World Rugby Rankings

Top 30 as of 22 July 2024[1]
Rank Change* Team Points
1 Steady  South Africa 093.11
2 Steady  Ireland 092.12
3 Steady  New Zealand 090.37
4 Steady  France 086.96
5 Steady  England 085.40
6 Steady  Scotland 082.82
7 Steady  Argentina 081.64
8 Steady  Italy 079.98
9 Steady  Australia 078.96
10 Steady  Fiji 077.44
11 Steady  Wales 076.04
12 Steady  Georgia 074.10
13 Steady  Samoa 073.65
14 Steady  Japan 071.63
15 Steady  Portugal 070.61
16 Steady  Tonga 068.66
17 Steady  Uruguay 067.39
18 Increase1  Spain 066.29
19 Decrease1  United States 066.01
20 Steady  Romania 062.62
21 Steady  Canada 061.87
22 Steady  Chile 061.39
23 Increase1  Hong Kong 060.40
24 Decrease1  Namibia 060.23
25 Steady  Russia 058.06
26 Steady   Switzerland 057.44
27 Steady  Netherlands 057.29
28 Steady  Belgium 056.46
29 Steady  Brazil 054.49
30 Steady  Zimbabwe 053.33
* Change from the previous week

The World Rugby Rankings is a ranking system for national teams in rugby union, managed by World Rugby, the sport's governing body. There are separate men's and women's rankings. The teams of World Rugby's member nations are ranked based on their game results, with the most successful teams being ranked highest. A point system is used, with points being awarded on the basis of the results of World Rugby-recognized international matches. Rankings are based on the team's performance, with more recent results and more significant matches being more heavily weighted to help reflect the current competitive state of a team. The men's ranking system was introduced the month before the 2003 Rugby World Cup, with the first new rankings issued on 8 September 2003, when they were called the "IRB Rankings".[2]

  1. ^ "Men's World Rankings". World Rugby. Retrieved 22 July 2024.
  2. ^ "England top IRB rankings, Ireland third". Times. 2003-09-09. Retrieved 2008-11-23.

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