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Rugby World Cup 2023: today's match, full schedule and group standings

Gareth Davies - Rugby World Cup 2023: Today’s matches, full schedule and group standings
Gareth Davies goes over to score Wales’s first try in what turned out to be an emphatic win over Australia - Getty Images/Paul Harding

Wales became the first Rugby World Cup team to qualify for the quarter-finals on Sunday while virtually shutting the door on Australia’s hopes.

The far more experienced Welsh won by a record 40-6 by expertly executing a low-risk, disciplined gameplan and punishing Australian mistakes.

Meanwhile, Scotland remained in contention for a quarter-final place with a bonus-point 45-17 win over Tonga on Sunday. The win saw the Scots advance its hopes in a pool shaded by the seismic Ireland-South Africa showdown, with most assuming the Irish and Boks will be the teams to progress.

On Saturday, Steve Borthwick’s triple-playmaker plan worked well against Chile as England delivered their best display of the tournament so far. In a match that sometimes looked like a training run, Owen Farrell, George Ford and Marcus Smith showed they can share the field and deliver.

What are the next matches?

  • Thursday, Sept 28 – Japan v Samoa, Stade de Toulouse, 8pm - ITV4

  • Friday, Sept 29 – New Zealand v Italy, OL Stadium, 8pm - ITV1

How do I watch the Rugby World Cup on TV?

ITV have the exclusive broadcast rights in the UK. The channel for each match is listed below (the vast majority are on ITV1). You can read our guide to the 12 best pundits and commentators working at the tournament.

The radio commentary of every match is available only on the BBC, across Radio 5 Live, 5 Sports Extra and the BBC Sounds service.

In the US, the tournament is being shown on NBC Sports. In South Africa the TV coverage is on SuperSport.

Rugby World Cup 2023 full results, fixtures and schedule

All matches on ITV1 unless specified

Pool matches

Quarter-finals

  • Saturday, Oct 14 Winner Pool C v Runner-up Pool D, Stade de Marseille, 4pm

  • Saturday, Oct 14 Winner Pool B v Runner-up Pool A, Stade de France, 8pm

  • Sunday, Oct 15 Winner Pool D v Runner-up Pool C, Stade de Marseille, 4pm

  • Sunday, Oct 15 Winner Pool A v Runner-up Pool B, Stade de France, 8pm

Semi-finals

  • Friday, Oct 20 Winner QF 1 v Winner QF 2, Stade de France, 8pm

  • Saturday, Oct 21 Winner QF 3 v Winner QF 4, Stade de France, 8pm

Bronze medal match

  • Friday, Oct 27 Runner-up SF 1 v Runner-up SF 2, Stade de France, 8pm

Final

Who is in what pool?

Where is the Rugby World Cup taking place?

The 2023 Rugby World Cup is being played in France across nine stadiums in nine cities. The final will be played at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis (Paris).

  • Stade de France (capacity 80,698)Saint-Denis, Paris

  • Stade de Marseille  (67,394) – Marseille

  • OL Stadium (59,186) – Lyon

  • Stade Pierre-Mauroy (50,186) – Lille

  • Stade de Bordeaux (42,115) – Bordeaux

  • Stade Geoffroy-Guichard (41,965)Saint-Étienne

  • Stade de Nice (35,624)Nice

  • Stade de la Beaujoire (35,322) – Nantes

  • Stade de Toulouse (33,150)Toulouse

Who is playing?

A total of 20 teams qualified for the Rugby World Cup. These teams were split into four pools of five, with each pool getting one team from five ‘bands’.

Band one featured the four highest-ranked teams from when the draw for the tournament was made back in 2019 (South Africa, New Zealand, England, Wales). Band two comprised the next four highest-ranked teams (Ireland, Australia, France, Japan) and band three the four after that (Scotland, Argentina, Fiji, Italy).

Each side in the first three bands qualified automatically for the tournament owing to their world ranking, while the further two bands comprised the sides who had made it into the tournament via qualifying (Samoa, Georgia, Uruguay, Tonga, Namibia, Romania, Chile, Portugal).

South Africa are the defending champions. They beat England in the final in 2019.

England’s World Cup squad

Forwards (19)

Ollie Chessum (Leicester Tigers)
Dan Cole (Leicester Tigers)***
Tom Curry (Sale Sharks)*
Theo Dan (Saracens)
Ben Earl (Saracens)
Ellis Genge (Bristol Bears)*
Jamie George (Saracens)**
Maro Itoje (Saracens)*
Courtney Lawes (Northampton Saints)***
Lewis Ludlam (Northampton Saints)*
Joe Marler (Harlequins)**
George Martin (Leicester Tigers)
David Ribbans (Toulon)
Bevan Rodd (Sale Sharks)
Kyle Sinckler (Bristol Bears)*
Will Stuart (Bath Rugby)
Billy Vunipola (Saracens) **
Jack Walker (Harlequins)
Jack Willis (Toulouse)

Backs (14)

Henry Arundell (Racing 92)
Danny Care (Harlequins)*
Elliot Daly (Saracens)*
Owen Farrell (Saracens)**
George Ford (Sale Sharks)**
Ollie Lawrence (Bath Rugby)
Max Malins (Bristol Bears)
Joe Marchant (Stade Francais)
Alex Mitchell (Northampton Saints)
Marcus Smith (Harlequins)
Freddie Steward (Leicester Tigers)
Manu Tuilagi (Sale Sharks)**
Jonny May (Gloucester)**
Ben Youngs (Leicester Tigers)***

*denotes number of Rugby World Cup tournaments played

Recommended

Will Greenwood's guide to the England squad

Read more

Best of the latest odds

  • Ireland: 31/10

  • South Africa: 16/5

  • France: 15/4

  • New Zealand: 9/2

  • England: 12/1

  • Wales: 25/1

  • Argentina: 40/1

  • Fiji: 50/1

  • Scotland: 100/1

  • Australia: 750/1

Having a punt? First take a look at these Rugby World Cup free bets and betting offers.

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