· 17 of the 20 preliminary squads feature foreign-born players, with Samoa having over half (61%) of their players being born outside the country
· The United States and Italy have the most nationalities in their teams (9), followed by Ireland (8).
· New Zealand has the highest number of people playing in the World Cup, with a total of 91 New Zealanders (Kiwis) taking part. This is followed by South Africa and England
TAIPEI, Sept. 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- New research, from StubHub, has analysed the preliminary squads for the Rugby World Cup 2019 to reveal which teams have the most players from other countries and, in turn, are the most multicultural.
Rugby union is one of the most multicultural international sports, with many players choosing to play for countries other than that which they were born in, but which teams boast the most players from other countries?
*The Teams *
While 17 out of the 20 teams look set to feature foreign-born players, none boast as many as Samoa, with more than half (61%) of their players being born outside of the country, which makes sense when you consider the islands are home to less than 200,000 people!
*The 5 Squads With The Most Nationalities *
1-2.
United States and Italy - 9
3.
Ireland - 8
4.
Scotland - 7
5.
Japan - 5
*The 5 Squads With The Highest % Of Foreign-Born Players*
1. Samoa - 61%
2. Scotland - 48%
3. Tonga - 45%
4. Japan - 45%
5. United States - 42%
*The 5 Squads With The Highest % Of Native Players *
1. Argentina - 100%
2. Russia - 100%
3. Uruguay - 100%
4. Georgia - 98%
5. South Africa - 97%
*Team*
*Total Players*
*No. of Nationalities*
*Native Players*
*Native Players (%)*
*Foreign-Born Players*
*Foreign-Born Players (%)*
Samoa
33
3
13
39%
20
61%
Tonga
31
3
16
52%
15
48%
Scotland
44
7
23
52%
21
48%
Japan
31
6
17
55%
14
45%
United States
50
9
29
58%
21
42%
Australia
34
6
22
65%
12
35%
Wales
42
4
31
74%
11
26%
Ireland
44
8
33
75%
11
25%
Italy
44
9
33
75%
11
25%
England
38
6
29
76%
9
24%
France
37
6
31
84%
6
16%
Canada
31
4
27
87%
4
13%
New Zealand
39
4
34
87%
5
13%
Fiji
42
3
38
90%
4
10%
Namibia
50
2
46
92%
4
8%
South Africa
39
2
38
97%
1
3%
Georgia
43
2
42
98%
1
2%
Argentina
46
1
46
100%
0%
Russia
36
1
36
100%
0%
Uruguay
34
1
34
100%
0%
*Overall*
*788*
*30*
*618*
*78%*
*170*
*22%*
*World Cup Nationalities*
Looking at the latest announced squads by each team heading to the World Cup, we see that just over one in five players (22%) at the Rugby World Cup will have been born in a country/region other than the one that they'll be representing.
While 20 nations/regions will be competing at the tournament, there'll be players from 30 different nations/regions represented, including the likes of Germany, Cameroon, Algeria and Spain.
Overall there are 788 players in the preliminary squads, with 78% of these native (618) and 22% (170) foreign-born players.
*Nation/Region*
*Number of Players In The World Cup *
New Zealand
91
South Africa
62
England
54
Argentina
48
Namibia
46
Fiji
45
Georgia
42
Ireland
40
Russia
37
Australia
36
Uruguay
34
Italy
33
France
32
United States
32
Wales
31
Canada
28
Tonga
27
Scotland
23
Japan
17
Samoa
16
American Samoa
2
Hong Kong
2
New Caledonia
2
Zimbabwe
2
Algeria
1
Cameroon
1
Germany
1
Guinea
1
Papua New Guinea
1
Spain
1
*The Rules *
World Rugby's eligibility rules simply state that a player can play for a country that either:
· They were born in
· They have a parent or grandparent
· They have lived in for over three years (although this is set to be extended to five years from 2021)
However, certain countries do impose their own eligibility rules on top of this. For example, France requires players to hold French nationality, while Australian players based overseas have to have already played seven seasons in Australia and 60 games for the national team to be eligible.
The rules have often caused controversy, with Romania initially qualifying for the World Cup, before being disqualified for fielding ineligible players.
*NOTES TO EDITOR*
*Methodology & Sources:*
Squad lists and the majority of nationality data was sourced from Wikipedia.
For the full list of data and other sources used, click here.
The most recently available squads as of July 31st were used, which were as follows:
· Argentina - 46-man training squad
· Australia - 34-man Rugby Championship squad
· Canada - 31-man training squad
· England - 38-man training squad
· Fiji - 42-man Pacific Nations Cup squad
· France - 37-man training squad
· Georgia - 43-man training squad
· Ireland - 44-man training squad
· Italy - 44-man training squad
· Japan - 31-man Pacific Nations Cup squad
· Namibia - 50-man training squad
· New Zealand - 39-man Rugby Championship squad
· Russia - 36-man Rugby Europe Championship squad
· Samoa - 33-man Pacific Nations Cup squad
· Scotland - 42-man training squad
· South Africa - 39-man Rugby Championship squad
· Tonga - 31-man Pacific Nations Cup squad
· United States - 50-man training squad
· Uruguay - 43-man training squad
· Wales - 42-man training squad
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StubHub Analysed the Most Multicultural Rugby World Cup Teams
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