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Women's Rugby World Cup | Wikipedia audio article

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This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_Rugby_World_Cup


00:01:09 1 History
00:01:18 1.1 1990s
00:03:21 1.2 2000–present
00:04:33 2 Results
00:04:42 2.1 Tournaments
00:04:50 2.2 Participating nations
00:05:00 3 Format
00:05:48 4 Media coverage
00:07:05 5 See also



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Speaking Rate: 0.9369323902916091
Voice name: en-US-Wavenet-D


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SUMMARY
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The Women's Rugby World Cup is the premier international competition in rugby union for women. The tournament is organised by the sport's governing body, World Rugby. The championships are currently held every four years; the event was most recently held in Ireland in 2017. World Rugby has reset the tournament on a new four-year cycle to avoid conflict with the Olympics and Women's World Cup Sevens; World Cups will thus be held every four years after 2017.The first Women's Rugby World Cup was held in 1991 and won by the United States. The 1991 and 1994 competitions were not officially sanctioned by World Rugby, then known as the International Rugby Football Board, at the time - they later received retrospective endorsement in 2009 when the governing body included the 1991 and 1994 champions in its list of previous winners. It was not until the 1998 tournament held in the Netherlands that the tournament received official IRB backing. The most successful team, with five titles, is New Zealand.

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