Cameroon national rugby league team

Cameroon
Badge of Cameroon team
Team information
Governing bodyCameroon Rugby League XIII
RegionEurope
Head coachKhalil Njoya
IRL ranking41st
Team results
First international
  4 – 8 Morocco 
(Lagos, Nigeria; 2 October 2019)
Biggest defeat
 Nigeria 36 – 2  
(Accra, Ghana; 28 September 2022)

The Cameroon national rugby league team, known as the Indomitable Lions,[a] represent Cameroon in international rugby league football competition.

They made their debut in the 2019 Middle East Africa Championship in October 2019 with a 4-8 loss to Morocco[2] in Lagos, Nigeria, after travelling by bus for eight days to get there.[1]

As of July 2025 the Cameroon team is ranked 41st in the Rugby League International Federation world rankings.[3]

Most recent squad

Squad for 2019 MEA Rugby League Championship, as of 20 September 2019:[4]

  • Armel Damdja
  • Bidjana Jean Claude
  • Nguele Hermand
  • Hamadou Moussa
  • Nanga Yannick Olama
  • Patrick Eugene Nkouak
  • Lamere Mfochive Oudi
  • Yannick Noah Simon
  • Tientcheu Nguekam Manuel
  • Moutcheu Jangue Raphael
  • Yohan C. Kwedi
  • Kallasi Nguiagueu Arnaud
  • Embella Mouhamed
  • Christian T. Pegou
  • Bekolo Elie
  • Watio Franck
  • Fabrice Yepmo Joufang
  • Fosso Ledoux
  • Arnaud Ndjeng
  • Akoa Akoa Jean Marc
  • Ngoufack Geordane
  • Kuate Talom Steve

Competitive record

Results

  Win   Draw   Loss

Date Home Result Away Competition Venue Crowd
1 2 October 2019   4–8  Morocco 2019 MEA Championship Nigeria Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos
2 5 October 2019  Ghana 10–4   Nigeria Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos
3 28 September 2022  Nigeria 36–2   2022 MEA Championship GhanaUniversity of Ghana stadium, Legon Accra
4 1 October 2022   0–16  Kenya

IRL Rankings

Official rankings as of July 2025
Rank Change Team Pts %
1 Steady  Australia 100
2 Steady  New Zealand 83
3 Steady  England 80
4 Steady  Tonga 62
5 Steady  Samoa 53
6 Steady  Papua New Guinea 51
7 Steady  Fiji 43
8 Steady  France 29
9 Increase 2  Netherlands 22
10 Steady  Cook Islands 22
11 Decrease 2  Serbia 18
12 Steady  Wales 18
13 Steady  Malta 16
14 Increase 1  Greece 14
15 Decrease 1  Ukraine 13
16 Steady  Lebanon 11
17 Steady  Italy 10
18 Steady  Ireland 9
19 Increase 5  United States 8
20 Decrease 1  Jamaica 8
21 Decrease 1  Czech Republic 8
22 Steady  Scotland 7
23 Decrease 2  Chile 7
24 Decrease 1  Philippines 7
25 Steady  Poland 5
26 Increase 1  Germany 5
27 Increase 1  Norway 5
28 Decrease 2  South Africa 5
29 Steady  Brazil 4
30 Steady  Kenya 4
31 Steady  Canada 4
32 Steady  Montenegro 3
33 Steady  North Macedonia 3
34 Increase 22  Morocco 3
35 Decrease 1  Argentina 3
36 Decrease 1  Albania 2
37 Decrease 1  Bulgaria 2
38 Decrease 1  Ghana 2
39 Decrease 1  Nigeria 2
40 Decrease 1  Turkey 1
41 Decrease 1   1
42 Decrease 1  Japan 1
43 Decrease 1  Spain 1
44 Decrease 1  Colombia 1
45 Decrease 1  El Salvador 0
46 Decrease 1  Russia 0
47 Decrease 1  Bosnia and Herzegovina 0
48 Decrease 1  Hong Kong 0
49 Decrease 1  Solomon Islands 0
50 Decrease 1  Vanuatu 0
51 Increase 6  Hungary 0
52 Decrease 1  Latvia 0
53 Decrease 1  Denmark 0
54 Decrease 1  Belgium 0
55 Decrease 1  Estonia 0
56 Decrease 1  Sweden 0
57 Decrease 7  Niue 0
Complete rankings at
www.internationalrugbyleague.com

Notes

  1. ^ Most of the national sporting teams in Cameroon go by this name, including the Cameroon national football team.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Campton, Nick (5 September 2022). "The last hunt of Carol Manga, rugby league's indomitable lion of Cameroon". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  2. ^ "2nd MEA Rugby league Championship:Debutants Nigeria see off Ghana to set up Morocco final (audio)". Azu Emeh busybuddiesng.com. 3 October 2019. Archived from the original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2019.
  3. ^ "World Rankings". Rugby League International Federation. Retrieved 22 July 2025.
  4. ^ "Cameroon announce 22 man squad for MEA Championship". RLIF. 20 September 2019. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2019.