United Rugby Championship
The United Rugby Championship is an annual rugby union competition involving professional teams from Ireland, Italy, Scotland, South Africa, and Wales. For sponsorship reasons the league is known as the Vodacom United Rugby Championship in South Africa, and the BKT United Rugby Championship in the competition's other territories, the split branding mirroring the format previously adopted in Super Rugby. The Championship represents the highest level of domestic club or franchise rugby in each of its constituent countries.
The Championship is one of the three major professional leagues in Europe, the most successful teams from which go forward to compete in the highest-level continental club competitions, the European Rugby Champions Cup and Challenge Cup. Since 2022–23 South African teams have been eligible to qualify for European competitions.
Name
The tournament has had a number of names as it has grown, both organisationally and because of sponsors. The current name for the tournament was adopted in 2021, when the league expanded to include four South African teams previously from the SANZAR Super Rugby competition and both sets of naming rights, BKT and Vodacom, were added in the 2022–23 season.The genesis of the League can be traced to 1999 when two Scottish districts joined the professional Welsh Premier Division, creating the Welsh–Scottish League, which does not form part of the continuity of the competition known as URC, but is the acknowledged precursor to it. When the Welsh-Scottish league was disbanded to create a similar competition with the provincial clubs from Ireland three years later, the new competition became known as the Celtic League The league was sponsored by Irish cider makers Magners from the 2006–07 season until 2010–11, and was referred to as the Magners League. At the start of the 2010–11 season, the league expanded from 10 to 12 teams, by adding two Italian teams, the first step outside the Celtic nations who had formed the league.
Following the end of Magners' sponsorship, the league adopted a Pro12 branding to acknowledge the move beyond the Celtic nations, with RaboDirect coming on board as naming sponsor of the Rabobank Pro12 from 2011–12 through to 2013–14. A further expansion to 14 teams took place from the 2017–18 season, with two South African teams not competing in the Super rugby competition joining the Championship until the 2019–20 season. The sponsorship deal with Guinness began at the beginning of the 2014–15 season as the Guinness Pro14, and concluded after the Guinness Pro14 Rainbow Cup in July 2021. Following the arrival of the four South African Super Rugby franchises a further rebranding to the United Rugby Championship occurred, while the league formed a new partnership with Roc Nation. BKT and Vodacom secured naming rights the following season.
Trophy
The URC trophy is named 'The Array', and was made in collaboration between British silversmiths Thomas Lyte, and design agency, Matter, in 2022. While the trophy's official name is 'The Array', it is also affectionately nicknamed 'the Beast' as it weighs around, making it the heaviest trophy in club rugby. It stands 68 cm tall.Tournament format
Current format
As of the introduction of the United Rugby Championship in 2021–22, the championship season has broadly had a consistent format. It takes place between September and May, with teams split into four regional pools: The Irish Shield pool, the Welsh Shield pool, the South African Shield pool and the Scottish and Italian Shield pool for the purpose of fixture setting.Teams play each of the other teams in their pool twice and each team from the other pools once. This ensures that Irish, South African and Welsh teams each play six derby matches. For Italy and Scotland, their respective clubs play their own nations' sides only twice. All teams are sorted in a single league table. Championship points are awarded using the bonus points system; 4 points for a win and 2 for a draw. Bonus points can be earned so long as teams either score four or more tries in a game or lose by seven points or fewer – should a team do both, two bonus points are gained.
This creates an 18-match regular season before the play-offs, essentially a full single round robin with three additional 'derby ties'.
The play-offs are made up of a seeded three round single-elimination tournament for the top eight teams. Teams are seeded 1–8 and the highest-seeded teams receive home advantage in every tie, including in the final. Prior to 2022, in common with the English Gallagher Premiership competition, the finals had been held in pre-arranged venues, although unlike the Premiership -where the final was fixed at Twickenham, the event still travelled between hosts.
As for European qualification, As of 2022 the South African teams are eligible for European competition. As of 2023, the top eight teams qualify for the Champions Cup, with the remaining teams qualifying for the Challenge Cup, subject to lower ranked URC teams claiming qualification for the Champions Cup by winning a European trophy.
With three fewer regular season fixtures than in the Pro14, but with an extra round of playoffs, the season is truncated slightly to 21 match weeks and thus can still be scheduled to the same time period as previous models of the competition. Clashes between league matches and international weekends in November and during the Six Nations Championship have been reduced.
Due to the travelling distance between Europe and South Africa, home South African games are always played on a Saturday, allowing visiting teams to have a seven-day turnaround between fixtures, including five "clean days" that do not involve any travel. Should the draw see European teams play both South African teams away, the schedule will see the away team play the two matches back-to-back across two weeks, acting as a "mini-tour" and reducing air travel and freight.
URC Regional Shields
On 24 September 2021, URC confirmed that the top side in each regional pool after the end of the 18-game regular season would be awarded a subsidiary trophy, a regional Shield. In Ireland, Wales and South Africa, this shield functions as an informal national championship title for the main professional sides, while in Scotland and Italy's shared pool, it will be a joint regional trophy. The concept is comparable to the Divisional Championships in the NFL which are also loosely geographically based. For the 2021–2022 and 2022–2023 seasons, the winners of each Shield were decided on the basis of all 18 regular season games played, and also guaranteed qualification for the European Rugby Champions Cup, regardless of their overall league position. However, since the start of the 2023–2024 season, this was no longer the case and the top eight teams in the league would qualify for Europe regardless of Shield position. In addition, the winners of the each Shield would be determined by the games played amongst the teams within their regional group, reaffirming its status as a specifically national and separate championship. In Scotland, the 'national' trophy is considered to be the 1872 Cup played exclusively between the two Scottish clubs, usually as a double header over the Christmas and New Year periods.Derby games have become a tradition in all five member nations over this holiday period, with most home teams achieving bumper crowds for the matches. In Wales, a tradition has also arisen for a double-header Judgment Day event, involving all four Welsh clubs in two Welsh derbies back-to-back at the Principality Stadium. In Ireland and Scotland, certain derby games have been moved very successfully to the larger national stadia, or in the case of Connacht and Munster, to much larger local GAA grounds.
Format history
The league has used a play-off structure for most of its history, from its beginnings in 2001 until to 2003, and again every year since the 2009–10 season to determine the champions, similar to that used in the English Premiership. For the first two seasons there were two groups and a knockout to determine a winner. Starting from the 2003–04 season until the 2008–09 season, the champions were determined from league performance, with all the teams in one league table. From 2009, the single league table was retained, but play-offs were reintroduced to crown a champion. From the 2017–18 season, when the competition expanded to fourteen teams, the regular season employed a conference structure rather than a single round robin league, with 'derby games' between teams from the same nation being protected, and an expanded playoff structure. This allowed the expanded competition to control the calendar, and control the number of games per team.League points are awarded using the bonus points system. Until and including the 2008–09 season, the champions were decided solely on the basis of who finished top of the league table, but since the 2009–10 season, the league champion has been decided by a play-off series, in line with other rugby club competitions such as Super Rugby, Top 14, and the English Premiership: at the conclusion of the regular season, the top four placed teams enter the semi-final stage, with the winner of the first vs fourth and second vs third play-offs entering the final.
Two Italian teams – the former National Championship of Excellence team Benetton Treviso, and a new team, Aironi – joined the league starting with the 2010–11 season. Aironi was replaced by Zebre from the 2012–13 season. Through the 2012–13 season, the Welsh, Irish, Scottish and Italian rugby unions used the league as the sole determinant for Heineken Cup qualification, and from 2013–14 they use it as the sole means of qualification for the successor to the Heineken Cup, the European Rugby Champions Cup.
Two South African teams – Southern Kings and Cheetahs joined the competition in 2017 to create Pro14, while the four remaining professional franchises stayed in Super Rugby. The competition adopted a modified two-conference format rather than a full round-robin single table, with extra fixtures to maintain national derby matches. As weaker provinces, both South African teams struggled in the three years in which they took part, and were ineligible for European competition. The terminal financial difficulties at Southern Kings, and the COVID-19 pandemic effectively ended their participation in 2020, and there was no South African participation in the 2020 season, although the competition retained the Pro14 name.
Despite the difficulties, however, the competition proved attractive to the South African Rugby Football Union, due to shared time zones and reduced travelling, and the four major Super Rugby franchises – Stormers, Sharks, Bulls and Lions joined the renamed United Rugby Championship the following year, firstly through the transitional Pro14 Rainbow Cup, held in a split tournament format across Europe and South Africa, and then the United Rugby Championship, this time eligible for European competition. Ironically, Cheetahs, no longer in the URC, were invited to join the second-tier European competition, the EPCR Challenge Cup, as well, along with Georgian side, Black Lion from the Rugby Europe Super Cup. South African team, Stormers, won the first edition of URC in an all South African final, before being runner-up in the second season to Irish side, Munster.
| Period | Sponsor | Name | Teams | Countries |
| no sponsor | Celtic League | 15 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales | |
| 2002–2003 | no sponsor | Celtic League | 16 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales |
| 2003–2004 | no sponsor | Celtic League | 12 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales |
| 2004–2006 | no sponsor | Celtic League | 11 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales |
| 2006–2007 | Magners | Magners League | 11 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales |
| 2007–2010 | Magners | Magners League | 10 | Ireland, Scotland, Wales |
| 2010–2011 | Magners | Magners League | 12 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales |
| 2011–2014 | RaboDirect | RaboDirect Pro12 | 12 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales |
| 2014–2017 | Guinness | Guinness Pro12 | 12 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales |
| 2017–2020 | Guinness | Guinness PRO14 | 14 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, South Africa, Wales |
| 2020–2021 | Guinness | Guinness PRO14 | 12 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, Wales |
| 2021 | Guinness | Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup | 16 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, South Africa, Wales |
| 2021–2022 | Vodacom no sponsor | United Rugby Championship | 16 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, South Africa, Wales |
| 2022– | Vodacom BKT | Vodacom United Rugby Championship BKT United Rugby Championship | 16 | Ireland, Italy, Scotland, South Africa, Wales |
Corporate organisation
The legal name of the body running the competition is PRO Rugby Championship DAC, a private company limited by shares based in Ireland. The organisation is responsible for running and operating the URC and is currently owned equally by the Irish Rugby Football Union, the Scottish Rugby Union and the Welsh Rugby Union. The Italian Rugby Federation may become a shareholder subject to it meeting certain conditions.The board of Celtic Rugby DAC is made up of representatives from the IRFU, SRU, WRU, ProRugby Wales, the FIR and the South African Rugby Union. The chief executive is Martin Anayi.
In 2020 the championship received an investment from CVC Capital Partners who acquired a 28% share in the championship.
The organisation's headquarters are at Millbank House, Sandyford, Dublin 18.
Media coverage
Starting in the 2010–11 season, the League was broadcast live on BBC Two Wales, BBC Two Northern Ireland, RTÉ, the Irish language channel TG4, the Scottish Gaelic channel BBC Alba, the Welsh language channel S4C. The BBC Two Wales matches were usually made available to the rest of the United Kingdom via BBC Red Button. Complete match replays were also available on the BBC iPlayer. Each broadcaster provided feeds to the others for matches in their home territory. While this meant that the league was now available free to air in the UK and Ireland, in Italy it was only available on a subscription basis in its first year.Commencing from the 2014–15 season, Sky Sports became one of the league's broadcast partners, broadcasting 33 live games on a Saturday and also showing both the semi-finals and the final live. Its contract concluded at the end of 2017–18 season.
Also starting in the 2014–15 season, Italy's Nuvolari began broadcasting the games involving the two Italian clubs live on its digital free-to-view channel. Glasgow Warriors and Edinburgh matches were also broadcast live on BBC Radio Scotland.
From the 2018–19 season, coverage of the tournament was taken over by Premier Sports in the UK, EirSport in Ireland, DAZN in Italy, and Supersport in South Africa.
Coverage of the tournament can be found in other territories – on beIN Sports in France, and on various Setanta Sports channels around the globe, as well as EuroSport.
Broadcast coverage history
Current broadcasters:- URC TV
- TG4
- Television New Zealand
- RTÉ Sport
- S4C
- BBC Wales
- BBC Northern Ireland
- Eurosport
- DAZN
- FloSports
- Disney+
- SuperSport
- Viaplay Sports
- Premier Sports Asia
- SKY Sport Italy
- Sky Sports
- eir sport
- Setanta Sports
- beIN Sports
- BBC Alba
- BBC Scotland
- STV
- Dahlia TV
- Sportitalia
- Nuvolari
- RAI Sport
- DAZN
- Mediaset
- Eurosport Italia:
- Setanta Sports
- ESPN
- Spark Sport
On 2 May 2013, Sky Sports announced that it had agreed a four-year deal to broadcast 33 live matches each season. This deal commenced at the start of season 2014–15, Sky have 30 exclusive matches but are only allowed to cover one set of fixtures; for instance, only one Leinster v Munster match was live on Sky with the other on TG4. Regional screening of matches continued, BBC Wales show Scrum V Live on Friday Night with S4C covering a match now on Sunday afternoons. BBC Alba also screened matches, with some also available in English on BBC Scotland, although BBC Alba did offer English language commentary via their Red Button service when the match was not shown on BBC Scotland. BBC Northern Ireland screened all Ulster matches not available on Sky Sports. RTÉ Sport dropped their coverage after the 2014 final due to budget cuts, making TG4 the only broadcasters of the competition in the Republic of Ireland. The semi-finals and finals are available to all broadcasters.
On 31 August 2017, SuperSport announced that it had acquired the rights to broadcast matches within South Africa.
On 30 April 2018, PRO14 Rugby signed a partnership with Premier Sports and FreeSports to broadcast every Pro14 game live in high definition across the UK for at least the next three years. The agreement, which came into effect for the 2018–19 season, also saw at least one match per round shown live free-to-air on FreeSports.
Teams
The league is based on regionalised, provincial and franchise representation of the participating nations, except for Benetton which represents the city of Treviso itself. Benetton was selected for its long history after the project of a second Italian regional team, Praetorians Roma, failed. Zebre Parma replaced an earlier franchise Aironi in Italy. South Africa and Ireland use explicitly provincial structures, the former operating on a franchise system. Both countries have long organised domestic and representative rugby on a provincial basis going back decades. Wales employs a more recent regional structure, but built on an original club foundation where regions originally represented a combination of local premiership clubs, while Scotland employs the opposite, a 'two city club' system where each of the clubs maps over a previous regional team. A third Scottish regional team, Border Reivers and a fifth Welsh regional-club team Celtic Warriors, were wound down by the respective unions early in the competition's history, while Cheetahs and Southern Kings left prior to the URC rebranding, with Cheetahs surviving to compete as an invitee team in the European Rugby Challenge Cup and Kings being wound down for insolvency.| Club | Established | Joined | Location | Stadium | Surface | Capacity | Titles | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() Italian teams join (2010)The Celtic League board met in November 2008 to explore the possibility of Italian participation; the chief executive of the Welsh Rugby Union, Roger Lewis, stated that the league was looking "favourably" on Italian participation.Following a 19 December 2008 board meeting of the Italian Rugby Federation to discuss proposals to improve Italian rugby, FIR announced that it would submit a proposal to join the Celtic League. FIR had two possibilities – either entering four existing Italian clubs from the National Championship of Excellence into the league; or creating two teams of Italy-qualified players exclusively for the competition. On 18 July 2009, the FIR announced that Aironi and Praetorians Roma would compete in the Celtic League from the start of the 2010–11 season – beating bids from Benetton Treviso and Duchi Nord-Ovest. Praetorians would be based in Rome at the Stadio Flaminio, while Aironi would be based in Viadana but would play some matches in the city of Reggio Emilia. On 2 October 2009, the FIR proposed Benetton Treviso in place of Praetorians Roma. On 28 January 2010, the FIR declared that they had withdrawn from negotiations with the Celtic League regarding two Italian teams joining the tournament, with the main issue being a €3 million warranty asked for by the league, but by 7 February, the Italian clubs had come up with the required funding. By 8 March 2010, a deal had been finalised for Aironi and Benetton Treviso to enter the Celtic League from the 2010–11 season, with each team guaranteed a place in the Heineken Cup. At the end of the 2011–12 season, however, Aironi were no longer available to compete in future competitions as a regional club, as, on 6 April 2012, they were refused a licence to continue on financial grounds. They were replaced by another Italian side, Zebre. Former teamsThirty separate teams have taken part in the various versions of the Championship. Of the fourteen teams no longer involved, nine were Welsh premiership clubs, replaced by five new regions. One of those Welsh regions, two South African franchises, one Scottish region and one Italian franchise make up the rest of the historic teams. Only the four Irish provinces and the original Scottish regions have been ever present. Of the fourteen, eight of the nine Welsh clubs and Cheetahs continue to compete in other competitions. Ireland has never entered a new team nor withdrawn a team since their entry to the competition.
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