
Hong Kong have finally made it to the Rugby World Cup – now the real work begins
Advertisement
A 70-22 victory over South Korea sealed a sixth consecutive Asia Rugby Emirates Men's Championship title and booked a spot at the global tournament in Australia in 2027.
Hong Kong will be only the second team from Asia to play in the World Cup after ever-present qualifiers Japan, who have already qualified for 2027 after finishing third in their pool at the 2023 tournament in France.
The 10 tries Hong Kong scored at the Incheon Namdong Asiad Rugby Stadium, after they ran in 12 against Sri Lanka two weeks ago, took the team's total to 28 for the championship, underscoring the gulf that exists between the side and their regional rivals.
Once again they came from forwards and backs, with the former having the upper hand in the rout. Alex Post, the hooker, and Josh Hrstich, who started the game at No 8, scored a brace each, while James Sawyer and Luke van der Smit also crossed.
Hong Kong captain Josh Hrstich scored two tries in his team's 10-try haul. Photo: HKCR
In the backs, Matt Worley's individual score – created by man of the match Nathan de Thierry, who kicked nine conversions as well as pulling the strings from fly half – got things moving with just two minutes gone, and he was followed across the line by Paul Altier, Harry Sayers and Max Denmark.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Give Hong Kong women's football elite treatment or see it remain in backwaters, says coach
Ricardo Rambo said Hong Kong must treat women's football as an elite sport, or accept existing in the shadow of more dynamic and heavily resourced Asian rivals. Advertisement Head coach Rambo's team suffered AFC Asian Cup qualifying heartbreak in Cambodia on Saturday when they lost 1-0 to much-higher-ranked Philippines in a straight shoot-out to reach next year's Australian finals. Although Rambo drew some satisfaction from his world No 80 team 'closing gaps to the best sides defensively and in their tactical understanding', he acknowledged Hong Kong needed increased resources and hi-tech support to compete with leading countries. 'We need more manpower, so we have staff working to analyse matches and players,' Rambo said. 'That would allow us to have an individual approach to players, so we can create a profile and physical condition for each of them. 'To improve in modern football, you need data and analysis.' Hong Kong (in red), ranked 80, lost to the 41st-ranked Philippines by a goal to nil. Photo: HKFA With the Asian qualifiers doubling up as a pathway to the 2027 World Cup, Hong Kong will have to wait until 2029, at least, to feature again in a major tournament.


South China Morning Post
9 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong well-placed to referee commercial sports disputes
Hong Kong is taking another important step towards becoming a go-to destination for dispute resolution. A month after launching its first legal body to solve international disputes through mediation before a neutral third party, Hong Kong is inviting proposals to run a two-year pilot programme for sports dispute arbitration. The convention signed by 33 countries to establish the Hong Kong-based International Organisation for Mediation is a groundbreaking China-led initiative to promote amicable dispute resolution. Hopefully, before too long, dispute resolution by formal mediation can also be extended to the sports sector. Few sectors can match the growth of sport and its universal appeal across borders and cultural divides. Along with increasing commercialisation, this has created fertile ground for disputes at the elite level. Experts say the pilot two-year programme for sports dispute resolution is a key step towards a neutral intervention mechanism. The Department of Justice says it is seeking joint proposals from an administrator and a technology provider by July 31. Given Hong Kong's international standing in arbitration, a sports dispute resolution process would not have to start from scratch. The proposed pilot scheme follows a pledge in the chief executive's policy address in October to explore establishing such a system. Along with the new organisation for mediation, this can enhance Hong Kong's reputation as an international centre for dispute resolution. The increasingly commercialised sport sector is generating more diverse and complex disputes, leading to the creation of institutions to settle them. The leading example is the Court of Arbitration for Sport based in Switzerland.


South China Morning Post
13 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong star trained with PSG and Ajax but is living his dream in the city
After training with the France national youth team, and attending camps at Paris Saint-Germain and Ajax, Raphael Merkies thought moving to Hong Kong in 2016 would wreck his football dream. Nine years later, as an increasingly important figure for the representative team, the Paris-born winger said coming to the city was the making of him. Merkies said it was an easy decision to obtain a passport last year. He made his city team debut in January's Hong Kong-Guangdong Cup, then secured a transfer from Southern to four-time Chinese Super League champions Shandong Taishan the following month. He is set to add to his three caps at the forthcoming East Asian Championship finals in South Korea. 'My mum was a bit more hesitant about me naturalising, because the French passport is very strong,' Merkies said. 'But I had no doubts, and she accepted my decision quite quickly once I'd explained how the passport would help my football. 'My first target was to represent Hong Kong. It's where I grew up and started my career. I want to pay back the trust of the coach, and the support of the fans and Hong Kong.' Raphael Merkies is scythed down by Hu Ruibao during January's Guangdong-Hong Kong Cup. Photo: Elson Li Merkies had a trial with the France youth teams at the federation's Clairefontaine headquarters around the age of 10.