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MEA Championship 2020

yakstorm

First Grade
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5,383
Source: RLEF Media Release

Lebanon will return, alongside 2019 holders Nigeria, runners-up Morocco and hosts South Africa, to compete in this year’s Middle East Africa Championship, which will be held in Pretoria in the autumn.

The Cedars, who will only select players from their domestic competition – something they previously did at home to Italy in the 2017 Mediterranean Cup - last participated in the MEA Championship in 2015, defeating South Africa in both matches to qualify for the 2017 Rugby League World Cup.

The LRLF is still planning to launch their local championship later this month despite civil unrest in the country which has prevented other Lebanese sporting federations from running their competitions.

Lebanon RL CEO Nayef Abi Said, commented: “We are looking forward to participating again in the MEA Championship, it will provide an opportunity for our Lebanese championship players to further prepare for RLWC 2021 as part of the LRLF’s new strategy to expand and strengthen the domestic game.”

Nigeria defeated Morocco 38-10 in Lagos to lift the MEA title last year - Ghana beating Cameroon 10-4 to claim third spot, and NRLA general manager Ade Adebisi noted: “Having been crowned champions of Africa last year, the next step is to test ourselves against previous World Cup entrants and established members in Lebanon and South Africa. This is what sport is all about, year-on-year improvement and a chance to evaluate ourselves at new levels. Domestically this is a real catalyst for Nigeria Rugby League to improve all aspects of our competition.”

Morocco RL president, Yamina Abdesselem, said: “We are delighted to playing once again in the MEA Championship. We have a lot of domestic presence including a club competition, World Cup promotion, school activity and an U19s international planned. Everything is geared towards strengthening our national team in a sustainable way and our preparations for this year’s MEA Cup will be much stronger as a result.”
 

adamkungl

Immortal
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42,955
That's a really strong 4 nations they've got there. Nigeria will be hard pressed to beat Lebanon and South Africa to retain their title.

Wonder what's in the works for Ghana and Cameroon though. Hopefully there's a B level tournament or home-and-away and maybe the winner can be promoted into the 2022 edition. As RLIF members they should be given the same opportunities to compete.
 

yakstorm

First Grade
Messages
5,383
The IRL plan that was talked about at the Sydney Conference outlined plans for a MEA Championship B & C, however these were talked about as more 2022 events.

With Burundi, DRC, Kenya and Cameroon all running regular competitions, plus Ethiopia, Palestine, Libya & Sierra Leone all being RLEF members, 3 divisions of 4 wouldn't be hard to fill.... Unfortunately I bet it will all come down to cost and lack of budget.
 
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adamkungl

Immortal
Messages
42,955
The IRL plan that was talked about at the Sydney Conference outlined plans for a MEA Championship B & C, however these were talked about as more 2022 events.

With Burundi, DRC, Kenya and Cameroon all running regular competitions, plus Ethiopia, Palestine, Libya & Sierra Leone all being RLEF members, 3 divisions of 4 wouldn't be hard to fill.... Unfortunately I bet it will all come down to cost and lack of budget.

Does the IRL have some obligation to hold meaningful tournaments for member nations though?
Even if it's a pretty small home-away kind of thing like the Euro D's.
 

Pommy

Coach
Messages
14,657
The IRL plan that was talked about at the Sydney Conference outlined plans for a MEA Championship B & C, however these were talked about as more 2022 events.

With Burundi, DRC, Kenya and Cameroon all running regular competitions, plus Ethiopia, Palestine, Libya & Sierra Leone all being RLEF members, 3 divisions of 4 wouldn't be hard to fill.... Unfortunately I bet it will all come down to cost and lack of budget.

I’m sure there’s all kinds of issues running a competition across this region.
Cost is sure to be a big deal. I remember an interview with the head of one of these nations making the comparison to Europe, Africa just doesn’t have the budget airlines or freedom of movement. To travel by road could take a considerable amount of time and has potential visa issues in multiple countries. Also if I remember correctly one of the teams got robbed travelling to the MEA championships last time.
 

yakstorm

First Grade
Messages
5,383
I’m sure there’s all kinds of issues running a competition across this region.
Cost is sure to be a big deal. I remember an interview with the head of one of these nations making the comparison to Europe, Africa just doesn’t have the budget airlines or freedom of movement. To travel by road could take a considerable amount of time and has potential visa issues in multiple countries. Also if I remember correctly one of the teams got robbed travelling to the MEA championships last time.

For sure, Africa is also a lot bigger than Europe plus you have the fun issue where citizens from certain countries cannot cross into certain other countries... Something that doesn't really exist (or to the same extent) in Europe these days.

It was poor Cameroon who were robbed, among other things, in the last tournament.
 

yakstorm

First Grade
Messages
5,383
When they said Autumn, they must have been talking Northern Hemisphere autumn... proposed dates for MEA Championship:

October 24:
  • South Africa v Morocco
  • Lebanon v Nigeria
October 31:
  • MEA Final
 

siv

First Grade
Messages
6,562
Well it could be Mar to May as that is South African autumn

So same 2 week structure as

2 winners playoff
 
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