Heineken Cup: Difference between revisions

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The '''Heineken Cup''' was established in 1995 with the intention of providing a new stage for club [[rugby union]]. It has grown since then to become the premier club competition in the northern hemisphere.  The tournament was originally set up under the auspices of the (then) Five Nations Committee by European Rugby Cup Ltd (now ERC) under the name of 'European Rugby Cup', but within days of its announcement it succeeded in attracting a title sponsor and the name was changed to the Heineken Cup.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ercrugby.com/eng/121_266.php |title=European Rugby Cup |accessdate=2009-06-01 |author= |authorlink= |coauthors= |date= |year= |month= |format=html |work= |publisher=ERC |pages= |language= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |quote="Within days the five nation, 12 team tournament had been renamed the Heineken Cup and one of rugby's greatest competitions was ready for the off." }}</ref>  A second competition, the [[European Challenge Cup]], is also run by the ERC, for teams who have not qualified for the senior competition.
The '''Heineken Cup''' was established in 1995 with the intention of providing a new stage for club [[rugby union|rugby]]. It has grown since then to become the premier club competition in the northern hemisphere.  The tournament was originally set up under the auspices of the (then) Five Nations Committee by European Rugby Cup Ltd (now ERC) under the name of 'European Rugby Cup', but within days of its announcement it succeeded in attracting a title sponsor and the name was changed to the Heineken Cup.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ercrugby.com/eng/121_266.php |title=European Rugby Cup |accessdate=2009-06-01 |author= |authorlink= |coauthors= |date= |year= |month= |format=html |work= |publisher=ERC |pages= |language= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |quote="Within days the five nation, 12 team tournament had been renamed the Heineken Cup and one of rugby's greatest competitions was ready for the off." }}</ref>  A second competition, the [[European Challenge Cup]], is also run by the ERC, for teams who have not qualified for the senior competition.


==Format of competition==
==Format of competition==
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On 22nd May, 2010, Toulouse beat Biarritz Olympique by 21-19 in an all-French final to take the 09/10 competition, becoming the only team to win four Heineken Cups.
On 22nd May, 2010, Toulouse beat Biarritz Olympique by 21-19 in an all-French final to take the 09/10 competition, becoming the only team to win four Heineken Cups.
On 21st May, 2011, Leinster, after being down 6-22 at half-time, came back to beat Northampton Saints by 33-22 to take the 10/11 trophy. 
On 19th May, 2012, Leinster became only the second team to successfully defend their title, when they beat Ulster 42-14 in what was dubbed the "All-Ireland Final".


==Final results==
==Final results==
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|-
|-
|2010–11
|2010–11
|  
| '''[[Leinster Rugby|Leinster]]'''
|  
| '''33 - 22'''
| [[Biarritz Olympique|Biarritz]]
|[[Northampton Saints]]
|[[Cardiff Arms Park]]
|[[Millennium Stadium]]
|  
| 72,456
|-
|2011–12
| '''[[Leinster Rugby|Leinster]]'''
| '''42 - 14'''
|[[Ulster Rugby|Ulster]]
|[[Twickenham Stadium|Twickenham]]
| 81,774
|-
|2012–13
| -
| -
| -
|[[Lansdowne Road|Aviva Stadium]]
| -
|}
|}


==References==
==Notes==
<references/>
{{Reflist}}
 
[[Category:Rugby union competitions]]

Latest revision as of 04:14, 14 September 2019

The Heineken Cup was established in 1995 with the intention of providing a new stage for club rugby union. It has grown since then to become the premier club competition in the northern hemisphere. The tournament was originally set up under the auspices of the (then) Five Nations Committee by European Rugby Cup Ltd (now ERC) under the name of 'European Rugby Cup', but within days of its announcement it succeeded in attracting a title sponsor and the name was changed to the Heineken Cup.[1] A second competition, the European Challenge Cup, is also run by the ERC, for teams who have not qualified for the senior competition.

Format of competition

The Heineken Cup is played between the top 24 club teams drawn from the countries competing in the Six Nations Championship: Ireland, England, Scotland, Wales, France and Italy. Teams are seeded and divided into six pools of four teams each.

Each team plays every other team in its pool, both home and away. Four points are awarded for a win, and two are awarded for a draw. An interesting innovation, though, is that teams can score bonus points: a Try Bonus of one point is awarded if a team scores four or more tries in a match, and a Losing Bonus of one point is awarded if a team loses by seven points or less.[2] This has the effect of making games a more interesting spectacle as teams attempt to win bonus pool points with exciting plays to score tries or minimise the winning team's margin.

The six pool winners and the two best placed runners-up (in terms of points scored) go through to the quarter-finals. The quarter-final winners go through to the semi-finals, and the semi-final winners meet in the final.

History

The first competition, in 1995/96, was played between twelve teams from Ireland, France, Wales, Italy and Romania (who have not competed since). England and Scotland entered teams for the 1996/97 competition, which was expanded to 20 teams. English teams didn't compete in 97/98, despite Bath having won the previous year. Since 98/99 on, all of the Six Nations countries have entered teams.

(CC) Photo: Anton Sweeney
The Leinster squad thank the fans after their Heineken Cup semi-final victory over Munster at Croke Park.

On 2nd May, 2009, the world record for attendance at a club rugby game was broken when 82,208 supporters watched Leinster beat Munster 25-6 in a Heineken Cup semi-final at Croke Park, Dublin.[3] Leinster went on to win the 08/09 competition, beating Leicester Tigers 19-16 in the final, played in Murrayfield on 24th May, 2009.

On 22nd May, 2010, Toulouse beat Biarritz Olympique by 21-19 in an all-French final to take the 09/10 competition, becoming the only team to win four Heineken Cups.

On 21st May, 2011, Leinster, after being down 6-22 at half-time, came back to beat Northampton Saints by 33-22 to take the 10/11 trophy.

On 19th May, 2012, Leinster became only the second team to successfully defend their title, when they beat Ulster 42-14 in what was dubbed the "All-Ireland Final".

Final results

Season Winner Score Runner-up Venue Attendance
1995–96 Toulouse 21 – 18 Cardiff Cardiff Arms Park 21,800
1996–97 Brive 28 – 9 Leicester Tigers Cardiff Arms Park 41,664
1997–98 Bath 19 – 18 Brive Stade Lescure 36,500
1998–99 Ulster 21 – 6 Colomiers Lansdowne Road 49,000
1999–2000 Northampton Saints 9 – 8 Munster Twickenham 68,441
2000–01 Leicester Tigers 34 – 30 Stade Français Parc des Princes 44,000
2001–02 Leicester Tigers 15 – 9 Munster Millennium Stadium 74,000
2002–03 Toulouse 22 – 17 Perpignan Lansdowne Road 28,600
2003–04 London Wasps 27 – 20 Toulouse Twickenham 73,057
2004–05 Toulouse 18 – 12 Stade Français Murrayfield 51,326
2005–06 Munster 23 – 19 Biarritz Millennium Stadium 74,534
2006–07 London Wasps 25 – 9 Leicester Tigers Twickenham 81,076
2007–08 Munster 16 – 13 Toulouse Millennium Stadium 74,417
2008–09 Leinster 19 – 16 Leicester Tigers Murrayfield 66,523
2009–10 Toulouse 21 - 19 Biarritz Stade de France 80,000
2010–11 Leinster 33 - 22 Northampton Saints Millennium Stadium 72,456
2011–12 Leinster 42 - 14 Ulster Twickenham 81,774
2012–13 - - - Aviva Stadium -

Notes

  1. European Rugby Cup (html). ERC. Retrieved on 2009-06-01. “"Within days the five nation, 12 team tournament had been renamed the Heineken Cup and one of rugby's greatest competitions was ready for the off."”
  2. European Rugby Cup (html). ERC. Retrieved on 2009-06-01.
  3. ERC Rugby (2009-05-02). World record crowd witness Leinster win (html). ERC Rugby. Retrieved on 2009-05-02.