{"id":294691,"date":"2023-10-01T15:40:06","date_gmt":"2023-10-01T15:40:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportstons.com\/?p=294691"},"modified":"2023-10-01T15:40:06","modified_gmt":"2023-10-01T15:40:06","slug":"australia-vs-portugal-live-rugby-world-cup-build-up-and-updates-as-wallabies-look-to-keep-faint-hopes-alive","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportstons.com\/rugby-union\/australia-vs-portugal-live-rugby-world-cup-build-up-and-updates-as-wallabies-look-to-keep-faint-hopes-alive\/","title":{"rendered":"Australia vs Portugal LIVE: Rugby World Cup build-up and updates as Wallabies look to keep faint hopes alive"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The Rugby World Cup is hotting up as teams seek to secure their places in the quarter-finals.<\/p>\n
The top two nations from each of the four pools will progress to the last eight, with the quarter-finals to be played on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 October in Marseille and Paris.<\/p>\n
In the event of a two-way tie, the nation that won the encounter between the two teams will progress; in the event of a three-way tie, the nation that finishes with the best points difference will finish on top, followed by the team that won the fixture between the two remaining teams.<\/p>\n
Teams receive four points for a win, with a bonus point available for scoring four tries or more. A losing bonus point is received if you finish within seven points of your opponents; a draw is worth two points.<\/p>\n
The third spot in each pool is crucial, too \u2013 while this will not allow teams further involvement at this year\u2019s World Cup, it will secure automatic qualification for the next tournament in Australia in 2027.<\/p>\n
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The tournament will conclude with the final at the Stade de France on Saturday 28 October <\/p>\n
Line-ups<\/strong><\/p>\n Australia XV: <\/strong>Angus Bell, Dave Porecki (captain), James Slipper; Nick Frost, Richie Arnold; Tom Hooper, Fraser McReight, Rob Valetini; Tate McDermott, Ben Donaldson; Marika Koroibete, Lalakai Foketi, Izaia Perese, Mark Nawaqanitawase; Andrew Kellaway.<\/p>\n Replacements: Matt Faessler, Blake Schoupp, Pone Fa\u2019amausili, Rob Leota, Josh Kemeny; Issak Fines-Leleiwasa, Carter Gordon, Suliasi Vunivalu.<\/em><\/p>\n Portugal XV: <\/strong>David Costa, Mike Tadjer, Diogo Hasse Ferreira; Jose Madeira, Martim Belo; David Wallis, Nicolas Martins, Thibault de Freitas; Samuel Marques, Jeronimo Portela; Rodrigo Marta, Tomas Appleton (captain), Pedro Bettencourt, Raffaele Storti; Nuno Sousa Guedes.<\/p>\n Replacements: Francisco Fernandes, Duarte Diniz, Francisco Bruno, Steevy Cerqueira, Rafael Simoes; Joao Belo, Joris Moura, Manuel Cardoso Pinto.<\/em><\/p>\n Portugal team news <\/strong><\/p>\n Patrice Lagisquet makes four changes to his Portugal side, all up front. David Costa earns a first start of the tournament at loosehead, while Martim Belo is back amongst things in the second row. David Wallis and Thibault de Freitas similarly come in to the back row trio.<\/p>\n The backline remains intact after a fine performance against Georgia, with double try-scorer Raffaele Storti again on the wing. 13 of this starting line-up featured in an eye-catching performance against Australia A in a warm-up fixture in August.<\/p>\n Australia team news<\/strong><\/p>\n Australia remain without regular captain Will Skelton and tighthead prop Taniela Tupou. Tupou\u2019s absence leaves James Slipper to make history away from his regular home on the loosehead; the prop becomes the most-capped Wallaby in tournament history as he makes his 21st World Cup appearance.<\/p>\n There\u2019s a new centre pairing in the form of Lalakai Foketi and Izaia Perese, with Samu Kerevi dropped, but Ben Donaldson continues at fly half in a familiar midfield trio that spent last season with the Waratahs.<\/p>\n Eddie Jones\u2019 Australia take on Portugal in what is likely to be their final fixture at this year\u2019s Rugby World Cup.<\/p>\n Last weekend\u2019s 40-6 loss to Wales marked the Wallabies\u2019 second defeat in a row, and they will be out of the tournament if Fiji take even a point from their final Pool C fixture against the Portuguese next weekend.<\/p>\n It would mark the first time Australia\u2019s men have exited at the pool stages.<\/p>\n They won\u2019t take anything for granted here, either, with Portugal among this World Cup\u2019s most impressive nations, pushing Wales hard for long periods of their opening fixture before drawing with Georgia.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s everything you need to know.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Everything you need to know ahead of the Pool C fixture <\/p>\n Australia will hope to put a disappointing tournament so far behind them as they take on Portugal in Pool C.<\/p>\n For the first time, the Wallabies are set to go out of the Rugby World Cup before the knockout rounds begin – if Fiji secure even a losing bonus point against Portugal next weekend, Eddie Jones\u2019s side will be out.<\/p>\n Ahead of a crucial period for Australian rugby with a home tournament in four years\u2019 time, the rebuilding begins now with a bonus point victory a must against a Portuguese side that have impressed mightily in France.<\/p>\n Having pushed Wales far closer than most expected, Patrice Lagisquet\u2019s squad narrowly missed out on an historic victory against Georgia and will be confident that they can test their opponents in Saint-Etienne.<\/p>\n Could they even deepen the Wallabies\u2018 woe? Follow all the latest from the Pool C match in today\u2019s live blog: <\/strong><\/p>\nAustralia vs Portugal LIVE: Rugby World Cup latest<\/h3>\n
Australia vs Portugal LIVE: Rugby World Cup latest<\/h3>\n
Australia vs Portugal LIVE: Rugby World Cup latest<\/h3>\n
Is Australia vs Portugal on TV? Channel and how to watch Rugby World Cup fixture<\/h3>\n
Australia vs Portugal LIVE: Rugby World Cup latest<\/h3>\n