Forget the Wallabies. A group of touring rugby players mostly from Canberra can land a World Cup blow before the official tournament begins in Japan this week.
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The Australia will play against New Zealand in the final of the Parliamentary Rugby World Cup on Thursday.
It's the perfect opportunity to get a psychological edge against the two-time defending world champion All Blacks and to give the Wallabies an Australian boost before their World Cup opener on Saturday.
Australia, or more affectionately known as the Wombats, has already beaten Argentina 19-0 and South Africa 24-12 to book its place in the final of the over-35s full contact competition.
Former Wallabies John Ross and Michael Martin are the coaches, with the team made up of current and former politicians, parliamentary staffers and security guards.
The competition was started to bring together the parliaments from England, Ireland, New Zealand, Japan, France, Argentina and Georgia, with the Australian side boasting MPs Keith Pitt, Luke Gosling and Graham Perrett.
The tournament was started and hosted by Nelson Mandela in 1995, but Pitt, Gosling and Perrett had to fly back to Canberra and will miss the final.
New Zealand has won the parliamentary trophy four times but the Australian side is the defending champion after winning in England four years ago.
The event wasn't without controversy, though. The scoring system in 2015 meant New Zealand had to beat France by 51 points to win the tournament, but the referee blew full-time early when they were leading by 46 points.