NEWCASTLE rugby fans will not get the chance to see the Wallabies live for at least 12 months after SANZAR was forced to move the Rugby Championship to Queensland due to the worsening COVID situation in lockdown.
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The Wallabies were scheduled to play Argentine at McDonald Jones Stadium on September 25 - they fought out a 15-all draw in the corresponding game last year..
However, Queensland will now host Rugby Championship games in a series of double-headers with matches to be played in Brisbane, Townsville and on the Gold Coast.
New Zealand are set to join the Wallabies in Perth for the final Bledisloe Cup match of 2021 before the remainder of the Rugby Championship is played in Queensland.
The All Blacks refused to leave New Zealand last week without the full schedule for the four-nation tournament locked away, bringing the relationship between the trans-Tasman rivals to a new low.
With the Wallabies already in Perth, Rugby Australia (RA) had sold 60,000 tickets to the match in a much-needed money spinner.
SANZAAR on Tuesday announced the dates and locations for the rest of the Rugby Championship after finally securing approval from the Queensland government for South Africa and Argentina teams to train while in quarantine.
The matches will be played as double-headers over four weekends, starting with Gold Coast on September 12 and then in Brisbane and Townsville before the final round back at Gold Coast's Cbus Super Stadium on October 2.
The Wallabies will take on South Africa, for the first time since the Springboks won the 2019 World Cup, on September 12 before a second showdown in Brisbane six days later.
The Centenary Test between the All Blacks and Springboks will be played at Queensland Country Bank Stadium in Townsville on September 25.
Rugby Australia boss Andy Marinos said Queensland was the "preferred position" by the SANZAAR alliance who signed off on the tournament Monday night.
He admitted that playing in Europe could have been more lucrative, but also more risky with the teams needing to sell tickets to nine games with little lead-in time.
"When we looked at the construct of the Rugby Championship this year, it was always going to be held between Australia and New Zealand and when New Zealand's position changed because of the COVID-19 outbreak, Australia remained the preferred option," Marinos said.
"So I think everyone just believed that we needed to close that loop before we looked at anything else."
Marinos said being unable to play games in New Zealand, particularly the Centenary Test, would mean a revenue hit while there would be additional costs around quarantine.
Marinos hoped to announce by Thursday the new date for the postponed Bledisloe Cup/Rugby Championship Test but it is set to be played in the WA capital over the weekend of September 3-5.
Rugby will work around the AFL final at Optus Stadium that weekend.
"I'm working quite closely with both the stadium and the Deputy Premier Roger Cook in trying to get finality... ," Marinos said.
"I think it's fair to say we'll look at that whole weekend and get the right date... the most important thing for me is to be able to put the Test match on and deliver a really good product for the people of Western Australia."
The All Blacks need to fly to Perth on Thursday with the WA government demanding seven days of soft quarantine before the match.
The Springboks and Pumas are set to arrive in Queensland by Friday from South Africa after playing their second Test there on the weekend.
The teams will be based at Sanctuary Cove on the Gold Coast during their 14-day managed quarantine and will have no contact with hotel workers, contractors and the general public.
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