The Rugby World Cup 2027 draw is locked in, and it has already thrown up some mouth-watering clashes. To have a bit of fun, we fed the official 24-team draw into an AI simulator and asked it to predict who lifts the trophy in Australia. The results? Fascinating, controversial, and occasionally brutal.
Rugby World Cup 2027 AI Prediction: Pool Stage to Round of 16
The AI has things relatively straightforward in the pools. New Zealand top Pool A ahead of Australia, South Africa lead Pool B, Argentina head Pool C, and Ireland finish above Scotland in Pool D. France dominate Pool E, with Japan in second, while England edge Pool F with Wales behind them. The four best third-place qualifiers — Georgia, Samoa, Tonga, and Uruguay — also make the Round of 16.
The Round of 16 delivers some genuine drama. Fiji pull off the standout result, knocking out Wales 24-22 on the back of their offload game and superior ranking. Scotland fans, meanwhile, are sent home early as France — inspired by Antoine Dupont — see off Gregor Townsend’s side 27-21 in a thriller. New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland, Australia, England, Argentina, and France all progress, though the AI reckons some of those winning margins — particularly the All Blacks over Samoa and South Africa over Tonga — feel conservative.
Quarterfinals and Semifinals: All Blacks Exit, Ireland Make History
Here is where it gets genuinely electric. The quarterfinals serve up South Africa versus New Zealand — a World Cup classic by any measure. The Springboks edge the All Blacks 24-22 with a late penalty, grinding out yet another knockout win over their fiercest rivals. Bear in mind the two sides meet six times in the build-up to the tournament, including four Tests in South Africa during 2026. Australia, meanwhile, fall 23-18 to England, ending the hosts’ dream on home soil. Ireland dismantle Argentina 28-15, and France overcome Fiji 29-20.
The semifinals produce two cracking contests. South Africa squeeze past France 21-19 in a brutal, physical encounter, while Ireland make history — defeating England 26-20 to reach their first-ever Rugby World Cup final. For the Irish faithful, that alone would represent the greatest achievement in their rugby history.
As for the final itself, the AI gives it to South Africa 24-18 over Ireland, with a decisive try in the final quarter sealing a fifth World Cup title and an unprecedented third consecutive triumph for the Springboks. Ireland fight courageously but are undone by South Africa’s relentless forward power and clinical game management. In the third-place play-off, France beat England 27-20.
Of course, as any seasoned rugby watcher will tell you, World Cups have a habit of ripping up every script imaginable. These are AI predictions — entertaining, thought-provoking, and worth precisely nothing once the first whistle blows in Australia. For more on the blockbuster trans-Tasman opener, check out our piece on the All Blacks and Wallabies meeting at the 82,000-capacity Accor Stadium. Two years out — the hype is already very real.

























