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Rugby Europe Sevens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Series of rugby sevens tournaments
For the women's competitions, seeRugby Europe Women's Sevens.
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(April 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Rugby Europe Sevens
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event2025 Rugby Europe Sevens Championship Series
SportRugby sevens
Founded2002; 23 years ago (2002)
No. of teams12 (Championship)
CountryEuropean
Most recent
champion
 France (4th title)
Most titles Portugal (8 titles)

TheRugby Europe Sevens are a series ofrugby sevens tournaments held byRugby Europe. It was formerly known as theFIRA-AER Sevens until 2013, and theSevens Grand Prix Series until 2021.[1] Only one annual tournament existed prior to 2011, when Rugby Europe created a series of tournaments, following the model of theWorld Rugby Sevens Series. The main division is known as the Rugby Europe Championship Series, formerly known the Grand Prix, followed by the Trophy Series, Conference 1, and Conference 2.[1] The competitions use a promotion/relegation system.

Format

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In the Championship Series, twelve teams play in at least two tournaments each summer throughout Europe. Each tournament spans two to three days — the first day is a pool phase, the second day is a pool and knockout phase, and the third day a knockout phase. During the pool phase, the teams are divided into three pools of four teams each. After the pool phase, the top eight teams (two first of each pool, plus two best-performing third place teams) advance to the Cup tournament; the other four teams play for the Challenge Trophy.

At the end of each tournament, teams are awarded points based on their performance. At the end of the series, the team with the most points is declared the champion. The team with the fewest points is relegated from the Championship Series to the Trophy competition, whereas the champion of the Trophy competition is promoted to next season's Championship Series.

History

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2002–2010

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A number of qualifying tournaments lead up to a finals tournament, which functions as the European championship and, in 2008, also as the qualifying stage for the Sevens World Cup.

Portugal won the first European Championship held inHeidelberg in 2002. Portugal would go onto win eight out of the first ten tournaments. In 2003, Heidelberg again held the tournament. In 2004Palma de Mallorca was the host. From 2005 to 2007,Moscow hosted the tournament. Hanover held the tournament for the first time in 2008 and did so again in 2009. In 2010, the tournament returned to Moscow.

2011–present

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In 2011, the format of the competition changed. The twelve best teams now meet over the course of several tournaments, following the model of theIRB Sevens World Series. The name also changed from the European Championship to theSevens Grand Prix Series. The first edition of this competition was held in 2011 and won by Portugal. In 2021 the competition changed its name from the Sevens Grand Prix to the Rugby Europe Sevens Championship Series.[1]

Tournaments

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Championship Series

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Rugby Europe Sevens
Championship
EditionYearEventsChampionsRunners-upThirdFourth
I20021 Portugal Georgia Germany France
II20031 Portugal France Georgia Germany
III20041 Portugal Italy Ireland Scotland
IV20051 Portugal Russia Italy France
V20061 Portugal Russia Italy France
VI20071 Russia France Moldova Spain
VII20081 Portugal Wales Georgia Ireland
VIII20091 Russia France Italy Spain
IX20101 Portugal France Russia Spain
Grand Prix Series
X20114 Portugal England Spain Russia
XI20123 England Portugal France Spain
XII20132 England France Russia Portugal
XIII20144 France Scotland England Russia
XIV20153 France Spain England Russia
XV20163 Russia France Spain Germany
XVI20174 Russia Ireland Spain Wales
XVII2018[2]4 Ireland Germany Russia England
XVIII2019[3]2 Germany France Ireland Spain
2020Series not played because ofCOVID-19 pandemic.
Championship Series
XIX2021[4]2 Spain Germany Russia Lithuania
XX2022[5]2 Spain Germany France Belgium
XXI2023[6]2 Ireland France Spain Great Britain
XXII2024[7]2 France Ireland Germany Portugal
XXIII2025[8]2 France Spain Italy Belgium

Team records

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TeamChampionsRunners-upThirdFourth
 Portugal8 (2002,2003,2004,2005,2006,2008,2010,2011)1 (2012)2 (2013,2024)
 France4 (2014,2015,2024,2025)8 (2003,2007,2009,2010,2013,2016,2019,2023)3 (2012,2022)3 (2002,2005,2006)
 Russia4 (2007,2009,2016,2017)2 (2005,2006)4 (2010,2013,2018,2021)3 (2011,2014,2015)
 Spain2 (2021,2022)2 (2015,2025)4 (2011,2016,2017,2023)5 (2007,2009,2010,2012,2019)
 Ireland2 (2018,2023)2 (2017,2024)2 (2004,2019)1 (2008)
 England2 (2012,2013)1 (2011)2 (2014,2015)1 (2018)
 Germany1 (2019)2 (2018,2021)3 (2002,2022,2024)2 (2003,2016)
 Italy1 (2004)4 (2005,2006,2009,2025)
 Georgia1 (2002)2 (2003,2008)
 Scotland1 (2014)1 (2004)
 Wales1 (2008)1 (2017)
 Moldova1 (2007)
 Belgium2 (2022,2025)
 Lithuania1 (2021)
 Great Britain1 (2023)

Updated to 2024

Trophy

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YearChampionsRunners-upThirdFourth
2011 Germany Belgium Sweden Lithuania
2012 Romania Belgium Lithuania Cyprus
2013 Belgium Poland Netherlands Sweden
2014 Lithuania Poland Cyprus Sweden
2015 Poland Ukraine Latvia Moldova
2016[9] Ireland Ukraine Sweden Romania
2017 Sweden Romania Luxembourg Ukraine
2018 Romania Belgium Lithuania Denmark
2019 Lithuania Ukraine Belgium Croatia
2020Series not played because ofCOVID-19 pandemic.
2021 Czech Republic Belgium Ukraine Sweden
2022[10] Ireland England Wales Romania
2023[11] Ukraine Croatia Sweden Latvia
2024[12] Czech Republic Sweden Latvia Hungary

Conference

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Conference 1

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YearChampionsRunners-upThird
2011 Serbia Latvia Hungary
2012 Croatia Latvia Norway
2013North Latvia Norway Luxembourg
South Monaco Hungary  Switzerland
2014North Czech Republic Norway Luxembourg
South Hungary Bulgaria  Switzerland
2015[13] Ireland Serbia Slovenia
2016 Croatia Luxembourg Hungary
2017 Hungary Bulgaria Slovakia
2018 Czech Republic Bosnia and Herzegovina Moldova
2019 Hungary Turkey Moldova
2020Series not played because ofCOVID-19 pandemic.
2021[14] Bulgaria Monaco Moldova
2022[15]  Switzerland Moldova Turkey
2023[16] Turkey Monaco Austria
2024[17][18] Norway Denmark Serbia

Conference 2

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YearChampionsRunners-upThird
2015[19] Ireland Bosnia and Herzegovina Serbia
2016 Malta Montenegro Austria
2017 Austria Finland Estonia
2018  Switzerland Andorra Liechtenstein
2019–2021Competition not held
2022[20] Malta San Marino Slovakia
2023 San Marino Slovakia Montenegro
2024[21] Cyprus Slovakia Slovenia

Partners

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References

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  1. ^abc"Rugby Europe 7s Season Announced".Rugby Europe. Retrieved12 May 2021.
  2. ^"Ireland's rise in 7s continues as Eddy's men make history with Grand Prix title in Poland".the42. 9 September 2018. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  3. ^"Grand Prix Series".Rugby 7. Retrieved5 September 2022.
  4. ^"Russia and Spain clinch Series titles in Moscow".Rugby Europe. Retrieved29 July 2021.
  5. ^"Men's 7s Championship 2022".Rugby Europe. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  6. ^"Ireland Men Finish Season As Rugby Europe Sevens Champions".Irish Rugby. Retrieved12 July 2023.
  7. ^"Men's 7s Rugby Europe Championship 2024".Rugby Europe. Retrieved30 June 2024.
  8. ^"Men's 7s Rugby Europe Championship 2025".Rugby Europe. Retrieved29 June 2025.
  9. ^"Trophy Win Sees Ireland Qualify For European Grand Prix Series".Irish Rugby. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  10. ^"Men's 7s Trophy 2022".Rugby Europe. Retrieved19 June 2022.
  11. ^"Ukraine men and women both win 2023 Trophy series".Rugby Europe. Retrieved12 July 2023.
  12. ^"Men's 7s Rugby Europe Trophy Series 2024".www.rugbyeurope.eu. Retrieved2025-02-06.
  13. ^"Ireland Men Claim European Sevens Division B Crown".Irish Rugby. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  14. ^"Belgrade 2021".Rugby Europe. Retrieved6 June 2021.
  15. ^"Men's Sevens Conference 1 - 2022".Rugby Europe. Retrieved5 June 2022.
  16. ^"Men's 7s Conference 1 2023".Rugby Europe. Retrieved2023-06-11.
  17. ^"Poland, France, Moldova and Norway all taste sevens success".Rugby Europe. Retrieved1 July 2024.
  18. ^"Men's Conference - Belgrade".Rugby Europe. Retrieved1 July 2024.
  19. ^"Ireland Men's Sevens Team Secure European Division C Title And Promotion".Irish Rugby. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  20. ^"Men's 7s Conference 2".Rugby Europe. Retrieved19 June 2022.
  21. ^"Great weekend results for Latvia, Sweden and Cyprus".Rugby Europe. Retrieved1 July 2024.

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