3]
 Botswana
 Burundi
 Cameroon
 Egypt
 Eswatini
 Ghana
 Madagascar
 Mali
 Mauritania
 Mauritius
 Morocco
 Nigeria
 Rwanda
 Senegal
 Tanzania
 Togo
 Tunisia
 Uganda
 Zambia
 Bahrain
 Cambodia
 China
 Chinese Taipei
 Guam
 India
 Indonesia
 Kazakhstan
 Kyrgyzstan
 Laos
 Lebanon
 Mongolia
 Pakistan
 Philippines
 Qatar
 Singapore
 Sri Lanka
 Thailand
 United Arab Emirates
 Uzbekistan
 American Samoa
 Cook Islands
 Niue
 Papua New Guinea
 Solomon Islands
 Tahiti
 Vanuatu

National teams – band classification

Starting in 2008, in addition to the existing tier system, the IRB introduced a four-band system of classification in which unions and, by extension, teams are classified based on "their development status and record on the international stage". The new structure is:[4]

High performance

All countries previously in Tiers 1 and 2.

Development One

These are countries earmarked for increased developmental funding and include

Targeted

Again, the IRB did not release a list of unions in this category, but named several as being in this band:

Developmental

This is the location for all remaining unions.

Other teams

Defunct national sides

Various national sides have ceased to exist for political reasons. In the case of the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, there is more than one successor team. In the case of Catalonia, the Spanish Civil War and Franco's crackdown put an end to it, and in the case of East and West Germany, reunification led to their amalgamation into a single German side.

* For more information on these teams see above.

Women's rugby

Defunct women's national sides

Invitation sides

Notes and references

  1. "IRB Strategic Plan" (PDF). International Rugby Board. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF 0.3 MB) on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  2. Rugby Americas North Member
  3. Sudamérica Rugby Member
  4. "IRB announces increased funding for the game" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 25 January 2008. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
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