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FRIDAY FEATURE: World rugby rankings explained – why Ireland are above France and who is really the best in the world?

Louis Bielle-Biarrey scores a try during France's 2026 Six Nations 36-14 win over Ireland on February 5, 2026.
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The latest World Rugby men’s rankings have caused confusion among Six Nations fans.

How have France dropped a place despite remaining unbeaten? And why are Ireland ranked above them – even after losing to Les Bleus earlier in the championship?

The answer lies in understanding the difference between a tournament table and a global ranking system – and it also raises a bigger question: on pure form, who is actually the best rugby nation in the world right now?


The current top of the world rankings

As of late February 2026, the top five looks like this:

1️⃣ South Africa – 93.94
2️⃣ New Zealand – 90.33
3️⃣ Ireland – 88.89
4️⃣ France – 88.40
5️⃣ England – 85.62

The margins are incredibly tight. Ireland sit just 0.49 rating points ahead of France – a tiny difference in ranking terms.


Why did France drop a place?

France remain unbeaten in the Six Nations Championship, so how can they fall?

Because the rankings do not operate like league standings….

1️⃣ It’s a Points Exchange System

World Rugby uses a mathematical rating system. After every Test match:

  • Points are transferred between teams.
  • The amount depends on opponent strength.
  • Home advantage (worth +3 rating points) is factored in.
  • Larger margins (15+ points) slightly increase exchanges.
  • Rugby World Cup matches are weighted double.

It’s not about ‘wins = automatic rise.’ It’s about the value of each win.


2️⃣ Expected Wins equals smaller gains

France’s win over Italy produced only a modest increase because:

  • France were heavily favoured.
  • The match was at home.
  • Italy are ranked lower.

When a higher-ranked team beats a lower-ranked opponent at home, the points swing is minimal.


Why Ireland moved above France

Ireland’s ranking rise came from a high-impact result.

Their emphatic away victory over England was mathematically more valuable because:

  • England are highly-ranked.
  • The match was played away from home.
  • Away wins generate larger point transfers.

Even though Ireland lost to France earlier in the tournament, their overall rating gain from beating England outweighed France’s modest gains from expected wins.

Rankings measure cumulative strength – not just head-to-head results.


Other teams on the move

Rising

  • Scotland climbed to seventh after an important away win in Cardiff.
  • Portugal continued their steady rise thanks to strong Rugby Europe performances.

Slipping

  • England dropped after losing ranking points to Ireland.
  • France fell one place despite winning.
  • Australia and Fiji slipped due to European movement above them.
  • Wales dropped following a home defeat.

Rankings vs reality: why it feels confusing

Fans naturally think: ‘France beat Ireland – so France must be better.’ But rankings don’t work on single-match logic. They reflect:

  • Long-term consistency.
  • Quality of opposition.
  • Match location.
  • Margin of victory.
  • Recent performance weighted mathematically.

That’s why:

  • France can lead the Six Nations.
  • Ireland can sit above them globally.
  • South Africa and New Zealand remain clear at the summit despite not playing in the Six Nations.

So… who is actually the best team in the world right now?

If we step away from the maths and look purely at form, depth, physical dominance and big-game pedigree, one nation still sets the benchmark: South Africa.

The Springboks remain the most complete side in world rugby:

  • Back-to-back Rugby World Cup winners (2019 & 2023).
  • Deepest forward pack in the game.
  • Tactical adaptability.
  • Proven knockout temperament.

On form and in pressure matches, they remain the team everyone must beat.


The challengers

New Zealand

The All Blacks are never far away. Their attacking threat and evolving forward game make them constant contenders.

Ireland

Consistent, tactically sharp and improving under pressure. The question remains whether they can translate form into World Cup knockout success.

France

Explosive, powerful and currently unbeaten in the Six Nations. When they click, they look unstoppable.

England

Physically strong and structured – capable of grinding out tournament rugby.


Who are the favourites for the 2027 Rugby World Cup?

The 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia already has a clear group of leading contenders.

Tier One Favourites

  • South Africa
  • New Zealand
  • Ireland
  • France

Outside Contenders

  • England
  • Argentina
  • Australia (home advantage could be huge)

Right now, if the tournament started tomorrow, most analysts would still place South Africa marginally ahead – because of proven World Cup pedigree.

But Ireland and France are arguably closer to peak cycle form.


The bigger picture

The Six Nations often reshapes the rankings because top-tier teams are constantly facing one another. High-level, away victories carry enormous ranking weight.

That’s why small margins – sometimes less than half a rating point – can determine third and fourth in the world.

But rankings don’t always answer the emotional question fans really want answered: who would win a World Cup final tomorrow?

Based on form, squad depth and knockout history – South Africa remain the benchmark.

Looking at attacking momentum – France look electric.

Based on tactical cohesion – Ireland are relentless.

And based on history – never write off New Zealand.


Conclusion

France’s unbeaten run tells one story. The World Rugby rankings tell another.

The rankings reward context over headlines. Ireland’s high-value away victory generated more mathematical impact than France’s expected wins – and that’s enough to separate third and fourth in the world.

But when it comes to 2027 in Australia, the race is wide open.

Right now, South Africa are still the team to beat.

By 2027? That battle may come down to whichever of Ireland, France or New Zealand learns how to peak at precisely the right time.

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