2016–17 European Rugby Champions Cup
The 2016–17 European Rugby Champions Cup was the third European Rugby Champions Cup championship, the annual rugby union club competition for teams from the top six nations in European rugby. The competition replaced the Heineken Cup, which was Europe's top-tier competition for rugby clubs for the first nineteen years of professional European rugby union. The opening round of the tournament took place on the weekend of 14/15/16 October 2016. The final took place on 13 May 2017 at Murrayfield in Edinburgh.
English side Saracens were the 2015–16 champions, having beaten Racing 92 of France in the 2016 final in Lyon.
Saracens retained the cup, defeating Clermont in the final 28–17.
Teams
Twenty clubs from the three major European domestic and regional leagues competed in the Champions Cup. Nineteen of these qualified directly as a result of their league performance.The distribution of teams was:
- England: 6 clubs
- * The top 6 clubs in the English Premiership.
- France: 7 clubs
- * The top 6 clubs in the [2015–16 2015–16 Top 14 season|Top 14 season|Top 14].
- * There was a seventh club from France, after Montpellier won the 2015–16 European Rugby Challenge Cup.
- Ireland, Italy, Scotland & Wales: 7 clubs, based on performance in the Pro12.
- * The best placed club from each nation.
- * The 3 highest ranked clubs not qualified thereafter.
The following teams qualified for the 2016–17 tournament.
This was the first time all four Irish provinces qualified for Europe's top club competition on their own merits, as Connacht's two previous appearances in the former Heineken Cup had been as a result of Leinster winning that cup the previous season.
Team details
Below is the list of coaches, captain and stadiums with their method of qualification for each team.Note: Placing shown in brackets, denotes standing at the end of the regular season for their respective leagues, with their end of season positioning shown through CH for Champions, RU for Runner-up, SF for losing Semi-finalist and QF for losing Quarter-finalist.
| Team | Coach / Director of Rugby | Captain | Stadium | Capacity | Method of Qualification | |||||||||||||
![]() SeedingThe 20 competing teams are seeded and split into four tiers, each containing 5 teams.For the purpose of creating the tiers, clubs are ranked based on their domestic league performances and on their qualification for the knockout phases of their championships, so a losing quarter-finalist in the Top 14 would be seeded below a losing semi-finalist, even if they finished above them in the regular season.
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