Heineken Cup | |
---|---|
![]() 2009-10 Heineken Cup |
|
![]() Competition logo |
|
Sport | Rugby union |
Instituted | 1995 |
Inaugural season | 1995–96 |
Chairman | Jean-Pierre Lux |
Number of teams | 24 |
Nations | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Holders | Toulouse (2009–10) |
Most titles | Toulouse (4 titles) |
Website | Official site |
The European Rugby Cup (known as the Heineken Cup because of the tournament's sponsorship by Heineken) is an annual rugby union competition involving leading club, regional and provincial teams from six International Rugby Board (IRB) countries in Europe: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. Romania competed in the first year of the competition only. The competition is organised by the European Rugby Cup, who are also responsible for the secondary championship, the European Challenge Cup. It is one of the most prestigious trophies in the sport. The tournament was launched in the European summer of 1995 on the initiative of the then Five Nations committee to provide a new level of professional cross-border competition. It is sponsored by Dutch brewing company Heineken International (it is known as H-Cup in France because of alcohol advertising restrictions).
Each European countries has a different qualifying system, though in total, 24 teams contest the pool stages in six pools of four. According to performances, the number of clubs from each countries changes. The tournament is held from October to May, with various stages scheduled around domestic club competitions.
The 2009–10 tournament was won by Toulouse, who beat Biarritz 21–19 in an all-French final at Stade de France in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. Toulouse have won the competition a record four times, while Munster, Leicester Tigers and London Wasps have won it twice.
Contents |
The Heineken Cup is open to clubs in the Magners League, Guinness Premiership and the Top 14. The Italian Super 10 competition also sent clubs into the Heineken Cup through 2009–10, but will no longer do so after the expansion of the Magners League to include two Italian franchises. Clubs that do not qualify for the Heineken Cup can enter the European Challenge Cup.
22 places are awarded by country, with each country deciding how to allocate their alloted places[1]:
Starting with the 2009–10 season, the remaining two places in the 24-team tournament for the following season are filled by the winners of the Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup. If a trophy winner has already qualified for the Heineken Cup by virtue of its league position, that country will receive an extra Heineken Cup place (assuming that the country has an extra team that can take up a place; Scotland has only two top-level professional teams, as will Italy from the 2010–11 season onward). However, England and France are capped at seven Heineken Cup places each. If either country produces the winners of both European cups, the last place will be filled by the highest ERC-ranked club not of that nation to not have otherwise qualified.[2]
Previously, the remaining two places were allocated as follows:
The Heineken Cup is, generally speaking, the equivalent competition of the UEFA Champions League in professional football, whereas the European Challenge Cup is the equivalent to the secondary UEFA Europa League.
A proposal has been made that, in future, rather than Ireland, Wales and Scotland each sending their top-placed teams in the Magners League to the Heineken Cup, the top teams from the league as a whole should be sent, regardless of nationality.[3]
Six pools of four teams play both home and away games. Until the 2007/2008 season these pools were drawn mostly at random, with the following restrictions[4]:
From the 2008–09 season, there is more structure to the pools. The competing 24 teams are ranked based on past performance using the European club ranking from the ERC[5] and arranged into four tiers of six teams, with the reigning champion automatically appearing in the top tier. Each pool receives one team at random from each tier; again, this is subject to the restriction that each pool cannot contain more than one team from each competing nation, except where France or England supply seven teams.
Four points are awarded for a win and two points for a draw. A bonus point is awarded for a loss by seven points or fewer, or for scoring four tries or more. The six pool winners (ranked 1–6 by number of points scored) and two best placed runners-up (ranked seven and eight) qualify for the quarter-finals. Teams ranked one to four have home advantage. The 3 next-best placed runners up qualify, starting with the 2009/10 season, for the knock-out stages of the European Challenge Cup.[2]
The quarter-finals are: team 1 v team 8; team 2 v team 7; team 3 v team 6; team 4 v team 5.
The quarter-finals are played at the home stadiums of the higher-seeded clubs, or sometimes at a larger stadium in or near the host team's city. The semi-finals, on the other hand, are always played at nominally neutral venues. Each of the two semi-final venues are in the country of the first team out of the hat when the draw is made. For example, in 2004, Munster v Wasps was played at Lansdowne Road in Dublin, while Toulouse v Biarritz was played in Bordeaux.[6]
However, the neutrality requirement is satisfied simply by the designated home team playing outside of its normal stadium. Both 2005 semi-finals were held in the host's home city; Leicester Tigers v Toulouse was held at Walkers Stadium in Leicester, not far from Leicester's normal home of Welford Road,[7] while Stade Français v Biarritz was played at Parc des Princes in Paris, across the street from Stade's normal home field. The semifinal venue must also meet the following additional criteria; it must have a capacity of at least 20,000[8] and it must be in the same country as the designated home team.
However, the European Rugby Cup, which organises the competition, may allow exceptions, such as with Biarritz, located in a city less than 20 km from the Spanish border, being allowed to host their 2006 and 2010 semi-finals across the border at Estadio Anoeta in Donostia-San Sebastián (which is the closest stadium to Biarritz that meets the requirements).[9][10] During pool stages, these requirements are further relaxed; for example, Bourgoin hosted Munster in Switzerland at Stade de Genève, Geneva in the 2006–07 competition,[11] and Stade Français planned to take their 2009–10 home fixture against Ulster to Belgium's largest stadium, King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels, but that fixture was canceled and moved to Paris after heavy snowfall in Brussels on the intended matchday. The final is held at a predetermined site.
Season | Winner | Score | Runner-up | Venue | Attendance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1995–96 Details |
![]() |
21 – 18 a.e.t. |
![]() |
Cardiff Arms Park, Cardiff |
21,800 |
1996–97 Details |
![]() |
28 – 9 | ![]() |
Cardiff Arms Park, Cardiff |
41,664 |
1997–98 Details |
![]() |
19 – 18 | ![]() |
Stade Lescure, Bordeaux |
36,500 |
1998–99 Details |
![]() |
21 – 6 | ![]() |
Lansdowne Road, Dublin |
49,000 |
1999–2000 Details |
![]() |
9 – 8 | ![]() |
Twickenham Stadium, London |
68,441 |
2000–01 Details |
![]() |
34 – 30 | ![]() |
Parc des Princes, Paris |
44,000 |
2001–02 Details |
![]() |
15 – 9 | ![]() |
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff |
74,000 |
2002–03 Details |
![]() |
22 – 17 | ![]() |
Lansdowne Road, Dublin |
28,600 |
2003–04 Details |
![]() |
27 – 20 | ![]() |
Twickenham Stadium, London |
73,057 |
2004–05 Details |
![]() |
18 – 12 a.e.t. |
![]() |
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh |
51,326 |
2005–06 Details |
![]() |
23 – 19 | ![]() |
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff |
74,534 |
2006–07 Details |
![]() |
25 – 9 | ![]() |
Twickenham Stadium, London |
81,076 |
2007–08 Details |
![]() |
16 – 13 | ![]() |
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff |
74,417 |
2008–09 Details |
![]() |
19 – 16 | ![]() |
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh |
66,523 |
2009–10 Details |
![]() |
21 – 19 | ![]() |
Stade de France, Saint-Denis, Paris |
78,962 |
2010–11 |
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff |
||||
2011–12 |
Twickenham Stadium, London |
The Heineken Cup was launched in the summer of 1995 on the initiative of the then Five Nations Committee to provide a new level of professional cross border competition.[12] Twelve sides representing Ireland, Wales, Italy, Romania and France competed in four pools of three with the group winners going directly into the semi-finals.[13] English and Scottish teams did not take part in the inaugural competition.[14] From an inauspicious beginning in Romania, where Toulouse defeated Farul Constanţa 54–10 in front of a small crowd, the competition gathered momentum and crowds grew. Toulouse went on to become the first European cup winners, eventually beating Cardiff in extra time in front of a crowd of 21,800 at Cardiff Arms Park.[13]
Clubs from England and Scotland joined the competition in 1996–97.[15] European rugby was further expanded with the advent of the European Challenge Cup for teams that did not qualify for the Heineken Cup. The Heineken Cup now had 20 teams divided into four pools of five.[16] Only Leicester and Brive reached the knock-out stages with 100 per cent records and ultimately made it to the final, Cardiff and Toulouse falling in the semi-finals. After 46 matches, Brive beat Leicester 28–9 in front of a crowd of 41,664 at Cardiff Arms Park, the match watched by an estimated television audience of 35 million in 86 countries.[16]
1997–98 saw the introduction of a home and away format in the pool games.[17] The five pools of four teams, which guaranteed each team a minimum of six games, and the three quarter-final play-off matches all added up to a 70-match tournament. Brive reached the final again but were beaten late in the game by Bath with a penalty kick. Ironically, English clubs had decided to withdraw from the competition in a dispute over the way it was run.[14]
Without English clubs, the 1998–99 tournament revolved around France, Italy and the Celtic nations. Sixteen teams took part in four pools of four. French clubs filled the top positions in three of the groups and for the fourth consecutive year a French club, in the shape of Colomiers from the Toulouse suburbs, reached the final. Despite this it was to be Ulster's year as they beat Toulouse (twice) and reigning French champions Stade Français on their way to the final at Lansdowne Road, Dublin. Ulster then carried home the trophy after a 21–6 win over Colomiers in front of a capacity 49,000 crowd.[17]
English clubs returned in 1999–2000. The pool stages were spread over three months to allow the competition to develop alongside the nations’ own domestic competitions, and the knockout stages were scheduled to take the tournament into the early spring. For the first time clubs from four different nations – England, Ireland, France and Wales – made it through to the semi-finals. Munster's defeat of Toulouse in Bordeaux ended France's record of having contested every final and Northampton Saints' victory over Llanelli made them the third English club to make it to the final. The competition was decided with a final between Munster and Northampton, with Northampton coming out on top by a single point to claim their first major honour.[15]
England supplied two of the 2000–01 semi-finalists – Leicester Tigers and Gloucester – with Munster and French champions Stade Francais also reaching the last four. Both semi-finals were close, Munster going down by a point 16–15 to Stade Français in Lille and the Tigers beating Gloucester 19–15 at Vicarage Road, Watford. The final, at Parc des Princes, Paris, attracted a crowd of 44,000 and the result was in the balance right up until the final whistle, but Leicester walked off 34–30 winners.
Munster reached the 2001–02 final with quarter-final and semi-final victories on French soil against Stade Francais and Castres. Leicester pipped Llanelli in the last four, after the Scarlets had halted Leicester's 11-match Heineken Cup winning streak in the pool stages. A record crowd saw Leicester become the first side to successfully defend their title.[12]
From 2002, the European Challenge Cup winner now automatically qualified for the Heineken Cup. Toulouse's victory over French rivals Perpignan in 2003 meant that they joined Leicester as the only teams to win the title twice.[12] Toulouse saw a 19-point half-time lead whittled away as the Catalans staged a dramatic comeback in a match in which the strong wind and showers played a major role, but Toulouse survived to win.
In 2003–04 the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) voted to create regions to play in the Celtic League and represent Wales in European competition. Henceforth, Wales entered regional sides rather than the club sides that had previously competed. English side London Wasps had earned their first final appearance by beating Munster 37–32 in a Dublin semi-final while Toulouse triumphed 19–11 in an all-French contest with Biarritz in a packed Chaban Delmas, Bordeaux. The 2004 final at Twickenham saw Wasps defeat defending champions Toulouse 27–20 at Twickenham to win the Heineken Cup for the first time. The match was widely hailed as one of the best finals. With extra time looming at 20–20, a late opportunist try by scrum half Rob Howley settled the contest.
The tenth Heineken Cup final saw the inaugural champions Toulouse battle with rising stars Stade Français when Murrayfield was the first Scottish venue to host the final.[18] Fabien Galthié's Paris side led until two minutes from the end of normal time before Frédéric Michalak levelled the contest for Toulouse with his first penalty strike. He repeated this in the initial stages of extra time and then sealed his side's success with a superb opportunist drop-goal. Toulouse became the first team to win three Heineken Cup titles.[18]
In 2006, Munster defeated Biarritz in the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, 23–19.[19] It was third time lucky for the Irish provincial side, who had previously been denied the ultimate prize twice by Northampton and Leicester.
The 2006–07 Heineken Cup would be distributed to over 100 countries following Pitch International's securing of the rights.[20] That season was the first time in the history of the competition that two teams went unbeaten in pool play, with both Llanelli Scarlets and Biarritz doing so. Biarritz went into their final match at Northampton Saints with a chance to become the first team ever to score bonus-point wins in all their pool matches, but were only able to score two of the four tries needed. Leicester defeated Llanelli Scarlets to move into the final at Twickenham, with the possibility of winning a Treble of championships on the cards, having already won the EDF Energy Cup and the Guinness Premiership. However, Wasps won the final 25 points to 9 in front of a tournament record 81,076 fans.[21]
During competition there was uncertainty over the future of the tournament after the 2006–07 season as French clubs had announced that they would not take part because of fixture congestion following the Rugby World Cup and an ongoing dispute between English clubs and the RFU.[22][23] It was speculated that league two teams might compete the next season, the RFU saying "If this situation is not resolved, the RFU owes it to the sport to keep this competition going...We have spoken to our FDR clubs, and if they want to compete we will support them.".[24] A subsequent meeting led to the announcement that the tournament would be played in 2007–08, with clubs from all the six nations. On May 20 it was announced that both French and English top-tier teams would be competing [25]
In 2008 Munster won the cup for their second time ever by beating Toulouse at the Millenium Stadium in Cardiff.
Leinster won the title in 2009 in their first ever final after beating Munster in the semi-final in front of a world record Rugby Union club match attendance in Croke Park. They beat the Leicester Tigers in the final at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh.
In the 2010 final, Stade Toulousain defeated Biarritz Olympique in the Stade de France to claim their fourth title, a Heineken Cup record.
Country | Winners | Runners-up | Winning clubs | Runners-up |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
6 | 3 | Leicester Tigers (2), London Wasps (2), Bath, Northampton Saints | Leicester Tigers (3) |
![]() |
5 | 9 | Toulouse (4), Brive | Biarritz (2), Stade Français (2), Toulouse (2), Brive, Colomiers, Perpignan |
![]() |
4 | 2 | Munster (2), Leinster, Ulster | Munster (2) |
![]() |
0 | 1 | Cardiff |
Team | Winners | Runners-up | Years won | Years losing finalist |
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
4 | 2 | 1995–96, 2002–03, 2004–05, 2009-10 | 2003–04, 2007–08 |
![]() |
2 | 3 | 2000–01, 2001–02 | 1996–97, 2006–07, 2008–09 |
![]() |
2 | 2 | 2005–06, 2007–08 | 1999–2000, 2001–02 |
![]() |
2 | 0 | 2003–04, 2006–07 | |
![]() |
1 | 1 | 1996–97 | 1997–98 |
![]() |
1 | 0 | 1997–98 | |
![]() |
1 | 0 | 2008–09 | |
![]() |
1 | 0 | 1999–2000 | |
![]() |
1 | 0 | 1998–99 | |
![]() |
0 | 2 | 2005–06, 2009-10 | |
![]() |
0 | 2 | 2000–01, 2004–05 | |
![]() |
0 | 1 | 1995–96 | |
![]() |
0 | 1 | 1998–99 | |
![]() |
0 | 1 | 2002–03 |
Players involved in the 2009–10 Heineken Cup are in bold. Players not involved in this season's competition, but still active at club level, are in italics.
Player | Club | Tries |
---|---|---|
Vincent Clerc | Toulouse | 30 |
Dafydd James | Pontypridd, Llanelli, Bridgend, Celtic Warriors, Harlequins, Scarlets, Cardiff Blues | 29 |
Brian O'Driscoll | Leinster | 28 |
Shane Horgan | Leinster | 26 |
Ben Cohen | Northampton Saints, Brive, Sale Sharks | 24 |
Michel Marfaing | Toulouse | 24 |
Anthony Foley | Munster | 23 |
Tom Voyce | Bath, London Wasps, Gloucester | 23 |
Gordon D'Arcy | Leinster | 23 |
Geordan Murphy | Leicester Tigers | 22 |
Player | Club | Points |
---|---|---|
Ronan O'Gara | Munster | 1,136 |
Stephen Jones | Llanelli, Scarlets, Clermont Auvergne | 801 |
Diego Domínguez | Milan, Stade Français | 636 |
David Humphreys | Ulster | 564 |
Neil Jenkins | Pontypridd, Cardiff, Celtic Warriors | 502 |
Dimitri Yachvili | Biarritz | 487 |
Jean-Baptiste Élissalde | Toulouse | 441 |
Andy Goode | Leicester Tigers, Saracens, CA Brive | 423 |
Felipe Contepomi | Bristol, Leinster | 421 |
Lee Jarvis | Pontypridd, Cardiff, Neath, Newport Gwent Dragons | 411 |
Player | Club | Games |
---|---|---|
John Hayes | Munster | 92 |
Ronan O'Gara | Munster | 90 |
Anthony Foley | Munster | 86 |
Peter Stringer | Munster | 84 |
Fabien Pelous | Dax, Toulouse | 81 |
David Wallace | Munster | 78 |
Shane Horgan | Leinster | 77 |
Martyn Williams | Pontypridd, Cardiff, Cardiff Blues | 75 |
Marcus Horan | Munster | 74 |
Alan Quinlan | Munster | 74 |
This lists average attendances for each season's Heineken Cup competition and, where available, total attendance and the largest for each season. Typically, the final is the most-attended single match, as it is generally held in a larger stadium than any club's home venue.
However, the 2009 final was only the third most-attended match that season. The most-attended match was a semi-final between Irish rivals Leinster and Munster that was taken to the country's largest stadium, Croke Park. The attendance of 82,208 set a world record for a club match in the sport's history. Second on that season's list was a pool match between Stade Français and Harlequins that drew 76,569 to Stade de France, a venue that the Parisian club has used for occasional home matches since 2005.
Year | Total | Average | Highest |
---|---|---|---|
1995–96 | 6,502 | ||
1996–97 | 6,765 | ||
1997–98 | 6,613 | ||
1998–99 | 5,860 | ||
1999–00 | 7,924 | ||
2000–01 | 8,187 | ||
2001–02 | 8,308 | ||
2002–03 | 8,921 | ||
2003–04 | 10,352 | ||
2004–05 | 11,620 | ||
2005–06 | 12,370 | ||
2006–07 | 914,048 | 11,570 | 81,076 |
2007–08 | 942,373 | 11,928 | 74,417 |
2008–09 | 1,177,064 | 14,900 | 82,208 |
In Australia the Heineken Cup will be broadcast on Setanta Sports from 2010-11 season.
|
|