First Rugby Club World Cup tournament planned
The first Rugby World Club Cup will be held in 2028 after
"unanimous" agreement from the relevant leagues and unions, European
Professional Club Rugby has announced.
The competition will then be staged every four years with 16
teams taking part, eight qualifying through the Investec Champions Cup and the
remainder from Super Rugby and Japan.
EPCR chairman Dominic McKay confirmed the plans, which have
been spoken about for "two or three years", were finalised in Cardiff
before the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup finals.
The Champions Cup, which was established in 1995, currently
brings together teams from England, France, Ireland, Wales, Scotland, South
Africa and Italy.
That competition, along with the second-tier Challenge Cup,
will continue to take place, with McKay stating the aim of the World Club Cup
is to "elevate them further" while also adding that "ambitious
plans" for the already established European tournaments will be revealed
in the coming weeks.
"The Investec Champions Cup is the greatest club
competition in the world, and we're going to continue to protect that, nurture
it and develop it further," McKay said.
"We want to create this World Club Cup proposition in
2028 and 2032 with our friends from the south [southern hemisphere].
"We have these incredible competitions that we own and
operate, and we want to find a way to elevate them further and bring in teams
from Australia, from New Zealand, from Japan, and we'll do that through the
World Club Cup."