RFU Championship explained

Championship Rugby
Current Season:2024–25 RFU Championship
Last Season:2021–22 RFU Championship
Sport:Rugby union
Administrator:RFU
Teams:11
Champions:Ealing Trailfinders (2nd title)
Champ Season:2023–24
Most Successful Club:Bristol Bears (4 titles)
Levels:Level 2
Promotion:No promotion
Relegation:National League 1
Domestic Cup:Premiership Rugby Cup

The RFU Championship is an English rugby union competition comprising eleven clubs. It is the second level of men's English rugby and is played by both professional and semi-professional players.[1] [2] The competition has existed since 1987, when English clubs were first organised into leagues.[3]

Organisation and format

The Championship is governed by the Rugby Football Union (RFU).[4] The current competition format is a double round-robin tournament, where teams play each other home and away. The 2022–23 season had no playoff phase, and no team was promoted to the Premiership as Jersey Reds did not meet the minimum standards criteria.[5]

History

Precursor competitions (1987–2009)

The governing body for rugby union in England, the RFU, first allowed league hierarchies in 1987. This came nearly a century after leagues were first established in football and cricket, England's other two principal team sports.[6] [7]

The RFU's reluctance to allow leagues was based on a perceived threat to the sport's amateurism regulations: competitive leagues were seen as making clubs more likely to use incentives to attract and retain the best players.[8]

When formalised leagues were finally permitted in the 1987–88 season, the second level was known as 'Courage League National Division Two'. The league has since had several different names before becoming the RFU Championship in the 2009–10 season.

Name of second-level competitionFirst seasonLast season
Courage League National Division Two1987–881996–97
Allied Dunbar Premiership Two1997–981999–2000
National Division One2000–012008–09

Origins (2008)

In November 2008, the Rugby Football Union (RFU) published a plan for a new professional tier below the Premiership. The 12-team Championship replaced the 16-team National Division One.

Level of men's rugbyName of competition in 2008–09Name of competition in 2009–10Number of teams in 2008–09Number of teams in 2009–10
Level 1Guinness PremiershipGuinness Premiership1212
Level 2National Division OneRFU Championship1612
Level 3National Division 2National League 11416

To enable Level 2 to transition from 16 teams to 12, the RFU proposal called for five teams to be relegated at the end of the 2008–09 season. The relegated teams would play in the third level of rugby, known as 'National Division 2' in 2008–09 and to be known as 'National League 1' in 2009–10.

Additionally, one team would be relegated from the Premiership (Level 1 to Level 2), one team would be promoted to the Premiership (Level 2 to Level 1), and one team would be promoted from National Division 2 (Level 3 to Level 2).

The RFU Council voted overwhelmingly in favour of the new proposal, and the first Championship season started the following year, in 2009.

RFU Championship (2009–present)

Promotion to the Premiership

Automatic promotion to the Premiership has not been a consistent feature of the RFU Championship. A playoff tournament was used to decide promotion between the 2009–10 and 2016–17 seasons, as well as in the 2020–21 season.

In seasons without a promotion playoff (2017–18, 2018–19, 2019–20), the team at the top of the league was automatically promoted to the Premiership.[9]

SeasonNumber of playoff teams
2009–108
2010–11
2011–12
2012–134
2013–14
2014–15
2015–16
2016–17
2017–18No play-offs
2018–19
2019–20
2020–212
2021–22No play-offs
2022–23
2023–24

The RFU plans to reintroduce possible promotion at the end of the 2023–24 season, by means of a play-off between the top placed team in the Championship and the bottom placed side in the Premiership.[10]

COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic caused the 2019–20 season to be prematurely ended. Final standings were based on a "best playing record formula" and promotion and relegation remained for the 1st and 12th placed clubs respectively.[11]

The 2020–21 season was impacted by the aforementioned pandemic and as a consequence, a shorter season kicked off in spring 2021. The reduced season saw each team play each other once only with the top two teams entering a two-legged promotion playoff. There was no relegation due to cancellation of National League 1.[12]

In February 2021, a moratorium on relegation from the Premiership into the Championship was approved and it was confirmed that the RFU were working on a review of the minimum standards criteria for promotion and the league structure from 2021–22.[13] The moratorium was extended for a further two years in June 2021 and also could include promotion from the Championship at the end of the 2022–23 season if there was promotion in the previous season. There was also no relegation from the Championship in 2021–22.

Competition funding

The RFU Championship clubs were in dispute with the RFU over funding for the competition and claimed that each club was owed £77,000 for the past three seasons, and will be owed a further £120,000 over the next four seasons. The clubs believed they should have received £295,000 in 2009–10, rising to £400,000 by 2015–16 and further believe there was a breach of contract on the part of the RFU. The RFU stated that the original funding was an estimate and by 2015–16 the figure will be £359,400.[14] When the RFU announced the hiatus of promotion play-offs, it also announced funding increases from both itself and the Premiership, including a new system which ties some of the new funding to each Championship side's performance in the league season.[9] The extra funding provided prior to 2016–17 was removed prior to the 2020–21 season.[15] [16]

Sponsorship

For sponsorship reasons, the competition was officially known as the Greene King IPA Championship between the 2013–14 and 2020–21 seasons.[17]

Historic results

Courage League National Division Two (1987–1997)

SeasonMatchesChampionsRunners–upRelegated teams
11 Rosslyn Park No relegation
11 Saracens London Scottish and London Welsh
11 Northampton No relegation
12 Rugby
12 London Scottish Plymouth Albion, Liverpool St Helens
12 Newcastle Gosforth Bedford, Rosslyn Park, Richmond, Blackheath, Coventry, Fylde, Morley
18 Sale Rugby, Otley
18 Saracens Fylde, Coventry
18 Northampton No relegation
22 Richmond Rugby, Nottingham
Green background are promotion places.

Allied Dunbar Premiership Two (1997–2000)

SeasonMatchesChampionsRunners–upRelegated teams
22 Bedford No relegation
26 Bristol Blackheath and Fylde
26 Rotherham
Green background are promotion places.

National Division One (2000–2009)

SeasonMatchesChampionsRunners–upRelegated teams
26 Leeds Tykes Orrell and Waterloo
26 Rotherham Henley and Bracknell
26 Rotherham Moseley, Rugby Lions
26 Worcester Wakefield, Manchester
26 Bristol Orrell, Henley
26 Harlequins No relegation
30 Leeds Tykes Otley, Waterloo
30 Northampton Saints Pertemp Bees, Launceston
30 Leeds Tykes Esher, Sedgley Park, Newbury, Otley, Manchester
Green background are promotion places.

RFU Championship (2009–)

SeasonMatchesChampionsRunners–upRelegated teams
2009–1022Exeter ChiefsBristolCoventry
2010–1122Worcester WarriorsBedford BluesDoncaster Knights
2011–1222London WelshBristolEaling Trailfinders
2012–1322Newcastle FalconsBristolPlymouth Albion
2013–1423London WelshDoncaster KnightsMoseley
2014–1522Worcester WarriorsYorkshire CarnegieNo relegation
2015–1622BristolEaling TrailfindersRotherham Titans
2016–1722London IrishEaling TrailfindersRichmond
2017–1822BristolEaling TrailfindersYorkshire Carnegie
2018–1922London IrishEaling TrailfindersNo relegation
2019–2015*Newcastle FalconsEaling TrailfindersNo relegation
2020–2110**SaracensEaling TrailfindersNo relegation
2021–2220Ealing TrailfindersDoncaster KnightsNo relegation
2022–2322Jersey RedsEaling TrailfindersRichmond
2023–2420Ealing TrailfindersCornish PiratesNo relegation
2024–2522
Green background are promotion places.
**2020–21 season started late due to the pandemic.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: What next for rugby's Championship?. BBC Sport.
  2. Web site: RFU cuts turn London Scottish semi-pro but Championship could become development league | SWLondoner. 2 April 2020.
  3. Any given Saturday: Competitive balance in elite English rugby union. 10.1080/13606719.2012.674388. 2012. Williams. Peter. Managing Leisure. 17. 2–3. 88–105. 154035466.
  4. Web site: Regulation 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200424153347/https://www.englandrugby.com/dxdam/78/78c488a3-c7bf-46f7-93fb-d26c11771275/Regulation%2013.pdf . 24 April 2020 . live .
  5. Web site: RFU.
  6. Book: Williams . P. J. . Professionalism and Change in English Rugby Union: An Inside View - ProQuest . 2000 . University of Manchester . 22 November 2021 . en.
  7. Web site: Annual Meeting of County Secretaries – the programme for 1890 . . . 1889 . 478–479 . 3 July 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170908020352/http://stats.acscricket.com/Cricket/1889/index.html#523/z . 8 September 2017 . dead .
  8. Williams . P. . Battle Lines on Three Fronts: The RFU and the Lost War Against Professionalism . The International Journal of the History of Sport . December 2002 . 19 . 4 . 114–136 . 10.1080/714001793 . 145705183 . 22 November 2021.
  9. Play-off system removed from Greene King IPA Championship from next season . Premiership Rugby Limited . 3 March 2017 . 4 March 2017.
  10. Web site: RFU Council Vote in Favour of Covid Recovery Plan and Temporary Pause on Relegation. 2021-06-29. Premiership Rugby. en-US.
  11. Web site: RFU. 2021-02-12. www.englandrugby.com.
  12. Web site: Greene King IPA Championship Fixtures Confirmed. 2021-02-12. www.championshiprugby.co.uk.
  13. Web site: RFU Council Votes in Favour of No Relegation. 2021-02-16. www.englandrugby.com.
  14. News: Straughan. Dick. Falcons relegated as Welsh win RFU promotion appleal. The Cornishman. 5 July 2012. 80.
  15. Web site: Update on RFU Funding of Greene King IPA Championship. Rugby Football Union. 2020-02-11.
  16. Web site: Update on RFU Funding of Greene King IPA Championship. Rugby Football Union. 2020-02-23.
  17. Greene King IPA to sponsor RFU Championship . Rugby Football Union . 26 June 2013 . 27 June 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130701022502/http://www.rfu.com/news/2013/june/news-articles/260613_greene_king_championship . 1 July 2013 . dmy-all .