photos: Dan Sheridan / Scottish Rugby / FIR

Foreign-Born / Produced Players in 2021 Six Nations

Despite pandemic concerns the Six Nations will go ahead as planned. One of the topics that continues to be a point of discussion around the tournament is player eligibility, with a handful of new residency captures taking the field during the Autumn Nations Cup.

Players obtain eligibility by meeting Regulation 8 as outlined by World Rugby. This can be achieved in one of three ways: (a) country of birth; (b) country where one parent or grandparent was born; or (c) complete 3 years of consecutive residency immediately before representative duty.

World Rugby opted to revise Regulation 8 in May of 2017, extended the consecutive residency requirement from three to five years. This was set to begin on January 1, 2021, but World Rugby unilaterally decided to delay the change by one year citing disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

This article attempts to identify the qualifications of players not born in the country they are representing, and the youth system in which they were developed. The latter adds context for the many players who moved to their home nation as a child.

It should also be noted that there are many examples of players who qualify for a nation they may have no affiliation with other than having been born there. Cameron Redpath, for example, was born in France while his father was on a professional contract but moved to England before the age of one.

There were 129 Foreign-Born players at RWC 2015. The number increased to 144 for RWC 2019.

 

SCOTLAND (23)

Duncan Taylor was schooled in multiple countries including Scotland. Rob Harley and Rufus McLean were schooled in Scotland. None of the remaining 20 foreign-born players were produced by Scottish rugby. Newcomer Ewan Ashman was born in Toronto and grew up near Manchester. His father is Scottish. Oli Kebble’s father was a Springbok. Cameron Redpath was on England’s roster to tour South Africa in 2018. He missed out through injury. His father Bryan captained Scotland.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBLITY OTHER REP.
Allan Dell LH South Africa Grandparent South Africa u20
Oli Kebble LH South Africa Residency (2020) South Africa u20
Ewan Ashman HO Canada Parent
Simon Berghan TH New Zealand Grandparent
Willem Nel TH South Africa Residency (2015)
Rob Harley LO/FL England Parent
Sam Skinner LO England Parent England u20
Josh Bayliss FL England Grandparent England u20
Cornell du Preez FL South Africa Residency (2016) South Africa u20
Hamish Watson FL England Grandparent
Nick Haining N8 Australia Grandparent
Blade Thomson N8 New Zealand Grandparent New Zealand u20; New Zealand Māori
Ali Price SH England Parent
Jaco van der Walt FH South Africa Residency (2020) South Africa u18
Chris Harris CE England Grandparent England Counties
Sam Johnson CE Australia Residency (2018) Australia Schoolboys
James Lang CE England Grandparent
Cameron Redpath CE France Parent England u20
Duncan Taylor CE England Parent
Byron McGuigan WI Namibia Parent
Sean Maitland WI New Zealand Grandparent New Zealand Māori; New Zealand Schools; New Zealand u19; New Zealand u20
Duhan van der Merwe WI South Africa Residency (2020) South Africa Schools; South Africa u20
Rufus McLean FB USA Parent

 

WALES (12)

Hallam Amos, Jonathan Davies, Dan Lydiate, George North, Josh Macleod, and Taulupe Faletau all came through the Welsh system. Tomas Francis, Jake Ball, Will Rowlands, Willis Haloholo, Nick Tompkins, and Johnny Williams were primarily produced outside Wales. Johnny Williams played for England vs the Barbarians in an un-capped and non-capturing match. Taulupe Faletau’s father played at RWC 1999 for Tonga.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBILITY OTHER REP.
Tomas Francis TH England Grandparent
Jake Ball LO England Parent
Will Rowlands LO England Parent
Dan Lydiate FL England Parent
Josh Macleod FL Monaco Residency (2004)
Taulupe Faletau N8 Tonga Residency (2001)
Jonathan Davies CE England Parent
Willis Haloholo CE New Zealand Residency (2019) New Zealand Schools; Tonga u20
Nick Tompkins CE England Grandparent England u18; England u20; England Saxons
Johnny Williams CE England Parent England u20; England
Hallam Amos WI England Residency (2004)
George North WI England Parent

 

ITALY (10)

Three of the five qualifying via residency moved to Italy as children. They are Cristian Stoian, Marco Manfredi and Cherif Traoré. All played for Italy at junior levels. Johan Meyer and Monty Ioane arrived from South Africa and Australia respectively as professionals. None of the five who qualify via ancestry are Italian rugby products. Three of them played representative rugby for the unions that they learned their rugby. Stephen Varney is an exception having played for Italy u20. Juan Ignacio Brex used the ‘Olympic loophole’ to change his allegiance from Argentina to Italy. He has already played for Italy 7s.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBILITY OTHER REP.
Cherif Traoré LH Guinea Residency (2004)
Marco Manfredi HO Germany Parent
David Sisi LO Germany Parent England u20
Cristian Stoian LO Moldova Residency (2005)
Johan Meyer FL South Africa Residency (2018)
Sebastian Negri FL Zimbabwe Parent
Callum Braley SH England Grandparent England u16; England u18; England u20
Stephen Varney SH Wales Parent
Juan Ignacio Brex CE Argentina Grandparent Argentina u19; Argentina u20; Argentina XV; Argentina 7s
Monty Ioane WI Australia Residency (2020)

 

IRELAND (8)

Ultan Dillane moved to Ireland as a child. The rest did so on professional contracts. Billy Burns and Rob Herring were able to immediately represent Ireland due to ancestry. The five others qualified via residency. CJ Stander captained South Africa at the Junior World Championship. James Lowe started for the Māori against the British & Irish Lions in 2017.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBILITY OTHER REP.
Rob Herring HO South Africa Grandparent
Ultan Dillane LO France Parent
Quinn Roux LO South Africa Residency (2015)
CJ Stander FL South Africa Residency (2016) South Africa u18; South Africa u20
Jamison Gibson-Park SH New Zealand Residency (2019) New Zealand Māori
Billy Burns FH England Grandparent England u18, England u20
Bundee Aki CE New Zealand Residency (2017)
James Lowe WI New Zealand Residency (2020) New Zealand Māori; New Zealand Schools; New Zealand u15 Basketball

 

FRANCE (4)

France requires all players to carry a French passport. This is unique in the Six Nations. All players born abroad arrived in France as adults. Uini Atonio was born and raised in New Zealand. He played u20s for Samoa due to having a Samoan parent. Paul Willemse was a 2012 Junior World Championship winner with South Africa. New Zealand born Virimi Vakatawa moved to Fiji as a child and began playing rugby there aged 9. There are also two players from French territories in the South Pacific. Hooker Peato Mauvaka was born in New Caledonia and Yoram Moefana is from Wallis-et-Futuna. They moved to France aged and 15 and 13 respectively.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBILITY OTHER REP.
Uini Atonio TH New Zealand Residency (2014) Samoa u20
Bernard le Roux LO South Africa Residency (2012)
Paul Willemse LO South Africa Residency (2018) Namibia u18; South Africa u20
Virimi Vakatawa CE New Zealand Residency (2013) Fiji u19

 

ENGLAND (2)

Billy and Mako Vunipola qualify for England via residency. Born in Australia and New Zealand to Tongan parents, they moved to Wales at the ages of 5 an 6 in 1998 and then to England in 2005.

PLAYER POS. BIRTH COUNTRY ELIGIBILITY OTHER REP.
Mako Vunipola LH New Zealand Residency (2008)
Billy Vunipola N8 Australia Residency (2008)

 

About Americas Rugby News

Formally created in June 2015, this website's goal is to increase media exposure of the Tier 2 rugby nations, and create a hub with a focus on the stories of rugby in the Americas - North, Central and South.

Check Also

Bristol Bears Sign Puma Pedro Rubiolo

The Bristol Bears have completed the signing of Pedro Rubiolo. The English Premiership club will …