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Rugby World Cup Japan city guide - Oita

By RugbyPass

The next stop on our Rugby World Cup guide is the prefecture of Oita on the southern island of Kyushu.

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Jaybor experiences a sand bath in the town of Beppu and pays a visit to the famous City Spa Onsen with stunning views over the city.

We stop off for a feed in a traditional izakaya, which is a local Japanese pub that serves cheap food and great beer, before heading onto the 42k seater Oita stadium.

Oita will play host to two quarter-finals as well as three group stage matches involving New Zealand, Australia, Wales and Fiji.

Follow all of Jaybor’s adventures throughout Japan in Operation Jaypan – Part 1 & Part 2

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Roger 1 hours ago
Why the Wallabies won't be following the Springboks' rush defence under Schmidt

You forget this is Rassie Erasmus who is still holding the Springbok keys. Even with Felix Jones orchestrating a really tight RWC SF last year. It still wasn't enough to get England past their particular Springbok Monkey in world cups. The reason is FJ was going off of what they did in 2019 not necessarily adapting to current Springboks. So yes, Australia can get passed England because let's be honest, England have a one track strategy, Springboks do not. Even with rush defense I wouldn't be surprised if Rassie continually tweaks it. Also bear in mind Rassie is happy to sacrifice a few mid year and inter World Cup matches to pin point how opposition plays and how to again tweak strategies to get his Springboks in peak performance for the next World Cup. As much as most teams like to win games in front of them and try to win everything, Rassie always makes sure to learn and train for the greatest showdown International Rugby has to offer. Tbh, most people remember World Cup wins and ignore intermediate losses as a result but will remember also WC losses, Ireland, even if they won games in the interim. So even if games are won against the Springboks, it's likely Rassie is just getting a feel for how opposition is moving and adapt accordingly…in time. For Rassie, a loss is never a loss because he uses it as a chance to learn and improve. Sometimes during a game, again like the England match in last year's Semi Final.

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