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English rugby union system

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Rugby union in England has a comprehensive league structure in place, which includes professional leagues at the highest level, down to amateur regional leagues. The format and competitiveness of the leagues has changed greatly since their beginnings in 1987.[1] The latest widespread restructuring of the leagues was announced in November 2008, for implementation from the 2009–10 season. Under this new structure, the top league remains the 12-team Aviva Premiership. The second tier league has been rebranded and restructured; as the RFU Championship which has replaced the old National Division One. This league also has 12 teams, and like the Premiership, is professional.

Beneath the two professional leagues, the National Leagues have been restructured to include a new 16 team National League 1, 16 team National League 2 South and 16 team National League 2 North. The four top regional leagues are now part of National League 3 at level five. Promotion and relegation remains throughout the system.

Professional rugby

The top two tiers of English rugby are professional with 24 teams (2014/15 season):

Team Stadium Capacity City/Area 2013/14 Overall League Position
Bedford Blues Goldington Road 7,000 Bedford, Bedfordshire 21st (9th in Championship)
Bristol Ashton Gate 12,100 Bristol 13th (1st in the Championship)
Cornish Pirates Mennaye Field 3,500 Penzance 18th (6th in the Championship)
Doncaster Knights Castle Park 5,000 Doncaster 25th (1st in National 1)
Jersey St. Peter 5,000 Saint Peter, Jersey 23rd (11th in the Championship)
London Scottish Athletic Ground, Richmond 4,500 London 17th (5th in Championship)
London Welsh Kassam Stadium 12,500 Oxford 14th (2nd in the Championship)
Moseley Billesley Common 3,000+ Birmingham 19th (7th in the Championship)
Nottingham Meadow Lane 19,588 Nottingham 22nd (10th in the Championship)
Plymouth Albion The Brickfields 8,500 Plymouth 20th (8th in the Championship)
Rotherham Titans Clifton Lane
Oakwell (if promoted to the premiership)
2,500
23,000
Rotherham 16th (4th in the Championship)
Yorkshire Carnegie Headingley Carnegie Stadium 20,250 Headingley, Leeds 15th (3rd in the Championship as Leeds Carnegie)
Bath The Recreation Ground 12,300 Bath 5th
Exeter Chiefs Sandy Park 10,744 Exeter 8th
Gloucester Kingsholm Stadium 16,500 Gloucester 9th
Harlequins The Stoop 14,816 London 4th
Leicester Tigers Welford Road 26,000 Leicester 3rd
London Irish Madejski Stadium 24,250 Reading 10th
Newcastle Falcons Kingston Park 10,200 Newcastle 11th
Northampton Saints Franklin's Gardens 13,600 Northampton 2nd
Sale Sharks Salford City Stadium 12,000 Salford 6th
Saracens Allianz Park 10,000 Hendon, London 1st
Wasps RFC Ricoh Arena 32,609 Coventry 7th
Worcester Warriors Sixways Stadium 12,068 Worcester 12th (relegated to the Championship)

Level 1: Aviva Premiership

The Aviva Premiership is the top level league in England, containing the best 12 professional clubs. The premiership still includes strict ground criteria and a salary cap that must be met by all participants. Promotion and relegation remains between the top two divisions with the bottom side being relegated at the end of the season, providing the promoted club meets the ground criteria. The promoted club will no longer be the top team in the RFU Championship after the 22 match first phase; the champions being decided by a play-off system which is hoped to bring to an end a select number of clubs bouncing between the leagues. (For example, each season between 2005–06 and 2008–09 saw the club relegated to National Division One earning promotion to the Premiership the following season, and also either the promotion or relegation of Leeds Carnegie.) Debate still continues over the question of promotion and relegation, but with the strict criteria and now a fully professional Championship providing the replacement financial fears are reduced.

Level 2: RFU Championship

The new RFU Championship was formed in 2009–10 to provide a second tier of professional competition. The former National Division One was decreased from 16 clubs to 12 to accommodate the new fixture structure. For the first three seasons this included:

  • a first phase of 22 regular season games
  • end of season play-offs to decide the promotion and relegation places
  • participation in a new British and Irish Cup with Irish, Scottish and Welsh clubs
  • a minimum of 32 games per season

From season 2012–13 the end of season play–offs are discontinued, with the top four teams now playing against each other in two semi–finals and a final; which decides the champions, and thus the team eligible for promotion providing certain ground criteria are met. The last team at the end of the first phase is relegated to, and replaced by, the champions of the third tier National Division One.

Levels 3-5: National Leagues

The new National League structure includes:

Level 3: National League 1

The former National Division Two was renamed and increased from 14 to 16 teams. This resulted in a 30-game season on a home and away basis. The champions are promoted to the level 2 RFU Championship, and the three bottom sides are relegated to the level 4 National League 2 North or National League 2 South depending on geographical location.

Level 4: National League 2 South and National League 2 North

The previous National Division Three leagues became National League 2, keeping the same structure as previous except for being increased to 16 teams each. The two league champions are promoted, with the two runners-up meeting in a promotion play-off to decide the third promoted team. The bottom three in each league are relegated to their respective regional division. A new element is that the champions will meet in a National Final.

Level 5: National League 3

The former top regional leagues became the lowest level of the national league structure, increasing in size from 12 to 14 teams. The leagues are:

The four champions are promoted to either the National League 2 North or National League 2 South, the four runners up enter play-offs to decide the other two promoted sides. The four champions clubs also meet in a knock-out national finals competition.

Regional leagues

With the restructuring, levels 6-12 became the new regional system. There are now 8 regional Division 1 leagues, which are connected to the national leagues by promotion and relegation.

The system

The table below shows the current structure of the system. For each division, its official name, sponsorship name (which differs from its historic name) and number of clubs is given. At levels 1-3, each division promotes to the national division(s) that lie directly above it and relegates to the national division(s) that lie directly below it. Below that level, clubs relegate to the nearest local league.

History

Historically, there were no leagues allowed as these were seen as a sign of professionalism. In the 1970s the RFU allowed the creation of regional merit leagues with the most significant ones being the North, Midlands, South West and London merit leagues. In 1984 the RFU approved the creation of two national merit tables where clubs had to play a minimum of eight games against the clubs in their division. 1985 saw the creation of a third national merit league. In 1987 this was formed into a true national league system.

Level

League(s)/Division(s)

1

Aviva Premiership Rugby
(English Premiership)
12 clubs

2

Greene King IPA Championship
(RFU Championship)
12 clubs

3

National League 1
16 clubs

4

National League 2 North
16 clubs

National League 2 South
16 clubs

5

National League 3 Midlands
14 clubs

National League 3 North
14 clubs

National League 3 South-East
14 clubs

National League 3 South-West
14 clubs

6

Midlands 1 West
14 clubs

Midlands 1 East
14 clubs

North 1 East
14 clubs

North 1 West
14 clubs

London 1 North
14 clubs

London 1 South
14 clubs

South West 1 West
14 clubs

South West 1 East
14 clubs

7

Midlands 2 West (North)
Midlands 2 West (South)
Midlands 2 East (North)
Midlands 2 East (South)

North Lancashire/Cumbria
South Lancashire/Cheshire 1
Durham/Northumberland 1
Yorkshire 1

London 2 North East
London 2 North West
London 2 South East
London 2 South West

Tribute Western Counties North
Tribute Western Counties West
Southern Counties South
Southern Counties North

8

Midlands 3 West (North)
Midlands 3 West (South)
Midlands 3 East (North)
Midlands 3 East (South)

Cheshire (South)
Cumbria League
Durham/Northumberland 2
Lancashire (North)
Merseyside (West)
Yorkshire 2

London 3 North East
London 3 North West
London 3 South East
London 3 South West

Tribute Somerset Premier
Gloucester Premier
Tribute Cornwall/Devon
Dorset & Wilts 1 North
Dorset & Wilts 1 South
Berks/Bucks & Oxon Premier

9

Midlands 4 West (North)
Midlands 4 West (South)
Midlands 4 East (North)
Midlands 4 East (South)

Durham/Northumberland 3
Yorkshire 3

Eastern Counties 1
Herts/Middlesex 1
Essex 1
Kent 1
Sussex 1
Surrey 1
Hampshire 1

Somerset 1
Gloucester 1
Tribute Cornwall 1
Tribute Devon 1
Dorset & Wilts 2 North
Dorset & Wilts 2 South
Berks/Bucks & Oxon Championship

10

Midlands 5 West (North)
Midlands 5 West (South)
Midlands 5 East (North)

Yorkshire 4

Eastern Counties 2
Herts/Middlesex 2
Essex 2
Kent 2
Surrey 2
Hampshire 2

Somerset 2 North
Somerset 2 South
Gloucester 2
Tribute Cornwall 2
Tribute Devon 2
Dorset & Wilts 3 North
Dorset & Wilts 3 South
Berks/Bucks & Oxon 2

11

n/a

Yorkshire 5

Surrey 3
Eastern Counties 3

Somerset 3 North
Somerset 3 South
Gloucester 3
Dorset & Wilts 4
Berks/Bucks & Oxon 3

12

n/a

n/a

Surrey 4
Eastern Counties 4

n/a

See also

References

  1. ^ Tony Williams and Bill Mitchell, ed. (1990). Official Rugby Union Club Directory 1990-91. Windsor: Burlington Publishing Co Ltd.