England are one win away from the 2023 Rugby World Cup final after beating Fiji in a lively quarter-final to reach the final four.
Owen Farrell’s drop-goal and a penalty in the final 10 minutes sealed victory after Fiji had pulled level with Steve Borthwick’s team.
They will face South Africa after the defending champions ended the hosts’ World Cup party with a one-point win in Paris.
Earlier on Saturday, New Zealand withstood three comebacks from top-ranked Ireland, plus two yellow cards, to win a gripping Rugby World Cup quarter-final 28-24 and stay on course for a record fourth title.
The All Blacks come back to Stade de France to meet Argentina next Friday, after the Pumas rallied to beat Wales 29-17 in Marseille.
How do I watch the Rugby World Cup on TV?
ITV have the exclusive broadcast rights in the UK. The channel for each match is listed below (all the knockout fixtures are on ITV1). You can read our guide to the 12 best pundits and commentators working at the tournament.
The radio commentary of every match is available only on the BBC, across Radio 5 Live, 5 Sports Extra and the BBC Sounds service.
In the US, the tournament is being shown on NBC Sports. In South Africa the TV coverage is on SuperSport.
Rugby World Cup 2023 full fixtures and schedule
All matches on ITV1
Semi-finals
Bronze medal match
- Friday, Oct 27 – Stade de France, 8pm
- Saturday, Oct 28 – Stade de France, 8pm
Pool-stage results in full
- Friday, Sept 8 – France 27 New Zealand 13
- Saturday, Sept 9 – Italy 52 Namibia 8
- Saturday, Sept 9 – Ireland 82 Romania 8
- Saturday, Sept 9 – Australia 35 Georgia 15
- Saturday, Sept 9 – England 27 Argentina 10
- Sunday, Sept 10 – Japan 42 Chile 12
- Sunday, Sept 10 – South Africa 18 Scotland 3
- Sunday, Sept 10 – Wales 32 Fiji 26
- Thursday, Sept 14 – France 27 Uruguay 12
- Friday, Sept 15 – New Zealand 71 Namibia 3
- Saturday, Sept 16 – Samoa 43 Chile 10
- Saturday, Sept 16 – Wales 28 Portugal 8
- Saturday, Sept 16 – Ireland 59 Tonga 16
- Sunday, Sept 17 – South Africa 76 Romania 0
- Sunday, Sept 17 – Australia 15 v Fiji 22
- Sunday, Sept 17 – England 34 Japan 12
- Wednesday, Sept 20 – Italy 38 Uruguay 17
- Thursday, Sept 21 – France 96 Namibia 0
- Friday, Sept 22 – Argentina 19 Samoa 10
- Saturday, Sept 23 – Georgia 18 Portugal 18
- Saturday, Sept 23 – England 71 Chile 0
- Saturday, Sept 23 – South Africa 8 Ireland 13
- Sunday, Sept 24 – Scotland 45 Tonga 17
- Sunday, Sept 24 – Wales 40 Australia 6
- Wednesday, Sept 27 – Uruguay 36 Namibia 26
- Thursday, Sept 28 – Japan 28 Samoa 22
- Friday, Sept 29 – New Zealand 96 Italy 17
- Saturday, Sept 30 – Argentina 59 Chile 5
- Saturday, Sept 30 – Fiji 17 Georgia 12
- Saturday, Sept 30 – Scotland 84 Romania 0
- Sunday, Oct 1 – Australia 34 Portugal 14
- Sunday, Oct 1 – South Africa 49 Tonga 18
- Thursday, Oct 5 – New Zealand 73 Uruguay 0
- Friday, Oct 6 – France 60 Italy 7
- Saturday, Oct 7 – Wales 43 Georgia 19
- Saturday, Oct 7 – England 18 Samoa 17
- Saturday, Oct 7 – Ireland 36 Scotland 14
- Sunday, Oct 8 – Japan 27 Argentina 39
- Sunday, Oct 8 – Tonga 45 Romania 24
- Sunday, Oct 8 – Fiji 23 Portugal 24
Quarter-finals results in full
Where is the Rugby World Cup taking place?
The 2023 Rugby World Cup is being played in France across nine stadiums in nine cities. The final will be played at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis (Paris).
- Stade de France (capacity 80,698) – Saint-Denis, Paris
- Stade de Marseille (67,394) – Marseille
- OL Stadium (59,186) – Lyon
- Stade Pierre-Mauroy (50,186) – Lille
- Stade de Bordeaux (42,115) – Bordeaux
- Stade Geoffroy-Guichard (41,965) – Saint-Étienne
- Stade de Nice (35,624) – Nice
- Stade de la Beaujoire (35,322) – Nantes
- Stade de Toulouse (33,150) – Toulouse
Who is playing?
A total of 20 teams qualified for the Rugby World Cup. These teams were split into four pools of five, with each pool getting one team from five ‘bands’.
Band one featured the four highest-ranked teams from when the draw for the tournament was made back in 2019 (South Africa, New Zealand, England, Wales). Band two comprised the next four highest-ranked teams (Ireland, Australia, France, Japan) and band three the four after that (Scotland, Argentina, Fiji, Italy).
Each side in the first three bands qualified automatically for the tournament owing to their world ranking, while the further two bands comprised the sides who had made it into the tournament via qualifying (Samoa, Georgia, Uruguay, Tonga, Namibia, Romania, Chile, Portugal).
Argentina and New Zealand have qualified for the semi-finals. England play Fiji and France take on South Africa today for a chance to join them.