Rugby World Cup Begins in Paris

The Rugby World Cup 2023 begins in Paris today, but you’d be hard pressed to know it. The tournament appears invisible in a city preparing for the 2024 Olympics.

Walking down the iconic Champs-Élysées – which has a fair incline that is not apparent when watching the Tour de France cyclists race along it at 50mph – the Rugby World Cup doesn’t appear to exist. bc approached several people and asked if they knew the World Cup was starting today, sadly none did.

Why are the banners on the Champs-Élysées lampposts promoting Paris’s IT week not the World Cup?

The only obvious indication of the tournament’s presence in the city is the doubling of hotel and hostel prices and bars and restaurants increasing their prices for game day.

IMG_0033

There is a Rugby Village at the Place de la Concorde but it doesn’t open until this afternoon  (and only on select days afterwards) so there really is nowhere for visiting or local or new fans to gather and meet up.

A big part of rugby is the social camaraderie between fans, yet the tournament organisers seem to have done nothing to build awareness and interest in the game among new fans . It feels like a missed opportunity, especially as the recent women’s football World Cup showed how a country can be transformed by a tournament.

T10 Super Typhoon Saola Batters Hong Kong

Surely influenced by the Hello Hong Kong marketing campaign, Super Typhoon Saola saw the HK Observatory raise the T10 storm signal for just the 16th time in over 100 years as Saola’s wind speeds topped 220km/h (135 mph).

Super Typhoon Saola

IMG_9173

IMG_9189

IMG_9443

IMG_9398

Click on any photo to see the full gallery of images.

IMG_9385

IMG_9279

IMG_9235

IMG_9334

IMG_9345

IMG_9353

Hong Kong 0 Myanmar 0

As the police watched on videoing fans to ensure patriotic complaiance over 12,000 were on hand at the Hong Kong Stadium for Hong Kong‘s first home game in front of HongKongers since 2019.

Poor finishing denied the home team and its supporters a chance to really celebrate as coach Jorn Andersen’s new look team spurned chance after chance.

“I want to be positive, we played a really good game,” Andersen said. “The first half was excellent. We attacked a lot, we created a lot, we defended high, we won the ball high and were creating chances. But today we were not so lucky and that’s why I’m not so happy today. We couldn’t make the goal that the Hong Kong fans wanted to see today.”

“We got very big support from the spectators. They pushed us to the front and we tried our best, but at the end we couldn’t make that first goal to make everyone happy. I’m sorry for that,” Andersen added.

In reality, while a win would have been nice the score was irrelevant; that fans could finally watch their team in person meant everyone was a winner.

image: HKFA

Hong Kong Men’s Sevens Squad Rugby World Cup Sevens 2022 Announced

The Hong Kong men’s sevens squad for the Rugby World Cup 7s in South Africa (9-11 September) has been announced by Hong Kong Rugby.

Hong Kong will kick off in the 16-team pre-round competition against Uruguay with the winner facing tournament favourites and new World Sevens Series champions, Australia.

Hong Kong head coach Paul John has named an experienced squad and commented that “We want them to enjoy the experience – this comes around every four years – and we earned the right to be here and this is a reward for that”

Hong Kong men will be making their eighth appearance sevens Rugby World Cup, two of which were hosted in Hong Kong (1997 and 2005).

All matches are streaming on the World Rugby website

Rugby World Cup Sevens 2022 Captains

Hong Kong Men’s Rugby World Cup Sevens Squad
  • Russ WEBB (co-captain)
  • Seb BRIEN (co-captain)
  • Salom YIU Kam-shing
  • Michael COVERDALE
  • Cado LEE Ka-to
  • Alessandro NARDONI
  • Hugo STILES
  • Harry SAYERS
  • Max DENMARK
  • Liam DOHERTY
  • Pierce MACKINLAY-WEST
  • Callum MCCULLOUGH
  • James CHRISTIE

Photo credit: Mike Lee – KLC fotos for World Rugby
Additional reporting: RugbyAsia247

"}; -->