World Cup Bitcoin Sports Betting
The 2017 Rugby League World Cup has teams coming in from Australia, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea just to name a few. This is the 15th staging of the Rugby League World Cup between the 27th of October and December 2017. Fans of the sporting event are now able to bet on their favorite teams with Bitcoin and use the provided betting odds below.
Best Bitcoin World Cup Betting Websites:
Sportsbet.io Crypto Sport Betting
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The Rugby Union World Cup is the most important international competition in the Rugby Union and has been held every four years since 1987 among currently twenty participating men’s national teams. The tournament is organised by World Rugby (WR), the World Rugby Union. The cup awarded, the Webb Ellis Cup, is named after William Webb Ellis, who is said to have invented the game.
The Rugby Union World Cup is one of the largest international sports tournaments in the world after the Football World Cup and the Summer Olympics. The reigning world champion is the New Zealand national team, which is also the record world champion with a total of three victories (1987, 2011, 2015).
Qualification
A qualification was introduced with a view to the second World Championship in 1991, when 24 nations played for eight of the 16 places. There was no qualification for the first World Championship in 1987. Seven teams were automatically qualified as members of the International Rugby Football Board (IRFB), the remaining nine teams were invited.
The previous format was for the eight quarter-finalists of the previous tournament to participate without qualifying, the remaining twelve places were played by continent. Three teams came from Africa, three from America, one from Asia, three from Europe and two from Oceania. The remaining two qualifying places were played out in a barrage between the teams that missed out on qualifying. The best non-qualified teams from Africa and Europe played against each other, the winner against an American team. A team from Oceania and one from Asia played for the last remaining position.
For the 2011 World Cup in New Zealand, the three best teams in each of the 2007 tournament groups were automatically qualified for the first time, so that twelve participants have already been determined. This should increase the readiness in the five-headed groups to fight for third place. This mode has been maintained ever since.
Final
In the current mode, the tournament is played between twenty teams over a month in one or more host countries. In the initial group phase, there will be four groups of five teams each. The four semi-finalists of the previous competition will be distributed among the four groups, the remaining four quarter-finalists will be distributed equally. The teams that have qualified will fill the remaining places.
In the group stage, each team plays once against each of its group opponents, awarding four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points may be awarded if a team makes four or more attempts during a match or loses seven or less points of difference. The two best teams in each group make it to the quarter-finals, with the winner of each group playing against the winner of the second. The winners of the quarter-finals play among themselves the semi-finals in which the opponents in the final are determined. The semi-final losers play for third place.
History
Before the introduction of the World Cup, there were several competitions in rugby union sport in which national teams played for titles. The oldest existing rugby tournament is the Six Nations and its predecessor, which is played between England, Ireland, Wales, Scotland, later France and since 2000 Italy. Although this tournament was a purely European affair, it was one of the few regular competitions. Four times, in 1900, 1908, 1920 and 1924, rugby was part of the Summer Olympics. France won the first gold medal, Australia followed, and the United States won the last two times. Then the International Olympic Committee (IOC) removed rugby from the canon of sports.
The idea of a World Championship dates back to the 1950s, but the IRFB (now IRB) made it clear to its members that it was strictly opposed to such a competition. The idea reappeared in the early 1980s and was rejected again at an IRFB meeting in 1983. The Australian Rugby Union (ARU) and the New Zealand Rugby Football Union (NZRFU), the federations of Australia and New Zealand, independently wrote a letter asking the IRFB to organise a World Cup. In 1985, despite opposition, especially from the Irish and British delegations, this idea was accepted and the organisation of the first World Cup was awarded to Australia and New Zealand two years later. The decisive vote came from the South African delegates who supported the project.
Among the 16 participating nations, the All Blacks from New Zealand emerged victorious in 1987 after defeating France 29-9 in the final. England hosted the following World Cup, but individual matches were also played in Wales, Scotland, Ireland and France. Australia won the final 12-6 against England. In 1995 the Springboks from South Africa returned to the international stage after the end of apartheid. As hosts, they also won the tournament after defeating New Zealand in the final. Nelson Mandela, dressed in a Springboks jersey and a matching shield cap, presented the trophy to Captain Francois Pienaar. The course of the tournament and the scene in question are also central to the film Invictus.
Wales hosted the 1999 Rugby Union World Cup, while other matches took place in the rest of the United Kingdom and France. This year the number of participants was increased from 16 to 20. Australia won the title for the second time with a win over France. The next tournament was originally to be jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand; differences between the IRB and the NZRFU over sponsorship, advertising and ticket sales led to Australia becoming the sole host of the 2003 Rugby Union World Cup. England won the title with a win over Australia, the first World Champion to come from the northern hemisphere. 750,000 people gathered in London to celebrate the team returning home.
The 2007 Rugby Union World Cup took place in France, and some matches were also played in Wales and Scotland. South Africa won the World Cup for the second time after 1995 by beating defending champions England in the final.
In November 2005, New Zealand was chosen to host the 2011 Rugby Union World Cup. As in 1987, the final was New Zealand – France; with a narrow 8-7 win, the All Blacks won the title for the second time.
On 28 July 2009, the IRB announced that the 2015 and 2019 World Championships would be hosted by England and Japan respectively. For the first time, the association appointed the hosts of the two forthcoming title games simultaneously.Italy and South Africa had also applied, along with England and Japan.
Determination of the aligner
The host country will be selected by the IRB members. The tournament will be organised by Rugby World Cup Ltd (RWCL). The voting process is controlled by several independent notaries, the voting remains secret. So far, all championships have been held in countries where rugby is very popular. The election of New Zealand as host in 2011 continues this trend: Japan, a traditionally weaker rugby nation, was not able to assert itself. In the meantime, the host is determined five or six years before the start of the event.
The choice of hosts is a controversial issue. It is suspected that, in order to become a host, applicants will make secret arrangements with the voting IRB members. In 2006, for example, there were suspicions that the Argentine Rugby Federation had voted for New Zealand in exchange for a regular tournament outside the World Cup.
Popularity
The tournament is one of the biggest sporting events in the world behind the Football World Cup and the Olympic Games. The first edition in 1987 had a cumulative television audience of 300 million worldwide. The worldwide cumulative reach rose to 495 million in 2003, with the final broadcast in 205 countries. The 48 matches were attended by 1,837,547 spectators in the stadiums, which corresponds to an average of 38,282. The 2015 World Cup was considered the largest and best tournament to date. The 48 matches were attended by 2.47 million spectators.
Country-specific success
A total of 25 national teams have so far participated in the finals of the Rugby Union World Cup.
Of all eight tournaments so far, only the one in 2003 has been won by a team from the northern hemisphere. However, the North has provided one finalist each time – apart from 1995 and 2015. Almost half of the teams that played for third place in the small final also came from Europe.
Numbers and Records
The difference in performance between the world’s top teams and the weaker teams was revealed in 1987 when New Zealand’s All Blacks scored 74 points against Fiji and France 13 times against Zimbabwe. The All Blacks also scored the most points in a World Cup match at 145-17 against Japan. The biggest difference in points is 142, scored at 142:0 by Australia against Namibia at the 2003 World Cup.
New Zealander Jonah Lomu set several individual records during his international breakthrough in 1995. He still holds the record for most attempts in World Cup finals – 15 in the two tournaments 1995 and 1999 – and most attempts in a finals – eight in 1999. This record was only reached again in 2007 by Bryan Habana (South Africa). Other New Zealand players hold world records – among others Grant Fox scored the most points in a tournament in 1987 with 126, Simon Culhane scored the most points in a game with 45 in the record match against Japan. In the same game he also broke the record for the most raises in a game by scoring twenty times, while Marc Ellis scored with six the most attempts in a single game. Sean Fitzpatrick, the long-time All Blacks captain, played the most World Cup games at 17 between 1987 and 1995, with Englishman Jonny Wilkinson scoring a record 249 points between 1999 and 2007.