Advertisement
The All Blacks' mission to claim a third Rugby World Cup in 2027 has become a daunting challenge with the announcement of the pools on 3 December. With the tournament expanding from 20 to 24 teams, the structure now includes six pools and a Round of 16. That shift increases opportunity for lower-ranked nations, but it also raises the stakes for favourites. There is more jeopardy, and it will be an uphill climb for the All Blacks. Their path is now set, with a colossal opening-night showdown against the Wallabies followed by a likely quarterfinal against the Springboks.

The All Blacks' mission to claim a third Rugby World Cup in 2027 has become a daunting challenge with the announcement of the pools on 3 December. With the tournament expanding from 20 to 24 teams, the structure now includes six pools and a Round of 16. That shift increases opportunity for lower-ranked nations, but it also raises the stakes for favourites. There is more jeopardy, and it will be an uphill climb for the All Blacks. Their path is now set, with a colossal opening-night showdown against the Wallabies followed by a likely quarterfinal against the Springboks.
If New Zealand go all the way in Australia, nobody will be able to say they had it easy. Their route is as tough as it gets, but history shows that the greatest All Blacks sides have always embraced the hard road.
The 2027 Rugby World Cup is expected to open with a big bang. All signs point to the All Blacks and Wallabies kicking off the tournament in Perth on 1 October, a headline fixture guaranteed to ignite rugby’s showpiece event. Two fierce rivals, a capacity stadium, and the weight of World Cup expectation will make it the headline event organisers are banking on.
Thankfully for the loser, early elimination won’t be a danger. With an expanded 24-team format and a Round of 16 in place, both teams are almost certain to progress. However, this opening match may shape the rest of the All Black’s tournament. Win, and New Zealand take the inside lane to a manageable Round of 16.
The draw hasn’t been particularly kind to the All Blacks. If the All Blacks top Pool A, win their Round of 16 match, and progress as expected, they’ll almost certainly run straight into the world champion Springboks in the quarterfinals.
The top two teams in the world, facing off in a quarterfinal has fans scratching thier heads questioning the format of the final stages. Its a meeting of rugby’s two superpowers a round earlier than anyone wants, and one will be sent home early.
For many All Blacks supporters, they are asking how has World Rugby allowed the two strongest teams to be matched-up together so soon? But if the roles were reversed, fans in France or England would be voicing the same complaints. It shows the relative competitiveness of this world cup that even one of the strongest rugby nations risks missing out on a semi-final.
The last time these two giants met in the quarters at the Rugby World Cup was in Australia in 2003, and the All Blacks won comfortably. But 2027 feels different. South Africa are defending back-to-back titles after their win over New Zealand in the 2023 final in Paris, and the rivalry has only intensified.
The draw makes the picture for the All Blacks simple, beat Australia in the opener and top Pool A. The Round of 16 should then pit them against a third-placed team from Pool C, E, or F, a fixture they would expect to win. But the reward for doing everything right is a quarterfinal against the Springboks, assuming South Africa cruise through Pool B as anticipated.
If the All Blacks want to win the World Cup, they’ll likely need to beat South Africa at some point. If that test comes in the quarterfinals, so be it. The early showdown could even benefit the winner, providing a hardening blow on the way to the semi-finals.
But that doesn’t make the prospect any less daunting.