Need to know
Wales play the Barbarians in the capital of England today, rather than the Principality Stadium
Why Wales v Barbarians is being played at Twickenham rather than Cardiff’s Principality Stadium – the reasons
Here are the key points:
- Barbarians tradition: The Barbarians regularly play “home” fixtures at neutral or alternative venues, with Twickenham a long-established host for showcase matches. This game is classed as a Barbarians home fixture
- Stadium availability: The Principality Stadium is unavailable due to scheduling clashes with other major events, ruling it out as a host venue for the fixture. Metallica are due to play a huge concert at the venue on Sunday
- Venue choice: The match has instead been moved to Twickenham (Allianz Stadium), which is available and capable of staging a high-profile international double-header
- Low crowd: The match has not proved to be a big seller with a crowd of just 20,000 expected at the 82,000-seater venue
- Double-header: The event will also feature Wales’ women’s side, with organisers keen to stage both fixtures on the same day at a single major venue. The men’s match kicks off at 2pm, followed by the women at 5pm
- Commercial factor: Hosting the game in London is seen as a stronger commercial opportunity, with higher potential matchday revenue compared to other venues away from the Principality for a non-cap fixture.
- Supporter base: A significant Welsh diaspora in London is expected to boost attendance, alongside neutral rugby fans attracted by the Barbarians’ brand of rugby.
- George North factor: Wales legend George North is set to play the final match of his career for the Barbarians against his own country. North has been named on the bench.

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