North v South - the battle for global supremacy is tighter than ever - Published The scoreline is emphatic: 9-1 and counting. When it comes to Rugby World Cups, nine of the 10 have been lifted by southern hemisphere hands. Only Jonny Wilkinson's extra-time drop-goal for England in the 2003 final stands between the south and a clean sweep of global glory.

So, a new Test competition pitting one half of the globe against the other will be long-haul, but intrigue-short. Won't it? Perhaps not.

The Nations Championship, which begins this weekend, might be a concept arriving at the perfect time. What is the Nations Championship? First, a quick recap.

The Nations Championship pits the northern hemisphere teams who compete in the Six Nations - England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, France and Italy - against southern hemisphere giants South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina, plus invited sides Fiji and Japan. The geographically observant will note that Japan is actually about 2,500 miles north of the equator, so doesn't sit in the southern hemisphere. But the sport is rolling with it, somewhat in the spirit of Australia's participation in Eurovision.

All teams will play each of the six in the opposing hemisphere once, with three rounds of fixtures staged in July and another three in November. Their results will rank the teams within their own hemisphere, from one to six. On the final weekend in November, there is a three-day play-off event staged at Allianz Stadium in Twickenham.

The sixth-placed team in the northern hemisphere plays off against the equivalent in the southern hemisphere standings and so on, culminating in the two top-ranked sides taking each other on. The winner of that final match is crowned the inaugural Nations Championship winner. However, there is also a parallel, Ryder-Cup style hemisphere title.

The winner of each of the matches on the play-offs weekend will earn one point for their hemisphere, except for the contest between the two top-ranked teams which delivers two. The first hemisphere to earn four points over the weekend will be crowned winners. Southern supremacy challenged For the vast majority of the past 120 years, the southern hemisphere sides have been rugby's jet set.

They have won nearly 57% of the 1,062 Tests between the two groups over more than 125 years of action. That win rate has fluctuated over time though. Initial dominance in Test rugby's early days weakened with fixtures drying up for South Africa, one of the south's powerhouse sides, as rugby, fitfully, joined the rest of the world in a boycott of its apartheid political regime.

Fiji and Japan, who played their first Tests against top northern hemisphere teams in 1964 and 1971, struggled for victories in those initial encounters. However, South Africa's return to international action and the south's more ardent adoption of professionalism widened their advantage over the north, with a generational New Zealand side winning more than 91% of their meetings with Six Nations opposition in the first decade of the new millennium. Things have been tighter in recent years though.

In fact, the decline of two-time world champions Australia and, by their own stratospheric standards, New Zealand, combined with the emergence of Ireland as a genuine superpower, mean the North have shaded an almost 50:50 split of results so far this decade.