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Rugby: when the game shapes your character

In this sport, the score isn’t always the most important thing.
What matters is how you stand your ground when life gets tough. And that’s why millions of people around the world respect it. Rugby is honest, open and unpretentious. And that’s why it’s so compelling.

Competition Results 2025

Why we do this

This site isn’t about numbers, bureaucracy, or ‘sports analytics’ in suits and ties.
We’re here because it’s important for us to convey the atmosphere. The atmosphere in the stands, when you shout at the top of your voice alongside people you’ve never met before. The atmosphere in the pub after the match, where arguments rage on until the early hours and then you’ll order another round because everyone is supporting their own team.

A game where nothing is left to chance

At first glance, it looks like chaos: someone tackling someone else, the ball flying back, whistles, roughhouse. But if you look closely, every move is meaningful.
The back-pass is the only way to advance as a team. The scrum is not just about strength, but about precise geometry, synchronisation and rhythm. One wrong step and the entire structure collapses. Here, it’s not the strongest who wins, but the one who understands the game better, who has confidence in the team around them, and who keeps a cool head even under pressure. Rugby isn’t “hit and run”. It’s a contest of speed and mud.

Predictions – a way to get a better look at the game

Some people think predictions are like playing the lottery. But if you’ve ever sat down and properly analysed why a team plays the way it does, you’ll never be able to watch a match “just like that” ever again. You start noticing things: who played yesterday and looked dominant, who has returned from injury, how the formation has changed. Predictions are not bets. They’re a way to feel the game on a different level. And if you understand this, it’s not about gambling, but about depth. Here, on this platform, this is how we do it: not as a way to win something, but as an opportunity to understand the sport better.

Competitions where legends are born

World championships, national leagues, European Cups – these are not just events on the calendar.
These are the moments people wait years for. These are the games people describe afterwards with ‘I saw it with my own eyes.’ This is where cultures collide: the French play with ease and elegance, the British with coldness and deliberation, and the New Zealanders like a hurricane that sweeps all before it. Competitions of this sort are not just about sport. They are places where respect is created. Even for your opponent. Especially for your opponent.