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EPCR Challenge Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Annual European rugby union competition
This article is about the rugby union competition. For the rugby league competition, seeChallenge Cup.

EPCR Challenge Cup
Current season or competition:
2025–26 EPCR Challenge Cup
SportRugby union
Inaugural season1996
Number of teams18
Nations England
 France
Ireland
Georgia (country)Georgia
 Italy
 Scotland
 South Africa
 Wales
HoldersEnglandBath(2nd title) (2024–25)
Most titlesFranceClermont
EnglandHarlequins(3 titles)
Websiteepcrugby.com/challenge-cup
Related competitions

TheEPCR Challenge Cup is an annualrugby union competition organised byEuropean Professional Club Rugby (EPCR).[1] It is the second-tier competition for clubs based in European leagues behind theEuropean Rugby Champions Cup. From its inception in 1996 to 2014, it was known as theEuropean Challenge Cup and governed byEuropean Rugby Cup (ERC). Following disagreements in the structure of the tournament's format and division of revenue, the English and French leagues withdrew to form the EPCR, which organized the Challenge Cup and the Champions Cup since the 2014–15 season.[2]

The Challenge Cup is currently contested between 18 teams; 16 of which qualify from the three main European domestic leagues (Premiership Rugby,Top 14, andUnited Rugby Championship).

Since the 2023–24 season, two teams outside of thewestern Europe leagues[3] have been invited to participate in the tournament. These teams areCheetahs, a South African team who won the2023 Currie Cup (who useAmsterdam as their home base during the competition) and Georgia'sBlack Lion, who are the holders of the third-tierRugby Europe Super Cup. Many more teams had applied to play in the 2024 season of theChallenge Cup, but both the Cheetahs and Black Lion have been invited to each tournament since.[4]

Format

[edit]

Qualification

[edit]

18 teams qualify for the EPCR Challenge Cup in 2023–24.

16 of these teams automatically qualified from the EnglishPremiership Rugby, the FrenchTop 14 and theUnited Rugby Championship, the 17th and 18th teams are invited to participate.

  • Teams from these leagues that do not qualify for theEuropean Champions Cup, either through league position or through promotion, and (in the case of the Top 14) are not relegated to a lower league, will automatically qualify for the Rugby Challenge Cup. Teams promoted to these leagues take up any remaining Challenge Cup places.

Continental Shield

[edit]
Main article:European Rugby Continental Shield

Until 2019–20 the 19th and 20th teams qualified via a Qualifying Competition, organised by European Professional Club Rugby andRugby Europe.[5]

For the 2014–15 season, this took the form of 2 two-legged play-off matches, with the aggregate winner of each taking one of the two Rugby Europe spots in the draw, and it involved the 2 best teams from Italy's Top12, plus a Romanian and Georgian selections.[6]

An expanded format, which was expected to feature more matches and more nations, for qualification into the2015–16 European Rugby Challenge Cup, and subsequent seasons, was expected to be announced 15 September 2014.[7][non-primary source needed][8] However, on 5 September 2014, it was announced that no such competition would take place during the 2014–15 season, and negotiations continue to create the new competition as soon as possible.[9]

Subsequently, on 22 December 2014, EPCR announced negotiations for a new format for the competition had now been completed, and the Qualifying Competition for entry into the 2015–16 Challenge Cup would begin in January.[10]

The expanded format includes clubs fromRugby Europe member unions Russia, Spain and Portugal alongside representatives from the Italian Eccellenza, and is being jointly organised by EPCR, Rugby Europe, and theFederazione Italiana Rugby (FIR).

The teams in the competition are split into two pools. Each team participates in a pool stage, before the two pool winners compete in a two-legged play-off against the teams currently competing in the Challenge Cup from the previous season.

The winners, on aggregate, of these two play-offs will take up the two final places in the Challenge Cup.[10]

In 2017, the competition was rebranded as the European Rugby Continental Shield, and introduced a final to be held as part of the main finals weekend and contested by the two play-off winners.[11]

Competition

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Group stage

[edit]

For the pool stage there are three pools of six teams. The teams are ranked based on domestic league performance the previous season, and arranged into three tiers. Teams are then drawn from the tiers into pools at random.[12]

Teams will play four other teams in their pool either at home and away and match points will be awarded depending on the result of each game. Teams receive four points for a win, and two for a draw. Teams can also earn 1 try bonus point for scoring four or more tries, and 1 losing bonus point for losing a match by seven points or fewer.[13]

Following the completion of the pool stage, the top four teams in each pool will qualify for the knock-out stage. They are joined in the round of 16 by the teams placed 5th in each Champions Cup pool.[5]

Knock-out stage

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(January 2023)

The eight quarter-finalists are ranked – pool winners from 1 to 5, and runners-up from 6 to 8 – based on performance in their respective pool. The four pool winners with the best pool record receive home advantage for the quarter-finals against one of the four lower-ranked teams, in a 1v8, 2v7, 3v6, 4v5 format. Unlike the later formats of the old European Challenge Cup, no teams will drop down into the competition from the Champions Cup.

The winners of the quarter-finals will contest the two semi-finals, the semi-final matches will be determined by criteria, and the winners of the semi-finals will contest the final, which is usually held in May.[14]

Temporary changes to format

[edit]

Because of the Coronavirus Pandemic the 2020/2021 competition took on a revised format.2020–21 European Rugby Challenge Cup

A similar format remained for the 2021/22 season, however, the number of teams was increased from 14 to 15 and an additional six will join from the Champions Cup.2021–22 European Rugby Challenge Cup

The format revision was removed from the 2022/23 season, so with the introduction of South African sides to the EPCR, 16 teams now qualify based on domestic league performance, with two further team invited. For the2023–24 EPCR Challenge Cup season, the invited teams will be the South African team,Cheetahs, andBlack Lion from Georgia.

Finals

[edit]

The competition has been dominated by English and French clubs since it was first introduced in 1996, reflecting the historical depth of those two leagues. However, teams from Ireland, Wales and Scotland have all made the final of the Challenge Cup, with the trophy twice being won byCardiff Rugby from Wales, and once by the Irish provincial sideLeinster. In 2024,Sharks, a South African professional franchise from the United Rugby Championship became the first South African and non-European team to win either of the two major European trophies when it won the2023–24 EPCR Challenge Cup, the fourth URC victory in the competition.

Key
Match was won duringextra time
European Challenge Cup Finals
SeasonWinnersScoreRunners-upVenueAttendance
1996–97FranceBourgoin18–9FranceCastresFranceStade de la Méditerranée,Béziers10,000
1997–98FranceColomiers43–5FranceAgenFranceStade des Sept Deniers,Toulouse12,500
1998–99FranceMontferrand35–16FranceBourgoinFranceStade de Gerland,Lyon31,986
1999–00FrancePau34–21FranceCastresFranceStade des Sept Deniers,Toulouse6,000
2000–01EnglandHarlequins42–33FranceNarbonneEnglandMadejski Stadium,Reading10,013
2001–02EnglandSale25–22WalesPontypriddEnglandKassam Stadium,Oxford12,000
2002–03EnglandWasps48–30EnglandBathEnglandMadejski Stadium,Reading18,074
2003–04EnglandHarlequins27–26FranceMontferrandEnglandMadejski Stadium,Reading13,123
2004–05EnglandSale27–3FrancePauEnglandKassam Stadium,Oxford7,230
2005–06EnglandGloucester36–34†EnglandLondon IrishEnglandThe Stoop,London12,053
2006–07FranceClermont22–16EnglandBathEnglandThe Stoop,London10,134
2007–08EnglandBath24–16EnglandWorcesterEnglandKingsholm Stadium,Gloucester16,057
2008–09EnglandNorthampton15–3FranceBourgoinEnglandThe Stoop,London9,260
2009–10WalesCardiff28–21FranceToulonFranceStade Vélodrome,Marseille48,990
2010–11EnglandHarlequins19–18FranceStade FrançaisWalesCardiff City Stadium,Cardiff12,236
2011–12FranceBiarritz21–18FranceToulonEnglandThe Stoop,London9,376
2012–13IrelandLeinster34–13FranceStade FrançaisIrelandRDS Arena,Dublin20,396
2013–14EnglandNorthampton30–16EnglandBathWalesCardiff Arms Park,Cardiff12,483
European Rugby Challenge Cup Finals
2014–15EnglandGloucester19–13ScotlandEdinburghEnglandThe Twickenham Stoop,London14,316
2015–16FranceMontpellier26–19EnglandHarlequinsFranceParc Olympique Lyonnais,Lyon28,556
2016–17FranceStade Français25–17EnglandGloucesterScotlandMurrayfield Stadium,Edinburgh24,494
2017–18WalesCardiff31–30EnglandGloucesterSpainSan Mamés,Bilbao32,543
2018–19FranceClermont36–16FranceLa RochelleEnglandSt James' Park,Newcastle28,438
2019–20EnglandBristol32–19FranceToulonFranceStade Maurice David,Aix-en-Provence[a]1,000
2020–21FranceMontpellier18–17EnglandLeicesterEnglandTwickenham Stadium,London[b]10,000[c]
2021–22FranceLyon30–12FranceToulonFranceStade de Marseille,Marseille51,431
2022–23FranceToulon43–19ScotlandGlasgowIrelandAviva Stadium,Dublin31,514
2023–24South AfricaSharks36–22EnglandGloucesterEnglandTottenham Hotspur Stadium,London34,761
2024–25EnglandBath37–12FranceLyonWalesMillennium Stadium,Cardiff36,705

Wins by club

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ClubWonRunner-upYears wonYears runner-up
FranceClermont311998–99,2006–07,2018–192003–04
EnglandHarlequins312000–01,2003–04,2010–112015–16
EnglandGloucester232005–06,2014–152016–17,2017–18,2023–24
EnglandBath232007–08,2024–252002–03,2006–07,2013–14
EnglandSale202001–02,2004–05
EnglandNorthampton202008–09,2013–14
WalesCardiff202009–10,2017–18
FranceMontpellier202015–16,2020–21
FranceToulon142022–232009–10,2011–12,2019–20,2021–22
FranceBourgoin121996–971998–99,2008–09
FranceStade Français122016–172010–11,2012–13
FrancePau111999–002004–05
FranceLyon112021–222024–25
FranceColomiers101997–98
EnglandWasps102002–03
FranceBiarritz102011–12
IrelandLeinster102012–13
EnglandBristol102019–20
South AfricaSharks102023–24
FranceCastres021996–97,1999–00
FranceAgen011997–98
FranceNarbonne012000–01
WalesPontypridd012001–02
EnglandLondon Irish012005–06
EnglandWorcester012007–08
ScotlandEdinburgh012014–15
FranceLa Rochelle012018–19
EnglandLeicester012020–21
ScotlandGlasgow012022–23

Wins by nation

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NationWinnersRunners-up
EnglandEngland1310
FranceFrance1216
WalesWales21
IrelandIreland10
South AfricaSouth Africa10
ScotlandScotland02

History

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European Challenge Cup

[edit]

1996–1999

[edit]
The Challenge Cup logo used while the tournament was sponsored by Amlin

European rugby competition began with the launch of theHeineken Cup in the summer of 1995.

The Challenge Cup began as the 'European Conference' (later renamed the European Shield) in 1996 with 24 teams from England, France, Italy, Romania, Scotland and Wales divided into four groups of six. All seven of the French teams made it to the quarter-finals with English club Northampton Saints filling the other berth. Predictably, the final was an all-French affair with Bourgoin beating Castres Olympique 18–9 to win the shield.

The following year's competition had an increased entry with eight groups of four teams. Colomiers continued the French dominance of the European Shield, defeating Agen 43–5 in the final.

The absence of English and Scottish clubs in 1998–99 saw the competition reduced to 21 teams divided into three groups of seven teams with representative sides of Spain and Portugal taking part. Once again, a French team was triumphant, with Montferrand beating Bourgoin 35–16 in the final held in Lyon.

With English and Scottish clubs back in the competition in 1999, there were 28 teams split in seven groups of four and London Irish and Bristol reached the semi-finals of the competition, but couldn't prevent another all-French final withSection Paloise crowned champions after a 34–21 defeat of Castres.

2000–2006

[edit]

The competition structure remained unchanged for the 2000–01 season, although no team from Romania participated. The semi-final draw was an all-English and all-French affair to leave Harlequins and Narbonne contesting the first final on English soil.Harlequins ended French dominance of the European Shield, defeating RC Narbonne 27–26 after extra time in the final.

There was a new sponsor and a name change in 2001. The newParker Pen Shield saw 32 teams divided into eight groups of four competing for the title. For the first time there were two Spanish club teams (Valladolid RAC and UC Madrid) and Romania was represented. Only one French club reached the quarter-finals along with five English and two from Wales and for the first time no French club reached the semi-finals after Pau lost to London Irish. For the first time, a Welsh team,Pontypridd, made it to the final butSale Sharks emerged victorious, coming from behind to win 25–22 at the Kassam Stadium in Oxford.

The league format was abandoned in 2002 and the tournament became a knock-out competition. This involved 32 clubs from eight nations, half of them seeded and drawn against an un-seeded team on a home and away basis. The nameParker Pen Shield was now applied to a repechage knock-out tournament for those teams that did not qualify for the second round of the Challenge Cup. The Parker Pen Challenge Cup winner now automatically qualified for the Heineken Cup.London Wasps beatBath 48–30 to win the renamedParker Pen Challenge Cup at theMadejski Stadium, Reading.

In 2003–04, theWelsh Rugby Union voted to create regions to play in the Celtic League and represent Wales in European competition. Henceforce Wales entered regional sides rather than the club sides which had previously competed. With a reduction from nine professional clubs to just five, there was no Welsh entry in that year's competition. Romania also did not take part in the Challenge Cup. Harlequins won the cup with a 27–26 last-second victory over Montferrand at theMadejski Stadium to become the first side to win the tournament twice.

Sale eased to victory in the 2005 final 27–3 over a disappointingPau side. In 2006,Gloucester edged outLondon Irish 36–34 after extra time.

TheParker Pen Shield was abandoned in 2005 due to restructuring of the European Challenge Cup. The competition reverted to being a league format followed by knock-out phase with five pools of four teams and home and away matches. Romanian interest returned to the competition in the form ofBucurești Rugby who had been formed to represent Romania in European competition, however, there was no representation from Spain or Portugal.

2006–2009

[edit]

Clermont were the first French winners of the title for seven years after they beatBath in the2006–07 competition; Clermont also reached theTop 14 final this year after finishing poorly the previous couple of years.

Beaten 2007 finalists Bath won the 2007–08 tournament after beating fellow English clubWorcester Warriors in the final inKingsholm Stadium,Gloucester. Spanish representation resumed in the 2007–08 Challenge Cup whenSpanish ChampionsCR El Salvador took part.

Northampton Saints won the 2009 final after beatingBourgoin 15–3 at theTwickenham Stoop; that season Northampton avoided relegation, they finished 2nd in the regular season of theGuinness Premiership, reached the Heineken Cup quarter-finals and won theAnglo-Welsh Cup the next season. Northampton became the eighth English club to win the competition in 9 seasons.

2010–2014

[edit]

The competition organiser, European Rugby Cup, announced several changes to the Challenge Cup effective in 2009–10:[15]

  • Only the five pool winners will qualify for the knockout stage of the competition. They will be joined by three clubs that parachute in from the pool stage of the Heineken Cup, specifically the third- through fifth-highest ranked second-place teams from pool play. Because of the demise of their third professional side,Scotland representation stopped but nowEdinburgh andGlasgow Warriors may play in the competition if they finish 3rd, 4th or 5th best runners-up in the Heineken Cup.
  • The European Challenge Cup winner will continue to receive an automatic berth in the following season's Heineken Cup; for the first time, this place will not come at the expense of its country's allocation. The only exception to this new rule will occur when England or France produces the winners of both the Heineken Cup and ECC in the same season. Both countries are capped at seven Heineken Cup places; in that scenario, the Heineken and ECC winners remain in the Heineken Cup while a berth is granted to the top club in the ERC rankings from another country that has not already qualified for the Heineken Cup.

Cardiff Blues benefited from the new format in its first year, winning the first ever Challenge Cup for the club and were also the first Welsh Club to win any European club tournament. Cardiff beatToulon 28–21 in the final at theStade Vélodrome inMarseille, which was also the first final to have no English involvement for 10 years.

England made a triumphant return to the final in 2011, withHarlequins defeatingStade Français 19–18. with a try in the last five-minutes by Argentinian wing, Gonzalo Camacho. This meantHarlequins became the first team to win the Challenge Cup three times and with this entered the Heineken Cup. The final was also notable in that it involved two teams that began the season in the Challenge Cup.

The 2011–12 competition was dominated by French sides, with all four semi-finalists coming from that country.Biarritz, which had parachuted in from theHeineken Cup, defeated Toulon to claim their first Challenge Cup.

The2012–13 season again saw the Challenge Cup claimed by a team that parachuted in from theHeineken Cup. This time, the victor wasLeinster, which became the first team fromIreland to win the Challenge Cup.[16]

Northampton Saints won the last edition of the European Challenge Cup in 2014, beatingBath 30–16 in the final.

European Rugby Challenge Cup

[edit]

2014–2021

[edit]

On 10 April 2014, following almost two years of negotiations, a statement was released under the aegis ofEuropean Professional Club Rugby announcing that the nine stakeholders to the new competition, the six unions and three umbrella club organisations (Premiership Rugby, Ligue Nationale de Rugby and Regional Rugby Wales), had signed Heads of Agreement for the formation of theEuropean Rugby Champions Cup, the European Rugby Challenge Cup and a new, third tournament, called the Qualifying Competition.[17] On the same day, BT and Sky signed an agreement that divided coverage of the new European competitions. Both would split the pool matches, quarter-finals, and semi-finals equally, and both would broadcast the final. BT would receive first choice of English Premiership club matches in the Champions Cup, with Sky receiving the same privilege for the Challenge Cup.[18] Subsequently, BT have signed an exclusive deal for the Challenge Cup between 2018–19 and 2021–22.[19]

2021–Present

[edit]

The 2023–24 competition saw a new precedent set, with theSharks of South Africa becoming the first team from outside of Europe to lift the Challenge Cup after an historic 36-22 victory over Gloucester.[20]

Sponsorship & suppliers

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(January 2024)

Sponsors

[edit]
  • Parker Pen Company – Title Sponsors of the European Challenge Cup from 2001 to 2005
  • Amlin – Title Sponsors of the European Challenge Cup from 2009 to 2014

Following the introduction of the European Rugby Challenge Cup, organisers decided to introduce aChampions League-style sponsorship system, including 3–5 principal partners, in lieu of one title sponsor.

Principal Partners

[edit]
Heineken, who had sponsored the Heineken Cup since 1995, signed on as the first partner for the Challenge Cup in 2014, and were credited as theFounding Partner of European Rugby
Announced as the second principal partner at the 2015–16 tournament launch, signing on for three seasons[21]

Secondary Sponsors

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Suppliers

[edit]
Following their appointment as an Official Supplier, Tissot began sponsoring the Match Officials kit.

Media coverage

[edit]

European markets:


Other markets:

For Australia, Europe (unsold markets), and Southeast Asia, all matches of theEPCR package (bothChampions and Challenge Cups) available on Rugby Pass.

Some games are alsolivestreamed for free on EPCR TV.[29]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Relocated fromStade de Marseille due toCOVID-19 pandemic.
  2. ^Relocated fromTottenham Hotspur Stadium toStade de Marseille and subsequently to Twickenham due to COVID-19 pandemic.
  3. ^Capacity limited to 10,000 due tonational restrictions surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Challenge Cup | Fixtures & Results".
  2. ^"A beginner's guide: The new European Rugby Champions Cup explained | Paul Rees".The Guardian. 11 April 2014.
  3. ^The South African teams play in the Europe based United Rugby Championship
  4. ^"European Challenge Cup: Georgian side Black Lion invited into European competition".BBC Sport. 6 July 2023. Retrieved22 August 2023.
  5. ^ab"Future of European Rugby resolved" (Press release). Rugby Football Union. 10 April 2014. Archived fromthe original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved10 April 2014.
  6. ^"Two places up for grabs in Challenge Cup : European Professional Club Rugby | Official website". Archived fromthe original on 27 August 2014. Retrieved26 August 2014.
  7. ^"Rugby Europe on Twitter".
  8. ^"Rugby Europe official website". 27 August 2014. Archived fromthe original on 27 August 2014.
  9. ^"Rugby Europe rules out third competition".
  10. ^ab"European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR)".epcrugby.com.
  11. ^"New identity for the Challenge Cup Qualifying Competition".epcrugby.com.
  12. ^"Watch the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup Pool Draws live : News | ERC | Official Website". Archived fromthe original on 31 October 2014. Retrieved8 June 2014. ERCRugby.com. Retrieved 8 June 2014
  13. ^"Challenge Cup Rules".epcrugby.com. Archived fromthe original on 11 October 2014. Retrieved7 October 2014.
  14. ^www.EPCRugby.com – European Rugby StatementArchived 22 June 2014 at theWayback Machine
  15. ^"Format and qualification changes for Europe" (Press release). European Rugby Cup. 15 June 2009. Archived fromthe original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved16 June 2009.
  16. ^"Sexton turns on style for Leinster".Irish Independent. 17 March 2013. Retrieved20 May 2013.
  17. ^Team, The Rugby Paper (10 April 2014)."European Rugby Statement".The Rugby Paper. Retrieved18 January 2023.
  18. ^"BT and Sky sign joint agreement over European rugby". ESPNscrum. 10 April 2014. Retrieved10 April 2014.
  19. ^"BT Sport wins exclusive rights to European Rugby Champions and Challenge Cup".BT Sport. British Telecom plc. Retrieved4 July 2017.
  20. ^"Impressive Sharks seal historic Challenge Cup win". springboks.rugby. 24 May 2014. Retrieved6 December 2024.
  21. ^"European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR)".epcrugby.com.
  22. ^"Where can you watch the Heineken Champions Cup and Challenge Cup?".EPCR. 15 January 2020. Archived fromthe original on 26 January 2020. Retrieved26 January 2020.
  23. ^epcrugby.com Droits audiovisuels des Coupes d'Europe de rugby (French)Archived 4 September 2014 at theWayback Machine
  24. ^"European Professional Club Rugby (EPCR)".
  25. ^"European club rugby tournaments more accessible than ever as Sky Italia lead global broadcast deals".European Professional Club Rugby. 7 December 2020. Retrieved9 December 2020.
  26. ^"S4C to broadcast Challenge Cup matches in Wales". 5 November 2019.
  27. ^http://www.therugbypaper.co.uk/latest-breaking-news/15724/european-rugby-broadcast-statement/ European Rugby Broadcast Statement, The Rugby Paper 10/4/14
  28. ^(GMT) (31 August 2022)."European Professional Club Rugby | EPCR announce new USA broadcast partnership with FloSports". Epcrugby.com. Retrieved1 September 2022.
  29. ^"Free viewing of six Challenge Cup ties on EPCR TV". 15 November 2019.

External links

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