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Cameroon national rugby league team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cameroon
Badge of Cameroon team
Team information
Governing bodyCameroon Rugby League XIII
RegionEurope
Head coachKhalil Njoya
IRL ranking37th
Team results
First international
 Cameroon 4 – 8 Morocco 
(Lagos, Nigeria; 2 October 2019)
Biggest defeat
 Nigeria 36 – 2 Cameroon 
(Accra, Ghana; 28 September 2022)

The Cameroon national rugby league team, known as the Indomitable Lions,[a] represent Cameroon in international rugby league football competition.

They made their debut in the 2019 Middle East Africa Championship in October 2019 with a 4-8 loss to Morocco[2] in Lagos, Nigeria, after travelling by bus for eight days to get there.[1]

As of September 2022 the Cameroon team is ranked 36th in the Rugby League International Federation world rankings.[3][1]

Most recent squad

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Squad for 2019 MEA Rugby League Championship, as of 20 September 2019:[4]

  • Armel Damdja
  • Bidjana Jean Claude
  • Nguele Hermand
  • Hamadou Moussa
  • Nanga Yannick Olama
  • Patrick Eugene Nkouak
  • Lamere Mfochive Oudi
  • Yannick Noah Simon
  • Tientcheu Nguekam Manuel
  • Moutcheu Jangue Raphael
  • Yohan C. Kwedi
  • Kallasi Nguiagueu Arnaud
  • Embella Mouhamed
  • Christian T. Pegou
  • Bekolo Elie
  • Watio Franck
  • Fabrice Yepmo Joufang
  • Fosso Ledoux
  • Arnaud Ndjeng
  • Akoa Akoa Jean Marc
  • Ngoufack Geordane
  • Kuate Talom Steve

Competitive record

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Results

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  Win   Draw   Loss

Date Home Result Away Competition Venue Crowd
1 2 October 2019  Cameroon 4–8  Morocco 2019 MEA Championship Nigeria Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos
2 5 October 2019  Ghana 10–4  Cameroon Nigeria Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos
3 28 September 2022  Nigeria 36–2  Cameroon 2022 MEA Championship GhanaUniversity of Ghana stadium, Legon Accra
4 1 October 2022  Cameroon 0–16  Kenya

IRL Rankings

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Official rankings as of 30 June 2024
Rank Change Team Pts %
1 Steady  Australia 100
2 Steady  New Zealand 82
3 Steady  England 80
4 Steady  Samoa 67
5 Steady  Tonga 49
6 Increase 1  Fiji 49
7 Decrease 1  Papua New Guinea 47
8 Steady  France 28
9 Steady  Lebanon 22
10 Steady  Cook Islands 20
11 Steady  Serbia 19
12 Steady  Netherlands 17
13 Steady  Italy 15
14 Increase 1  Greece 15
15 Decrease 1  Malta 14
16 Steady  Ireland 14
17 Steady  Wales 13
18 Steady  Jamaica 10
19 Steady  Scotland 9
20 Steady  Ukraine 7
21 Steady  Czech Republic 7
22 Steady  Germany 6
23 Increase 3  Chile 6
24 Steady  Poland 6
25 Increase 3  Norway 6
26 Increase 1  Kenya 5
27 Decrease 4  Philippines 5
28 Decrease 3  South Africa 4
29 Steady  Nigeria 4
30 Steady  Ghana 4
31 Increase 2  United States 4
32 Increase 4  Montenegro 4
33 Decrease 2  Brazil 3
34 Decrease 2  Turkey 3
35 Increase 7  North Macedonia 3
36 Decrease 2  Bulgaria 3
37 Decrease 2  Cameroon 2
38 Decrease 1  Spain 2
39 Decrease 1  Japan 1
40 Decrease 1  Albania 1
41 Increase 5  Canada 1
42 Decrease 2  Colombia 1
43 Decrease 2  El Salvador 1
44 Decrease 1  Morocco 1
45 New entry  Russia 0
46 Decrease 2  Sweden 0
47 Decrease 2  Bosnia and Herzegovina 0
48 Increase 2  Hungary 0
49 Increase 3  Argentina 0
50 New entry  Hong Kong 0
51 Decrease 3  Solomon Islands 0
52 Decrease 5  Niue 0
53 Increase 1  Latvia 0
54 Decrease 1  Denmark 0
55 Decrease 6  Belgium 0
56 Decrease 1  Estonia 0
57 Decrease 6  Vanuatu 0
Complete rankings at INTRL.SPORT

Notes

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  1. ^ Most of the national sporting teams in Cameroon go by this name, including the Cameroon national football team.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Campton, Nick (5 September 2022). "The last hunt of Carol Manga, rugby league's indomitable lion of Cameroon". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  2. ^ "2nd MEA Rugby league Championship:Debutants Nigeria see off Ghana to set up Morocco final (audio)". Azu Emeh busybuddiesng.com. 3 October 2019. Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2019.
  3. ^ "World Rankings". Rugby League International Federation. Archived from the original on 5 September 2022. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  4. ^ "Cameroon announce 22 man squad for MEA Championship". RLIF. 20 September 2019. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2019.