2 sides of a Women’s World Cup that could transform rugby
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Fans react to the WRU proposals to cut its professional men's teams from four to two.
Ahead of the Rugby World Cup, U.S. star Ilona Maher said, "It's so much easier to be yourself than anybody else."
The Wallabies stunned the Springboks in Johannesburg, can they do it again in Cape Town? And can the Pumas bounce back in Buenos Aires?
Mark Chapman, Jon Wilkin, Brian Noble and Jamie Peacock discuss and debate the hardest men in rugby league, from those known as being enforcers to others who were simply fearless.
Ilona Maher’s mission at the Women’s Rugby World Cup is about more than just winning games. Heading into the United States’ tournament opener on Friday, the world’s most followed rugby player on social media wants to get more eyeballs on the sport as it ramps up attempts to crack the market in America.
WWE approached the Olympic medalist Ilona Maher. She shared that if she considered that route, she'd take the Cena-Rock pipeline.
"Most of the people that I knew, if they had a baby they would then just stop playing." Ms Brown continued training up until she gave birth to her son and returned to the pitch six months after he was born. But it was a big change. "Logistics are really hard," she said, remembering sometimes having to breastfeed her son during games.
As the Women’s Rugby World Cup arrives in the UK, Jodie Ounsley, 24, from Yorkshire, shares how she defied expectations – and why more women should give the sport a try
South Africa’s video analysis of their stunning 38-22 Rugby Championship defeat to Australia would have been a hard watch, not least the set-piece where they lost five lineouts, normally such a reliable area of their game from which to launch attacks.