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Who makes the most-capped U20 graduate XV - by position


WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - SEPTEMBER 15: Sam Whitelock of the All Blacks fends against Eben Etzebeth of the Springboks during The Rugby Championship match between the New Zealand All Blacks and the South Africa Springboks at Westpac Stadium on September 15, 2018 in Wellington, New Zealand. (Photo by Anthony Au-Yeung/Getty Images)
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For the players from 16 teams currently gathered together in Georgia ahead of the start of the 2026 Junior World Championship, there is an opportunity to follow in the footsteps of some of the greats of the modern game as well as bagging some silverware early on in their careers.

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Since 2008, when the U20 age category was first used for international rugby’s elite ‘next-gen’ competition, the tournament has a proven track record in developing young talent into Test-ready stars. Over 1,000 players have played in the Junior World Championship and subsequently gone on to be capped by their countries at senior level,

For some teams, the pathway has been more fruitful than others. With 103 ‘graduates’, roughly 10 per cent of the overall total, three-time winners France, and the most successful team in recent years, have the best conversion rate of the 19 countries to have competed at this level.

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Argentina have never won the Junior Wolrd Championship, or even made the final (they’ve finished third twice), yet they are best-placed to join France in reaching three figures, as their graduate tally stands at an impressive 96.

After years of being the nearly men, South Africa won last year’s title and are fancied to go back-to-back this year, but under a new skipper now that 2025 title-winning captain, utility forward Riley Norton, has been promoted to the Springboks squad, alongside U20 teammate and Sharks fly-half Vusi Moyo.

Historically, the Boks are only ranked 10th in terms of overall graduates (64), but the pipeline of talent appears to be working well again after some fallow years if their call-ups are anything to go by.

For some capped Junior World Championship players, their acquintance with Test rugby is only fleeting, but when it comes to Australia, plenty of those that do step up in class tend to stay there.

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In terms of the volume of Test caps won by ex-U20s players, Australia find themselves ranked first with a combined total of 2,347 caps (from 81 players), and as a result, they have a strong presence in our most-capped U20 graduate XV.

Three former Junior Wallabies make the pack, including both props, James Slipper and Alan Alaalatoa, while Michael Hooper gets the openside slot.

Given the large volume of players to have come through their U20 system, it’s no surprise that Argentina have multiple representation in the form of hooker Julián Montoya and blindside Pablo Matera.

Players from the world’s two leading teams, South Africa and New Zealand, combine in the engine room, with Eben Etzebeth and Sam Whitelock making a formidable partnership.

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Rounding off the pack, Taulupe Faletau slots in at No.8, although by the end of the first phase of the Nations Championship, new All Blacks captain Ardie Savea will likely have won the three caps he needs to overtake the Welshman.

Four scrum-halves have played in the Junior World Championship and won a century of caps, but Ben Youngs’ tally of 127 ensures he gets in the most-capped XV ahead of Aaron Smith, Conor Murray and Will Genia. Youngs has Beauden Barrett outside of him at fly-half, where he won the majority of his 144 caps.

Gaël Fickou and Jonathan Davies make up a midfield that blends defensive excellence and power with subtle skills.

In additon to Faletau and Davies, Wales also boast two members of the back-three, taking their overall contribution to four, with full-back Leigh Halfpenny and wing Josh Adams joined by England’s Anthony Watson.

The Bomb Squad consists of Jamie George, Joe Marler, Tadhg Furlong, Peter O’Mahony, Ardie Savea, Aaron Smith, Owen Farrell and another Welshman, Liam Williams.

Most-capped U20s graduate XV by position:

1. James Slipper (Australia, 151 caps)*
2. Julián Montoya (Argentina, 117 caps)*
3. Alan Alaalatoa (Australia, 88 caps)*
4. Eben Etzebeth (South Africa, 141)*
5. Sam Whitelock (New Zealand, 153)
6. Pablo Matera (Argentina, 121)*
7. Michael Hooper (Australia, 125)
8. Taulupe Faletau (Wales, 108)*
9. Ben Youngs (England, 127)
10. Beauden Barrett (New Zealand, 144)*
11. Josh Adams (Wales, 70)*
12. Gaël Fickou (France, 98)*
13. Jonathan Davies (Wales, 96)
14. Anthony Watson (England, 57)
15. Leigh Halfpenny (Wales, 101)

*still playing

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2 Comments
C
Conrad 26 mins ago

Saw the ABs youth team playing in Belfast - Dagg, Freuen, Crotty, Whitelock, Ash Dixon. Superb team


The French U20s of a few years back were devastating.


Probably the best yet.

S
SB 50 mins ago

Very interesting.

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