rowan wrote:Owain Glyndwr wrote:Italy would get my vote. Close enough for all northern hemisphere fans that travelling isn't an issue, a decent number of home based fans, and good stadia and plenty of hotels and other infrastructure for fans. Time to spread the love.
The first point is Eurocentric, of course. Europeans get to see a World Cup in their own back yard every 8 years at present, while fans in the world's second biggest rugby-playing nation have to wait decades. & there are many rapidly developing rugby nations on the African continent. Just for example, Madagascar actually gets some of the biggest crowds outside of tier 1 for its major home-games, Kenya has emerged as a 7-a-side heavyweight, and Swaziland has one of the largest rugby communities per capita in the world.
This is a good point, and I think we can kill two birds with one stone here. What we need to do is find a way to tie RWCs hosted by major nations to development in expansion markets. Perhaps bids by a major nation should only be permitted if they can point to, say, 2 or 3 minor nations in their region with a realistic chance of qualifying (i.e in the top 25). That would give the major nations an incentive to develop the game in their back yard.
Under this system, let's see:
Japan could point to Hong Kong (23rd) and Korea (25th).
NZ/Aust can look at Fiji (10th), Tonga (13th) and Samoa (15th and heavily reliant on NZ born players).
The 6N can show the progress of Georgia (14th), Romania (17th), Russia (18th) and Spain (22nd).
Argentina has USA (16th), Canada (19th) and Uruguay (23rd) in its orbit.
And when South Africa pays more than lip service to the sport north of its border, I'm sure it could add to Namibia (20th). Given the interest in "transformation," and the interest in rugby in Africa Rowan points out, I'm surprised that SARU doesn't put more effort into developing rugby in Black Africa and seems perfectly happy with just supporting the Namibian Boer XV.