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Rugby Europe International Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rugby Europe International Championships
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2025–26 Rugby Europe International Championships
SportRugby union
Founded1936; 90 years ago (1936)
(predecessors)
2000; 26 years ago (2000)
(current format)
No. of teams35 (See below)
ContinentEurope
Most recent
champion
BERJAYA Portugal
Most titlesBERJAYA France (25)
BERJAYA Georgia (17)
BERJAYA Romania (10)

The Rugby Europe International Championships is the European Championship for rugby union

The tournament is the latest formation of a competition with history going back to 1932. At that time, France had been expelled from the then Five Nations, and joined with a number of European teams to found an alternative organisation, the International Amateur Rugby Federation (FIRA, now Rugby Europe). While France were eventually readmitted to the Five Nations, the then FIRA-AER continued to run competitions, increasingly taking the role of organiser of European continental rugby below the Five Nations, and in which France continued to compete.

The competition expanded and modified under the new Rugby Europe structure, even as France, then Italy, left to compete solely in the Six Nations. It was held in a variety of formats with a variety of names including the European Nations Cup and the Rugby Europe Nations Championship.

The competition today is split into 3 levels. The highest level is now called the Rugby Europe Championship and, unofficially, was referred to as the Six Nations B, although the event now features eight teams. Below the Championship a six team Rugby Europe Trophy is contested by tier three nations, with promotion and relegation operating between the Championship and the Trophy. Below that, as of 2024, is the Rugby Europe Conference consisting of the lowest ranked teams in Europe in five pools - previously there had been tiers within the conference. A previous Development Tier competition was disbanded at the same time.

History

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International championships before 2000

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Following the exclusion of France from the Five Nations Tournament after the 1931 edition, France joined with Italy, Romania, Germany, Spain, Belgium, Portugal, Netherlands, and Catalonia to create the International Amateur Rugby Federation (FIRA, now Rugby Europe) as an alternative to the International Rugby Football Board (now World Rugby). Three tournaments were held from 1936 to 1938, with France winning all three. Following the Second World War, France was readmitted into the Five Nations Championship, but they also competed in the only two tournaments organised by FIRA, the Rugby Union European Cup, held in 1952 and 1954, winning them both.

From 1965, FIRA attempted to revitalise the European competition by creating the FIRA Nations Cup (1965–1973) and then the FIRA Trophy (1973–1997); however, France fielded a France A side made up mostly of university students.[citation needed] While the French students won many of the tournaments, Romania also had their share of tournament titles. In the late 1990s, the championship became irregular, with some editions not taking place because of qualifications for the World Cup. Finally, the European Nations Cup began in 2000, no longer including France and Italy, as they now played in the reformed Six Nations Championship.

European Nations Cup: initial format (since 2000)

[edit]
BERJAYA
2024–25 Rugby Europe International Championships
Key
Six Nations
Championship
Trophy
Conference
Others

After the setup of the divisional system in 2000, Romania won the first competition with maximum points, The initial season also included Morocco.

Russia then replaced Morocco in 2001 when Georgia secured the title and were crowned champions after a 31–20 win over Romania in Bucharest. As the competition format changed from a one-year tournament to two-years, the Netherlands were not relegated after this season.

Romania started 2002 trailing Georgia after the 2001 results, but managed to win all of the remaining five games, including a 31–23 victory in Tbilisi.

Portugal were 16–15 winners over Romania in Lisbon and installed themselves at the top of the 2003–04 table. In the second half of the competition, Romania won 36–6 against Portugal in Constanța, but went down 24–33 to Russia in Krasnodar. Then Portugal clinched their first title with a last-minute 19–18 home win over Russia. The Russia – Czech Republic game was rescheduled due to bad weather and was eventually cancelled.

The 2005–06 championships also served as a qualifying pool for the 2007 Rugby World Cup. Romania triumphed finishing level on points with Georgia, while Ukraine were relegated after losing all matches.

The 2007–08 edition saw the return of the Spanish to the top division. The winners were Georgia, following their display at the 2007 Rugby World Cup. The Russians recorded their best ever placement, finishing in second. The Czech Republic were the team to finish on the bottom of the table, losing all of their matches, relegating them back to Division 2A.

A new format was decided at the beginning of 2009. Each calendar year had its own champion, but the cumulated ranking over two years determined which team was relegated. The 2009–10 edition was also basis for European qualification to the 2011 Rugby World Cup. The 2009 season saw the début of Germany in the top division, Georgia defended their title, and there were wins for Portugal and Russia in Bucharest.

Faced with the possibility of missing a Rugby World Cup for the first time, Romania were managed the 2010 title. This feat was however not enough to overtake Georgia and Russia, who helped by their good results from the previous year, gained the automatic qualification for the 2011 RWC, leaving Romania to go through the Play-Off Qualification Rounds. Germany were relegated after failing to win any games.

Georgia won the 2011 edition, after beating Romania 18–11 in Tbilisi. The promoted team, Ukraine, lost all but one of their matches, single win over Portugal.

European Nations Cup: second format (from 2010 to 2016)

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For the 2010–2012 competition (and promotion and relegation between groups going forward to successive competitions), the top two divisions (previously 1 and 2A) were redefined as 1A and 1B, both having six teams (previously six and five). The next four levels (previously 2B, 3A, 3B and 3C) become 2A-2D, under the new system, with the remnants of Division 3D making up the initial group of teams labelled as Division 3. In principle, each division is to encompass a different type of competition.

In Division 1, groups have six teams (meaning more matches and thus more travel), a significant fraction of the players are assumed to be professional or semi-professional (meaning that fixtures are, as often as possible, scheduled within the IRB's international fixtures time windows when clubs must release players for national duty), and only one team is promoted and one relegated every two years (meaning that the competitions are more stable).

In Division 2, groups have only five teams each (usually meaning one home match and one away match in the Autumn, and the same in the Spring, for each team), it is assumed that the majority of players are amateurs (meaning scheduling is not as limited), and in addition to the traditional automatic first-promoted-last-relegated system, fourth place from the higher pool will play second place from the lower pool after every two-year competition, with the winner taking the position in the higher pool. From a five-team group, one team is promoted, one team is relegated and two teams play in playoffs. Thus, a maximum of four of a pool's five teams could change from one two-year competition to the next.

In Division 3, a single-location, short-time-period (one week or 10 days) tournament is organised once per year. This minimises travel costs for teams and time-off-work requirements for players, and allows the flexibility of having a different membership every year, rather than requiring the membership to be constant over two years. The best performing team over two years of tournaments is promoted to Division 2.

In the year of transition to the new system (2010), there were no relegations from any division below the highest, because the second-highest (old 2A, new 1B) was expanded by one team.

International Championships: third format (from 2016 to 2022)

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From September 2016, the European Nations Cup became the Rugby Europe International Championships, made up of five levels or divisions:

  • Level 1 - Championship. The top six ranked European teams outside the Six Nations contest the annual title. Replaces the former Division 1A.
  • Level 2 - Trophy. The next six ranked European teams bid for the Trophy title. Replaces the former Division 1B.
  • Level 3 - Conference 1. Division 2, A through to D, becomes the new Conference level, where twenty teams are separated into two Conferences made up of ten teams each, based on their previous year rankings. Each conference is then split into two, North and South, where teams could change each year depending on the competing teams - nations closest to boundary moved from North to South and vice versa each season as necessary to geographically balance the conferences.
  • Level 4 - Conference 2
  • Level 5 - Development. Replaces Division 3.

The Trophy, Conference and Development divisions have normally been held across the turn of the year, in the autumn and winter of one year and the spring of the next. The Championship has usually been held in the spring, concurrent with the second half of the lower three divisions (and also concurrent with the Six Nations Championship).

A promotion and relegation play-off system is maintained across all levels every year, moving away from the two-year system in place since 2003, meaning teams will be promoted and relegated every year.[1]

In the 2020–2021 season, due to the worldwide COVID-19 epidemic, the lower divisions were not held, and much of the 2021 Championship division was delayed, being held over the whole of 2021 (thus, its last matches overlapped with the following 2021–2022 season of the lower divisions). Thus, there was no promotion/relegation between the divisions, including between the Championship and Trophy, following the 2020–2021 season: promotion/relegation resumed following the 2022 Championship (which was held on-time) and the 2021-2022 Trophy, Conference and Development divisions. The structure was slightly changed after 2022, to increase the Championship division to eight rather than six teams: furthermore, Russia (who had played, and lost, their first two matches), were disqualified and banned from the 2022 Championship and from all international rugby until further notice, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine after having played two matches of the 2022 season: their three remaining matches in the 2022 Championship were awarded to their opponents (Portugal, Georgia and Netherlands), by walkover.

Qualification for three European spots in the 2023 Rugby World Cup was determined by the collective results of the 2021 and 2022 Championships added together, which (thanks to the fact of no promotion and relegation following the 2021 season, and the lower divisions not being played at all) formed a full home-and-away round-robin between the six nations of the Championship. The top two teams would qualify as Europe 1 and Europe 2: the third-place team, as Europe 3, would enter the final qualification tournament along with Africa 3 (Kenya), Americas 3 (USA) and the loser of the Asia/Pacific play-off (Hong Kong). Russia's expulsion mattered little, since they had lost all but two of their matches anyway (both in the 2021 season). However, the issue of ineligible players raised its head again, though not to the extent it had in the 2019 qualification: Spain, who had been fourth in 2021 but second in 2022 and were in fact in second place over the collective two years, were penalised 10 points - five in each season - for fielding an ineligible player in two matches. Georgia were far ahead in first place, with 9 wins and 1 draw over the two years: Spain's discomfiture resulted in Romania qualifying directly from the Championship in second place, and Portugal being in third place for the final intercontinental qualifier. Portugal won that tournament to qualify for the World Cup.

Additionally, Rugby Europe made changes to the bonus points system. The standard system, that is applied in the Six Nations Championship was discarded in favour of the French system. The main difference is that where previously a team would be awarded 1 try bonus point for scoring (at least) 4 tries, regardless of the outcome, and whereas now, a team would be awarded 1 "bonus" point for winning while scoring at least the equivalent of 3 or more tries than their opponent.

International Championships: fourth format (from 2022 to 2023)

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From October 2022,[2] the Rugby Europe International Championships, made up of five levels or divisions:

  • Level 1 - Championship. The top eight ranked European teams outside the Six Nations contest the annual title.
  • Level 2 - Trophy. The next six (originally intended, ended up as five) ranked European teams bid for the Trophy title.
  • Level 3 - Conference 1
  • Level 4 - Conference 2
  • Level 5 - Development

A statement was released by the Polish Rugby Union in December 2021 confirming that the Rugby Europe Championship, will expand to 8 teams in 2022/2023 season. To accommodate this expansion, no team will be relegated from the top tier, while two teams from the second tier Trophy Championship will be promoted following the completion of the 2021/2022 Championship.[3] The serpentine system is applied to allocate each team to their respective groups.[2] Each team will play a total of five games (three round robin group matches to determine the team's path and two play-off matches).[2] Seeding (for group) and relegation is calculated over a two-year cycle, as is the promotion from Trophy competition.[2]

This was further altered by Russia's expulsion from international sport following the invasion of Ukraine, which left only five teams from those who had contested the 2022 Championship. Three teams, rather than the originally intended two, were promoted from the Trophy - Belgium, Germany and Poland: and the Trophy, in 2022–23, thus contained only five teams rather than the previous six, even with the promotion of Sweden and Croatia from the Conference to join Ukraine, Lithuania and Croatia.

A relegation system is maintained across all levels two-year, moving away from the one-year system in place since 2016, meaning teams will be promoted and relegated every two year.

International Championships: fifth format (from 2023 to 2024)

[edit]

From 2023, the Rugby Europe International Championships, made up of four levels or divisions:

  • Level 1 - Championship. The top eight ranked European teams outside the Six Nations contest the annual title. For the 2024 Championship, these were the same eight teams as in 2023.
  • Level 2 - Trophy. The next six ranked European teams bid for the Trophy title. (The five teams from the 2022–23 season were joined by the previous year's Conference champions, the Czech Republic.)
  • Level 3 - Conference. Former Conference 1 and Conference 2 combined to one level, in four groups.
  • Level 4 - Development

A statement was released by the Polish Rugby Union in June 2023, confirming that the Rugby Europe Conference 1 and Conference 2 will be combined to one level. Teams with ambitions of climbing up the rugby pyramid can compete in a play-off to the Trophy after submitting their intentions to Rugby Europe where an assessment on various aspects will be made after winning their respective pool.

International Championships: new format (from 2024)

[edit]

From 2024, the Rugby Europe International Championships, made up of three levels or divisions:

  • Level 1 - Championship. The top eight ranked European teams outside the Six Nations contest the annual title.
  • Level 2 - Trophy. The next six ranked European teams bid for the Trophy title.
  • Level 3 - Conference. Former Conference and Development combined to one level, in five groups.

Current divisions and standings (2026–27)

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Key
* Champion of the 2025–26 season
Team promoted from the division below after the 2025–26 season
Division champion but team not promoted after the 2025–26 season
Last place of division but team not relegated after the 2025–26 season
Team relegated from the division above after the 2025–26 season


Championship & Trophy

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Championship teams
Pool A
BERJAYA Belgium
BERJAYA Georgia
BERJAYA Poland
BERJAYA Romania
Pool B
BERJAYA Netherlands
BERJAYA Spain
BERJAYA Portugal *
BERJAYA  Switzerland
Trophy Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Czech Republic000
BERJAYA Denmark000
BERJAYA Germany000
BERJAYA Lithuania000
BERJAYA Malta000
BERJAYA Sweden000

Conference

[edit]
Pool A Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Estonia000
BERJAYA Finland000
BERJAYA Latvia000
BERJAYA Luxembourg000
BERJAYA Norway000
Pool B Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Austria000
BERJAYA Hungary000
BERJAYA Serbia000
BERJAYA Slovenia000
BERJAYA Slovakia000
Pool C Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Bulgaria000
BERJAYA Moldova000
BERJAYA Turkey000
BERJAYA Ukraine000
Pool D Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Andorra000
BERJAYA Israel000
BERJAYA Croatia000
BERJAYA Cyprus000
Pool E Pl W Pts
BERJAYA Bosnia and Herzegovina000
BERJAYA Kosovo000
BERJAYA Montenegro000

Updated through 24 May 2026

Predecessor tournaments (1936–1999)

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FIRA Tournaments (1936–1938)

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Year Host city Winner Runner-up Third place
1936 Nazi Germany Berlin BERJAYA France BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Italy
1937 French Fourth Republic Paris BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Germany
1938 Romania Bucharest BERJAYA France BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Romania

Rugby Union European Cup (1952–1954)

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Year Winner Runner-up Third place
1952 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA West Germany
1954 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Spain

FIRA Nations Cup (1965–1973)

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Year First Division Second Division
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winner
1965–66 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Portugal
1966–67 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Czechoslovakia
1967–68 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Poland
1968–69 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA France BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA West Germany
BERJAYA Poland
BERJAYA Italy
1969–70 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Morocco
1970–71 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Czechoslovakia
1971–72 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Spain
1972–73 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Portugal

FIRA Trophy (1973–1997)

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Year First Division Lower Division Champions
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Second Division Third Division
1973–74 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Poland
BERJAYA Morocco
BERJAYA Italy Not held
1974–75 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Poland
1975–76 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Netherlands BERJAYA Morocco[a]
BERJAYA Czechoslovakia
1976–77 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Belgium
1977–78 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Czechoslovakia BERJAYA Soviet Union Not held
1978–79 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Morocco
1979–80 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Tunisia
1980–81 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA France BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA Poland BERJAYA West Germany BERJAYA Portugal
1981–82 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Sweden
1982–83 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA West Germany BERJAYA Poland BERJAYA Czechoslovakia
1983–84 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Poland
BERJAYA Morocco
BERJAYA Spain
BERJAYA Tunisia
Not held
1984–85 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Netherlands
1985–87 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Tunisia
BERJAYA Portugal
BERJAYA Spain Not held
1987–89 BERJAYA France BERJAYA Soviet Union BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Poland BERJAYA Bulgaria
1989–90 BERJAYA France A[b] BERJAYA Soviet Union[b] BERJAYA Romania[b] BERJAYA Poland BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Andorra
1990–92 BERJAYA France A BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Germany
BERJAYA Morocco
BERJAYA Sweden
1992–94 BERJAYA France A BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Poland
BERJAYA Croatia
BERJAYA Georgia
BERJAYA Moldova
1995–97 BERJAYA Italy BERJAYA France BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Netherlands
BERJAYA Serbia and Montenegro
BERJAYA Ukraine
BERJAYA Hungary
BERJAYA Austria
  1. Promoted to First division
  2. 1 2 3 Champions of First division

FIRA Tournament (1996–1999)

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Year First Division Lower Division Champions
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Second Division Third Division Fourth Division
1996–97 BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Poland Not held
1997–98 Not held BERJAYA Latvia BERJAYA Luxembourg BERJAYA Austria
1998–99 BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Germany
BERJAYA Croatia
BERJAYA Denmark
BERJAYA  Switzerland

Statistics

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Nation 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
BERJAYA France 25 5 -
BERJAYA Romania 6 12 7
BERJAYA Italy 1 9 8
BERJAYA Soviet Union 1 3 3
BERJAYA Spain 1 - 3
BERJAYA Germany - 1 3
BERJAYA Morocco - - 2
BERJAYA Czechoslovakia - - 2

Current tournaments (2000–present)

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European Nations Cup (2000–2016)

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Year First Division Lower Division Champions
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Second Division Third Division Fourth Division
2000 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Morocco BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Czech Republic BERJAYA Slovenia
2001 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Poland Not held[4] Not held
2001–02 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Netherlands Not held[5] BERJAYA Slovenia
2003–04 BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Moldova
2004–06 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Latvia
2006–08 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Czech Republic BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Sweden
2008–10 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Germany [6] BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Lithuania
2010 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Russia
2011 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Ukraine [6] BERJAYA Belgium BERJAYA Sweden
2012 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Romania
2013 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Belgium [6] BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Netherlands
2014 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Russia
2015 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Belgium BERJAYA Estonia
2016 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Russia

Rugby Europe International Championships (2016–)

[edit]

First format

[edit]
Year Championship Trophy Conference 1 Conference 2 Development
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winners Relegated Winners Relegated Winner
2016–17 BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Netherlands BERJAYA  Switzerland BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Czech Republic[a] BERJAYA Malta BERJAYA Luxembourg BERJAYA Cyprus BERJAYA Hungary[b] BERJAYA Bosnia and Herzegovina[b] BERJAYA Turkey BERJAYA Slovakia[c]
2017–18 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Russia BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Netherlands BERJAYA Czech Republic BERJAYA Moldova BERJAYA Lithuania[a] BERJAYA Malta BERJAYA Latvia BERJAYA Andorra BERJAYA Luxembourg[b] BERJAYA Cyprus[b] BERJAYA Estonia BERJAYA Bulgaria[c]
2018–19 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Portugal[d] BERJAYA Netherlands BERJAYA  Switzerland BERJAYA Czech Republic BERJAYA Ukraine[a] BERJAYA Malta BERJAYA Moldova BERJAYA Bosnia and Herzegovina BERJAYA Latvia[b] BERJAYA Slovenia[b] BERJAYA Slovakia BERJAYA Turkey[c]
2019–20 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Belgium BERJAYA Netherlands[d] BERJAYA  Switzerland BERJAYA Ukraine
2020–21 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Portugal Not held
2021–22 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Russia[e] BERJAYA Belgium[d] BERJAYA Poland[d] BERJAYA Germany[d] BERJAYA Sweden[a] BERJAYA Croatia[a] BERJAYA Moldova[b] BERJAYA Bulgaria[b] BERJAYA Slovakia
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Promoted to Trophy
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Promoted to Conference 1
  3. 1 2 3 Promoted to Conference 2
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Promoted to Championship
  5. Disqualified and suspended due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine

Second format

[edit]
Year Championship Trophy Conference 1 Conference 2 Development
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winner Relegated Winners Relegated Winners Relegated Winner
2022–23 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA  Switzerland BERJAYA Czech Republic[a] BERJAYA Israel BERJAYA Finland BERJAYA Serbia BERJAYA Montenegro[b] BERJAYA Austria[c]
  1. Promoted to Trophy
  2. Withdrawn
  3. Promoted to Conference

Third format

[edit]
Year Championship Trophy Conference Development
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winner Relegated Winners Relegated Winner Runner-up
2023–24 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Poland BERJAYA  Switzerland[a] BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Latvia BERJAYA Luxembourg[b] BERJAYA Moldova BERJAYA Malta BERJAYA Montenegro[c] BERJAYA Kosovo[c]
  1. Promoted to Championship
  2. Promoted to Trophy
  3. 1 2 Promoted to Conference

Fourth format

[edit]
Year Championship Trophy Conference
Winner Runner-up Third Relegated Winner Relegated Winners
2024–25 BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Romania BERJAYA Germany BERJAYA Poland[a] BERJAYA Luxembourg BERJAYA Denmark[b] BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Moldova BERJAYA Malta BERJAYA Slovenia
2025–26 BERJAYA Portugal BERJAYA Georgia BERJAYA Spain BERJAYA Czech Republic BERJAYA Croatia BERJAYA Luxembourg BERJAYA Austria BERJAYA Ukraine BERJAYA Malta[b] BERJAYA Bosnia and Herzegovina
  1. Promoted to Championship due two year based ranking
  2. 1 2 Promoted to Trophy

Statistics (2000–present)

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All-time table

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NationPldWDLPFPAPDAVPPGPtsWin%Champs
BERJAYA Georgia 13511651445311561+297033.650085.93%17
BERJAYA Romania 1358924434432154+128925.536565.93%5
BERJAYA Spain 1255246828652918−5322.925241.6%0
BERJAYA Portugal 1205646027362550+18622.825946.67%2
BERJAYA Russia 1085435125262233+29323.423250%0
BERJAYA Germany 5571476992374−167512.74112.73%0
BERJAYA Belgium 50151349161412−49618.37830%0
BERJAYA Netherlands 45100358031499−69617.86622.22%0
BERJAYA Czech Republic 2960233621075−71312.484020.69%0
BERJAYA Ukraine 201019201997−79610.05155%0
BERJAYA Poland 10109126381-25512.6610%0
BERJAYA  Switzerland 10307135475-34013.51230%0
BERJAYA Morocco 53029469+2518.801160%0

Performance by team

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Nation Winner Runner-up Third Place
BERJAYA Georgia 1761
BERJAYA Romania 597
BERJAYA Portugal 224
BERJAYA Spain 045
BERJAYA Russia 036
BERJAYA Germany 001
BERJAYA Morocco 001

Records (since 2000)

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Updated as of 15 March 2026
Division 1A

Titles
Top division appearances
  • 29 (joint record) – BERJAYA Georgia (2000–present), BERJAYA Romania (2000–present)
Wins
  • most wins overall: 115BERJAYA Georgia
  • most home wins overall: 59BERJAYA Georgia
  • most away wins overall: 54BERJAYA Georgia
  • most consecutive wins overall: 22BERJAYA Georgia (12 February 2022 – 8 March 2026)
  • most consecutive home wins: 31BERJAYA Georgia (14 March 2009 – 26 June 2021)
  • most consecutive away wins: 18BERJAYA Georgia (17 February 2018 – 8 March 2026)
Draws
  • most draws overall: 5BERJAYA Georgia
Losses
  • most losses overall: 66BERJAYA Spain
Points
Games without a loss
  • Longest unbeaten run: 44BERJAYA Georgia (10 February 2018 – 8 March 2026)
  • Most consecutive games without a loss home: 58BERJAYA Georgia (6 March 2004 – present)
  • Most consecutive games without a loss away: 18BERJAYA Georgia (17 February 2018 – 8 March 2026)
Games without a win
  • 17, joint record – BERJAYA Ukraine (20 November 2004 – 17 March 2012), BERJAYA Germany (15 November 2009 – 27 February 2016)

Other trophies

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Several other trophies are contested within the main competition, mostly as long-standing fixtures between pairs of teams.

  • Trophy of the Two Iberias: Georgia versus Spain. The most recent Trophy of the Two Iberias match was won by Georgia (2026)
  • Coltan Cup: Portugal versus Belgium. The most recent Coltan Cup match was won by Portugal (2026)
  • Suebi Bowl: Germany versus Portugal. The most recent Suebi Bowl match was won by Portugal (2026)
  • Antim Cup: Romania versus Georgia. The most recent Antim Cup match was won by Georgia (2026)
  • Viriato Cup: Portugal versus Spain. The most recent Viriato Cup match was won by Portugal (2026)
  • Trajan's Column: Spain versus Romania. The most recent Trajan's Column match was won by Spain (2026)
  • Kiseleff Cup: Romania versus Russia. The most recent Kiseleff Cup match was won by Romania (2022)
  • Moscow Gold: Russia versus Spain. The most recent Moscow Gold match was won by Spain (2022)

See also

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References

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  1. Press Release - Rugby Europe AGM Twickenham, July 25, 2015 Archived August 25, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  2. 1 2 3 4 "New Format for Rugby Europe Championship". Rugby Europe. 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  3. RE:Championship z 8 drużynami! (Championship with 8 teams) (in Polish). (3 December 2021) Polski Zwiazek Rugby (Polish Rugby Union). Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  4. Was played the first round of 2003 Rugby World Cup – European qualification
  5. Was played as the second round of 2003 Rugby World Cup – European qualification
  6. 1 2 3 relegation and promotion on two year based ranking
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