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New Zealand travel restrictions leave Bledisloe Cup, Rugby Championship in doubt

Australia and New Zealand Rugby will apply for a government exemption for players to move freely between the two countries for the Bledisloe Cup and Rugby Championship Tests after 'travel bubble' scrapped for eight weeks

(L-R) Beauden Barrett, Aaron Smith and Sam Cane of the All Blacks celebrate with the Bledisloe Cup
Image: Beauden Barrett, Aaron Smith and Sam Cane of the All Blacks celebrate with the Bledisloe Cup

New Zealand's decision to suspend quarantine-free travel with Australia due to COVID-19 has thrown next month's Bledisloe Cup and Rugby Championship into doubt.

New Zealand will pause its 'travel bubble' with Australia for at least eight weeks from Friday night, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said, as Australia fights an outbreak of the highly infectious Delta virus variant.

The Wallabies are due to play the Bledisloe Cup opener against the All Blacks at Eden Park on August 7 but would need to quarantine for two weeks upon arriving in New Zealand unless given an exemption.

The second Test at Perth Stadium, which doubles as the Rugby Championship's opener, follows on August 21 with the third and final Australia-New Zealand clash in Wellington on August 28.

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The New Zealand government offered some hope of a workaround for the first Test, announcing it would allow managed return flights for New Zealanders from all Australian states and territories over the next week.

The Wallabies could travel to New Zealand during the window courtesy of an "economic impact" exemption.

"If there are significant economic issues that are brought up by the closure in that seven-day window that can be resolved, then we have a delegated minister to work through any of those issues," Ardern said on Friday.

It will be harder for the Wallabies and All Blacks to head back to New Zealand from Perth for the third Test, however, with Ardern saying her government would not make exceptions outside the seven-day window.

South Africa and Argentina are scheduled to tour the trans-Tasman countries for Rugby Championship matches in September.

Rugby Australia, New Zealand Rugby and SANZAAR, the Rugby Championship's organisers, said they were reviewing their options.

"These are difficult times but SANZAAR is confident a solution can be found to ensure the 12-match tournament proceeds," the sport's southern hemisphere governing body said in a statement.

Australia hosted the entire Rugby Championship without South Africa last year, rebranding it the Tri-Nations, and organisers may be forced to find a similar one-country solution to save the test schedule

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