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Fiji national rugby league team

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Fiji
Badge of Fiji team
Team information
NicknameFiji Bati
Governing bodyFiji National Rugby League
RegionAsia-Pacific
Head coachWise Kativerata
CaptainTui Kamikamica
Most capsKevin Naiqama (25)
Top try-scorerAkuila Uate (14)
Top point-scorerWes Naiqama (132)
Home stadiumNational Stadium
IRL ranking7th
Uniforms
First colours
Team results
First international
Samoa Western Samoa 32–18 Fiji 
(Apia, Samoa; 1992)
Biggest win
 Fiji 72–6 Wales 
(Townsville, Australia; 5 November 2017)
Biggest defeat
 Australia 84–14 Fiji 
(Marathon Stadium, Newcastle; 12 July 1994)
World Cup
Appearances5 (first time in 1995)
Best resultBronze Semifinals (2008, 2013, 2017)

The Fiji national rugby league team, nicknamed the Bati (pronounced [mˈbatʃi]), has been participating in international rugby league football since 1992. The team is controlled by the governing body for rugby league in Fiji, Fiji National Rugby League (FNRL), which is currently a member of the Asia-Pacific Rugby League Confederation (APRLC). Fiji have thrice reached the semi-finals of the Rugby League World Cup, in 2008, 2013 and 2017, and are currently ranked 6th in the International Rugby League's World Rankings. They are coached by Fijian Wise Kativerata, and their captain is Tui Kamikamica. The team will typically perform the hymn "Noqu Masu" before each match, singing in unison.[1]

History

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1990s

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The game was introduced to Fiji only in 1992 but despite this there has been a long history of Fijian players making their mark in rugby league, most notably back in the 1960s when great players such as Joe Levula and Laitia Ravouvou joined Rochdale Hornets and became household names in the English competition.

Interest and participation in rugby league snowballed throughout Fiji, and as well as continued success in the Rugby League World Sevens, the Batis began playing full 13-aside games against international teams. By 1994, Fiji had hammered the Great Britain amateurs 40–8 and, captained by mighty front-rower James Pickering, beat France 20–12.[2]

They had also produced their first rugby league superstar after winger Noa Nadruku joined Canberra Raiders and in 1993 became the top try-scorer in the Australian competition.

Fiji took part in their first World Cup in 1995 where, just as the 2000 World Cup, they had the misfortune to be placed in the same group as both England and Australia. But the Batis made a massive impression in their opening World Cup game in which they ran riot against South Africa, 52–6, and had the crowd on their feet at Keighley.

During the Super League war, Fiji, like most countries other countries, aligned itself with Super League. In search of international competition, the Australian Rugby League played a match against a "National Rugby League of Fiji" team in 1996. This match has been granted Test status by the ARL, but not by the Rugby League International Federation.

2000s

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Coached by Don Furner, Sr. and captained by Lote Tuqiri, Fiji competed in the 2000 World Cup but did not progress past the tournament's group stage.

The Fiji Bati qualified for the 2008 Rugby League World Cup held in Australia after finishing second in Pacific qualifying behind Tonga. Fiji's qualification campaign started with a thrilling 30–28 loss to Samoa before reversing the scoreline a few days later with a 30–28 win over the Tongans. Fiji won their final qualifying game against Cook Islands 40–4. Having qualified the Vodafone Fiji Bati team started their Rugby League World Cup 2008 campaign with 42–6 win over France followed by a 2-point defeat to Scotland, however they topped their group with a superior points difference. Beating Ireland in their quarter final they came within one match of the World Cup final, but were defeated by Australia, ending the tournament in 4th place.

2010s

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Fiji vs Samoa at the 2013 Rugby League World Cup

Fiji automatically qualified for the 2013 Rugby League World Cup after participating in the 2008 tournament. They took on Australia, England and Ireland in the pool stage. In their first match they took on 'the Wolfhounds'. They played at the famous Spotland Stadium, in Rochdale, where Fiji have an historic affiliation with. The Fijians convincingly won by a score of 32–14. As expected Fiji lost to both Australia and England, although they surprised many, as they only conceded 34 points against the teams in each game and they led 2–0 against Australia, and were within a few minutes of taking a half-time lead against England. Fiji would take on 'fierce Pacific rivals' Samoa in the quarter-final. They won the, passionate pacific, fixture and they would celebrate with a 22–4 victory. They celebrated even more, as it meant Fiji reached their second consecutive World Cup semi-final. They took on Australia again, but this game was nothing like the group stage fixture. Fiji's errors conceded them 62 points against a classy Australian side. This defeat ended and equalled their best World Cup campaign in their history.

In May 2014, Fiji took on Samoa in the 2014 Pacific Rugby League Test at Penrith Stadium. The International was created as a qualifier for the final 2014 Four Nations spot. It was also a chance for the Four Nations team (winner of this international) to warm-up before the event kicked off later in the year. Fiji failed to qualify with their fierce pacific rivals getting the better of them by 32–16.

In May 2015, Fiji took on Papua New Guinea in the 2015 Melanesian Cup test at Cbus Super Stadium. Fiji won the match and the inaugural Melanesian Cup title.[3] Fiji never looked like losing the match after an easy first half performance, leading 18-0 at the break. They went on to win the test match by 22–10.

In May 2016, Fiji took on Papua New Guinea in the 2016 Melanesian Cup test at Pirtek Stadium. Fiji had a similar situation in this year's Melanesian Cup with a half-time score of 16–8 but this time around they conceded too many second half points allowing the Kumuls to make a shock comeback and win the match 24–22.

In the 2017 Rugby League World Cup in New Zealand & Australia, Fiji topped Group D before recording their biggest upset victory, defeating New Zealand 4–2 in the quarter-finals. They then lost to Australia 54–6 in the semi-finals.

2020s

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Fiji automatically qualified for the 2021 Rugby League World Cup having reached the semi-finals of the previous Rugby League World Cup. The 2021 tournament will take place in England.

Kit

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Primary
1992–1995
1995 World Cup
2008 World Cup

Kit suppliers and sponsors

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Period Kit provider Sponsor on front of shirt Sponsor on top of back of shirt Sponsor on sleeves
2024–present Australia Dynasty Sport Sky Sport

Players

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Current squad

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A squad of 25 players selected for the 2025 Pacific Championships was announced on 3 October 2025 on social media.[4] On 9 October, a revised squad of 20 players was announced.[5][6]

Jersey numbers in the table reflect team selection for the Round 3 match versus PNG Kumuls

Statistics in the table are drawn from the website, Rugby League Project. They include the match versus the PNG Kumuls on 1 November 2025.

J# Player Age Position(s) Fiji Bati Club Club Matches
Dbt M T G F P Tier 1 Tier 2
1 Jahream Bula 23 Fullback 2023 5 5 0 0 20 Wests Tigers 57 3
2 Sunia Turuva 23 Wing, Fullback 2022 10 5 0 0 20 Wests Tigers 76 33
3 Jope Rauqe Centre 2025 1 0 0 0 0 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 0 0
4 Semi Valemei 26 Centre, Wing 2022 10 5 0 0 20 North Queensland Cowboys 46 35
5 Ronald Philitoga 24 Wing 2025 1 0 0 0 0 Wynnum Manly Seagulls 0 27
6 Kurt Donoghoe 23 Five-eighth, Lock 2023 7 3 0 0 12 Dolphins (NRL) 40 24
7 Brandon Wakeham 26 Halfback 2019 13 1 50 1 105 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles 40 75
8 Tui Kamikamica 31 Prop 2016 24 3 0 0 12 Melbourne Storm 138 72
9 Penioni Tagituimua 26 Hooker 2019 16 2 0 0 8 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 0 10
17 Kylan Mafoa Prop 2024 3 0 0 0 0 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles 0 7
11 Taane Milne 30 Second-row, Centre 2017 17 4 16 0 48 Huddersfield Giants 109 73
12 Kitione Kautoga 23 Second-row 2023 6 4 0 0 16 Parramatta Eels 18 40
13 Caleb Navale 22 Lock, Second-row 2023 7 2 0 0 8 Manly Warringah Sea Eagles 9 29
14 Terrell Kalokalo 22 Fullback, Wing 2025 2 0 0 0 0 South Sydney Rabbitohs 0 10
15 Solomone Saukuru 20 Centre 2025 2 2 0 0 8 Wests Tigers 0 0
16 Ben Nakubuwai 29 Prop, Second-row 2016 17 5 0 0 20 Norths Devils 62 80
19 Keresi Maya Lock 2025 2 0 0 0 0 Fiji Navy Albatross 0 0
19 Akuila Qoro Second-row 0 0 0 0 0 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 0 0
10 Michael Waqa 20 Prop 2025 1 0 0 0 0 Brisbane Broncos 0 7
20 Gabriel Tunimakubu Prop 0 0 0 0 0 Kaiviti Silktails 0 0
Michael Jennings 37 Centre 2024 3 3 0 0 12 St Marys Saints 307 6
IJ Jethro Rinakama 19 Wing 2025 1 0 0 0 0 Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 6 14

Notes:

Records

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  • Bold- denotes that the player is still active.

Most capped players

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# Name Career Caps
1 Kevin Naiqama 2009-2022 25
2 Akuila Uate 2006-2018 18
3 Apisai Koroisau 2013-2022 17
Tui Kamikamica 2016-2022 17
Eloni Vunakece 2007-2018 17
6 Viliame Kikau 2015-2022 16
Junior Roqica 2011-2019 16
8 Ashton Sims 2008-2017 15
9 Wes Naiqama 2006-2014 14
James Storer 2008-2017 14
Ben Nakubuwai 2016-2022 14

Top try scorers

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# Name Career Tries
1 Akuila Uate 2006-2018 14
2 Suliasi Vunivalu 2017-2019 12
3 Viliame Kikau 2015-2022 11
4 Kevin Naiqama 2009-2022 10
5 Jarryd Hayne 2008, 2017-2018 8

Top points scorers

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# Name Career Points Tries Goals Field Goals
1 Wes Naiqama 2006-2014 132 7 52 0
2 Brandon Wakeham 2019-2022 66 1 31 0
3 Akuila Uate 2006-2018 56 14 0 0
4 Suliasi Vunivalu 2017-2019 50 12 1 0
5 Apisai Koroisau 2013-2022 46 1 21 0

Competitive record

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The table below shows Fiji's all-time international rugby league record as of 21 October 2024.[10] They have been participating in International fixtures since 1992.[11]

Country Matches Won Drawn Lost Win % For Aga Diff
 American Samoa 1 1 0 0 100% 16 14 +2
 Australia 7 0 0 7 0% 24 378 –354
Australian Aboriginies 1 1 0 0 100% 21 20 +1
 Canada 1 1 0 0 100% 26 12 +14
 Cook Islands 15 9 1 5 60% 449 251 +198
 England 3 0 0 3 0% 22 146 –124
England England Knights 1 1 0 0 100% 44 8 +36
 France 2 2 0 0 100% 62 18 +44
 Great Britain 1 0 0 1 0% 4 72 –68
 Ireland 2 2 0 0 100% 62 28 +34
 Italy 2 2 0 0 100% 98 14 +84
 Lebanon 4 2 0 2 50% 118 118 0
 Māori 1 0 0 1 0% 12 32 –20
 New Zealand 2 1 0 1 50% 22 26 -4
New Zealand New Zealand Residents 1 1 0 0 100% 34 16 +18
 Niue 2 1 0 1 50% 34 38 –4
 Papua New Guinea 16 5 0 11 31.25% 261 375 –114
Rotuma Rotuma 1 1 0 0 100% 32 12 +20
 Russia 1 1 0 0 100% 38 12 +26
 Samoa 12 8 0 4 66.67% 274 184 +90
 Scotland 2 1 0 1 50% 46 32 +14
 South Africa 1 1 0 0 100% 52 6 +46
 Tonga 13 5 1 7 38.46% 221 296 –75
 United States 1 1 0 0 100% 58 12 +46
 Wales 1 1 0 0 100% 72 6 +66
Total 94 48 2 44 51.06% 2,102 2,126 –24

Rugby League World Cup

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World Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L D
England 1995 Group stage 6/10 3 1 2 0
EnglandFranceIrelandScotlandWales 2000 Group stage 12/16 3 1 2 0
Australia 2008 Semi-finals 4/10 4 2 2 0
EnglandWales 2013 Semi-finals 4/14 5 2 3 0
AustraliaNew ZealandPapua New Guinea 2017 Semi-finals 4/14 5 4 1 0
England 2021 Quarter-Finals 6/16 4 2 2 0
AustraliaPapua New Guinea 2026 qualified
Total 0 Titles 4/13 24 12 12 0

Four Nations

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Four Nations record
Year Round Position GP W L D
EnglandFrance 2009 Not Invited
AustraliaNew Zealand 2010 Failed to Qualify
EnglandWales 2011 Not Invited
AustraliaNew Zealand 2014 Failed to Qualify
England 2016 Not Invited
Total 0 Titles 0/5 0 0 3 0

Pacific Cup

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Pacific Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L D
New Zealand 1992 Group stage 9/10 4 1 3 0
Fiji 1994 Second Place 2/10 6 4 2 0
New Zealand 1997 Group stage 5/6 3 0 2 1
New Zealand 2004 Group stage 4/6 2 1 1 0
New Zealand 2006 Second Place 2/6 3 2 1 0
Papua New Guinea 2009 Semi-finals 3/5 2 1 1 0
Total 0 Titles 6/12 20 9 10 1

Margins and streaks

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Biggest winning margins

Margin Score Opponent Venue Date
66 72–6 Wales 1300SMILES Stadium 5 Nov 2017
56 60–4 Italy Kingston Park 22 Oct 2022
52 58–6 Cook Islands Carlaw 26 Oct 1992
50 56–6 Cook Islands HFC Bank Stadium 26 Oct 2024
46 58–12 United States 1300SMILES Stadium 28 Oct 2017
44 58–14 Lebanon Leichhardt Oval 22 June 2019
36 42–6 France WIN Stadium 1 Nov 2008

Biggest losing margins

Margin Score Opponent Venue Date
66 0–66 Australia Alfred McAlpine Stadium 14 Oct 1995
64 0–64 Australia Wembley Stadium 23 Nov 2013
52 0–52 Australia Aussie Stadium 16 Nov 2008
50 0–50 England AJ Bell 7 Oct 2022
48 6–54 Australia Suncorp Stadium 23 Nov 2017

IRL Rankings

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Official rankings as of December 2025
Rank Change Team Pts %
1 Steady  Australia 100
2 Steady  New Zealand 82
3 Steady  England 74
4 Steady  Samoa 56
5 Steady  Tonga 54
6 Steady  Papua New Guinea 47
7 Steady  Fiji 34
8 Steady  France 24
9 Steady  Cook Islands 24
10 Steady  Serbia 23
11 Steady  Netherlands 22
12 Steady  Ukraine 21
13 Steady  Wales 18
14 Steady  Ireland 17
15 Steady  Greece 15
16 Steady  Malta 15
17 Steady  Italy 11
18 Steady  Jamaica 9
19 Increase 1  Poland 7
20 Increase 1  Lebanon 7
21 Increase 1  Norway 7
22 Decrease 3  United States 7
23 Steady  Germany 7
24 Steady  Czech Republic 6
25 Steady  Chile 6
26 Increase 1  Philippines 5
27 Increase 1  Scotland 5
28 Decrease 2  South Africa 5
29 Increase 1  Canada 5
30 Decrease 1  Brazil 3
31 Increase 1  Morocco 3
32 Increase 1  North Macedonia 3
33 Increase 1  Argentina 3
34 Increase 1  Montenegro 3
35 Increase 4  Ghana 2
36 Decrease 5  Kenya 2
37 Increase 3  Nigeria 2
38 Decrease 2  Albania 1
39 Decrease 2  Turkey 1
40 Decrease 2  Bulgaria 1
41 Increase 1  Cameroon 0
42 Increase 1  Japan 0
43 Increase 1  Spain 0
44 Decrease 3  Colombia 0
45 Steady  Russia 0
46 Steady  El Salvador 0
47 Steady  Bosnia and Herzegovina 0
48 Steady  Hong Kong 0
49 Steady  Solomon Islands 0
50 Steady  Vanuatu 0
51 Steady  Hungary 0
52 Steady  Latvia 0
53 Steady  Denmark 0
54 Steady  Belgium 0
55 Steady  Estonia 0
56 Steady  Sweden 0
57 Steady  Niue 0
Complete rankings at
www.internationalrugbyleague.com

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "NOQU MASU - Fiji Bati's Pre Game Hymn — thecoconet.tv - the world's largest hub of Pacific Island content.uu".
  2. ^ "Historic win for Bati". Fiji Times. 28 January 2022. p. 6 – via PressReader.
  3. ^ "Fiji vs. PNG 2015 Melanesian Cup". Nrl.com. 2 May 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  4. ^ "Fiji Bati - Pacific Championships 2025". facebook. FNRL. 3 Oct 2025. Retrieved 5 Oct 2025.
  5. ^ a b "Kamikamica to lead Bati at Pacific Championships". NRL. 9 Oct 2025. Retrieved 9 Oct 2025.
  6. ^ a b "Locked In". facebook. FNRL. 9 Oct 2025. Retrieved 9 Oct 2025.
  7. ^ "Kangaroos squad for Ashes Tour". NRL. 6 Oct 2025. Retrieved 6 Oct 2025.
  8. ^ Basiyalo, Taina (12 Oct 2025). "Silktails skipper gets Fiji Bati call up". FBC News. Retrieved 14 Oct 2025.
  9. ^ "Pacific Championships Team Lists: Week 1". NRL. 14 Oct 2025. Retrieved 14 Oct 2025.
  10. ^ "Head to Head". Rugby League Project. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
  11. ^ "Fiji Head to Head". rugbyleagueproject. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
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