Rugby league is played in over 70 nations throughout the world.
Papua New Guinea is the only country to have rugby league as its
national sport. Four countries – Australia, England, France, and New Zealand – have teams that play at a professional level. 45 national teams are ranked by the RLIF and a further 32 are officially recognized and unranked. The strongest rugby league nations are
Australia,
England,
New Zealand,
Samoa and
Tonga.
World Cup The Rugby League World Cup is the highest form of representative rugby league. Countries that have contested are
Australia,
Cook Islands,
England,
Fiji,
France,
Ireland,
Italy,
Jamaica,
Lebanon,
New Zealand,
Papua New Guinea,
Russia,
Samoa,
Scotland,
South Africa,
Tonga,
US and
Wales. The 2021 Rugby League World Cup, which was hosted by
England during October and November 2022, staged the
Men's,
Women's and
Wheelchair competitions together for the first time. The competition formerly featured 16 teams, but has been cut down to 10 for the upcoming
2026 Rugby League World Cup.
Oceania and South Pacific vs
New Zealand at the
2008 Rugby League World Cup The
Asia-Pacific Rugby League Confederation's purpose is to spread the sport of rugby league throughout their region along with other governing bodies such as the
ARL and
NZRL. Since rugby league was introduced to
Australia in 1908, it has become the largest television sport and 3rd most attended sport in Australia. Neighbouring
Papua New Guinea is one of two countries to have rugby league as its
national sport (with
Cook Islands). The game is also among the predominant sports of
Tonga and is played in other Pacific nations such as
Samoa and
Fiji. Researchers have found that rugby league has been able to help with improving
development in the islands. In Australia, and indeed the rest of the region, the annual
State of Origin series ranks among the most popular sporting events.
Europe The
Rugby League European Federation are responsible for developing rugby league in
Europe. In England, rugby league has traditionally been associated with the historic northern counties of
Yorkshire,
Lancashire, and
Cumberland, where the game originated, especially in towns and cities along the
M62 corridor. , only two of the twelve Super League teams are based outside of these traditional counties:
Catalans Dragons and
London Broncos. One other team from outside the United Kingdom,
Toulouse Olympique, competes in the
British rugby league system, although not at the highest tier Super League level, but rather in the second tier
Championship. Super League average attendances are in the 8,000 to 9,500 range. The average Super League match attendance in 2014 was 8,365. In 2018 average Super League match attendance was 8,547. Ranked the
eighth most popular sport in the UK overall, rugby league is the 27th most popular participation sport in England according to figures released by
Sport England; the total number of rugby league participants in England aged 16 and over was 44,900 in 2017. While the sport is largely concentrated in the north of England there have been complaints about its lack of profile in the British media. On the eve of the
2017 Rugby League World Cup final where England would face Australia, English amateur rugby league coach Ben Dawson stated, "we're in the final of a World Cup. First time in more than 30 years and there's no coverage anywhere". vs
New Zealand in the
2013 Rugby League World Cup at
Parc des Sports (Avignon) France first played rugby league as late as 1934, where in the five years prior to the
Second World War, the sport's popularity increased as Frenchmen became disenchanted with the state of French rugby union in the 1930s. However, after the Allied Forces were defeated by Germany in June 1940, the
Vichy regime in the south seized assets belonging to rugby league authorities and clubs and banned the sport for its association with the left-wing
Popular Front government that had governed France before the war. In 1996, a French team,
Paris Saint-Germain was one of eleven teams which formed the new Super League, although the club was dissolved in 1997. In 2006, the Super League admitted the Catalans Dragons, a team from Perpignan in the southern
Languedoc-Roussillon region. They have subsequently reached the
2007 Challenge Cup Final and made the playoffs of the 2008
Super League XIII season. The success of the Dragons in Super League has initiated a renaissance in French rugby league, with new-found enthusiasm for the sport in the south of the country where most of the
Super XIII teams are based. In other parts of Europe, the game is played at semi-professional and amateur level.
North America As of 2023, there is no professional rugby league in North America. From 2017 to 2020, the
Toronto Wolfpack were
North America's only active professional Rugby League team, competing in the English Rugby League system. They won the 2017 Kingstone Press League 1 in their inaugural season and earned promotion to the 2018 Rugby League Championship. In 2019 The Wolfpack won promotion to the Super League, lasting only a few months before having to withdraw due to the ongoing worldwide
COVID-19 pandemic. New ownership is currently trying to revive the club with matches against amateur clubs in the US and Canada. Beginning in 2022, the
Ottawa Aces were scheduled to join the English league pyramid, becoming the only Canadian team in the system after the Wolfpack were denied re-entry. The club subsequently relocated to
Penryn, Cornwall, and are now known as Cornwall R.L.F.C. In 2021, the
North American Rugby League announced an attempt to be North America's professional championship, with Canadian club Toronto Wolfpack joining several
USA Rugby League clubs, New York Freedom and
Cleveland Rugby League to form the league's inaugural season. Several brand new clubs from Western USA were scheduled to join in 2022 but never played. The new competition is sanctioned by
Canada Rugby League, but not yet by the United States governing body. Unfortunately, while some exhibition matches were played in 2021 and 2022, NARL was defunct by 2023․
Other countries The early 21st century has seen
other countries take up the game and compete in international rugby league with the
Rugby League European Federation and
Asia-Pacific Rugby League Confederation expanding the game to new areas such as
Chile,
Canada,
Ghana,
Philippines,
Czech Republic,
Germany,
The Netherlands,
Sweden,
Norway,
Spain,
Sri Lanka,
Hungary,
Turkey,
Thailand and
Brazil to name a few.
Domestic professional competitions The two most prominent full-time professional leagues are the Australian
National Rugby League and the British
Super League (with teams from New Zealand and France respectively). Other professional and semi professional leagues include Australia's
Queensland Cup (which includes a team from
Papua New Guinea) and
NSW Cup, the British
RFL Championship and
RFL League 1, the French
Super XIII and
Elite 2. The
Papua New Guinea National Rugby League operates as a semi-professional competition and enjoys nationwide media coverage, being the national sport of the country. == Variants ==