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Rugby Europe Under-18 Championship

Annual rugby union championship


Annual rugby union championship

FieldValue
sportRugby union
founded2004
teams8 (2025)
countryEurope (Rugby Europe)
championseason=2025
most_champscount=8

The Rugby Europe Under-18 Championship is an annual rugby union championship for Under-18 national teams, held since 2004. The championship is organised by rugby's European governing body, Rugby Europe.

It has been held alternatingly in France and Italy, except for 2012 when it was held in Spain. The past editions were won by France, who won the championship in 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010, and England, which won it in 2005, 2006 and 2012. Ireland became the third nation to win the tournament when they beat England in the 2011 final.

History

The European Under-18 Rugby Union Championship was first held in 2004, in Treviso, Italy. It replaced the previously held European Under-18 Emergent Nations Championship, which had first been held in 2000. The first championship in 2004 was won by France.

The following two championships, held in Lille, France, in 2005 and again in Treviso in 2006, were won by England. Alternating between France and Italy, the next four championships were held in Biarritz, Treviso again, Toulon and once more in Treviso in 2010. All four were won by France. Wales and Scotland did not compete in those years, and England did not compete in 2010.

The 2011 edition of the competition saw the introduction of an elite division, above division one, the former A, made up of four teams, France, England, Wales and Ireland. The divisions below remained unchanged. It marked the first time that all countries participating in the six nations send a team to the European championship. The 2011 tournament was held in the regions of Armagnac and Bigorre, in southern France. It was won by Ireland and saw the French team not reaching the final for the first time.

England, Ireland, Wales, Scotland and Italy left the tournament for the 2016 edition.

On March 12, 2020, following the recent evolution of COVID-19, Rugby Europe has announced a suspension of all its matches and tournaments, from Friday, March 13, 2020 until April 15, 2020. On March 26 Rugby Europe has decided to extend the suspension of all its matches and tournaments for an indefinite period of time. On April 8 Rugby Europe Board of Directors decided to cancel 2019 European Under-18 Rugby Union Championship.

Format

In 2010, the championship, similar to previous editions, was organised in an A, B and C Division, with A being the highest and C the lowest. Each division consisted of eight teams and each team played three competition games, with a quarter final, semi final and final/placing game. The D division, unlike in the past, was held in a separate tournament in 2010.

The quarter finals were played according to a seeding list, with the winners moving on to the first to fourth place semi finals while the losers would enter the fifth to eighth place semi finals.

The winners of the semi-finals one to four would play in the division final while the losers would play for third place. Similarly, the winners of the fifth to eighth semi finals would play for fifth place while the losers would play for seventh.

The winner of the A division was crowned European champions while the eighth placed team would be relegated to the B division. Similarly, the winner of B and C division would move up a division for 2011 while the last placed teams would be relegated. This meant, France was crowned European champions while Romania finished on the relegation spot. Portugal won the B division and earned promotion while Ukraine was relegated and replaced by Sweden, the C champions.

The 2011 format saw the introduction of a four-team elite division. Below this level, the divisions remained unchanged but were now numbered instead of being ordered by letters.

In 2012 the modus was changed once more. The elite division now consisted of eight teams, as did the A and B divisions, with all three played at the same time and location while the C division consisted of four and the D division of three teams and were played separately.

Championship finals

Emergent nations championship

YearHostFinalThird place matchWinnerScoreRunner-up3rd placeScore4th place
2000Sofia56 – 1728 – 10
2001Split37 – 679 – 0
2002Prague5 – 025 – 0
2003Amsterdam24 – 529 – 7

European championship

#YearHostFinalThird place matchWinnerScoreRunner-up3rd placeScore4th place
12004Treviso32–019–6
22005Lille16–910–6
32006Treviso15–729–3
42007Dax8–8 (Pen. 4 – 3)52–9
52008Treviso12–521–5
62009Toulon20–1951–10
72010Treviso27–318–15
82011Tarbes17–815–6
92012Madrid25–1310–7
102013Grenoble27–2240–0
112014Poznań30–1431–30
122015Toulouse57–039–12
13url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406155938/http://www.rugbyeurope.eu/group-288.htmdate=2016-04-06 }} accessed: 27 March 2016Lisbon42–015–10
142017Quimperlé36–1822–16
152018Poznań8–317–0
162019Kaliningrad20–1038–27
2020Tournament canceled 2020–2022 due to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic
172021Kaliningrad27–046–7
182022Tbilisi / Rustavi34–1040–6
192023Prague19–326–13
202024Prague32–1134–0
212025Prague16–1126–15

Medals (2003-2025)

Divisional champions

Emergent nations championship 2000 to 2003:

YearA
2000
2001
2002
2003

The divisional champions from 2004 to 2010:

YearABCD
2004Not held
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010

The divisional champions after the reorganisation in 2011:

YearEliteABCD
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015

The divisional champions after the reorganisation in 2016:

YearChampionshipTrophyConference 1Conference 2
2016
2017
2018Not held
2019Not held
2020Tournament canceled 2020–2022 due to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic
2021Not held
2022Not held

The divisional champions after the reorganisation in 2023:

YearChampionshipQualifier
2023
2024
2025

Placings

The placings in the championship in order of the 2019 results:

Team200420052006200720082009201020112012201320142015201620172018201920212022202320242025
182183213125543233321
656667336672221111112
671465372177228765433
76778154768335378744
2442316424536416616
818842158886334322256
535324451346162231
323515461762457544678
771554874534836878582
252218684724715182
56777678521171545
122111143241112
833177738562614
456656863341486
54421535435577
318857447816828
185862211277141
7486843335152
816423228322533
2355153423674
465
673144872243386
21144
46457566413123
8221631665832
7646223322
45
3536
21133221113
343448527764
34535
5223212327
43415458
527332126818
6176878118
4654
3
FRA Côte d'Azur Selection7
8
Elite Division/ChampionshipA Division/Trophy/QualifierB Division/Conference 1C Division/Conference 2D Division

References

References

  1. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=166 U18 - 2010 FIRA-AER Justin Bridou European Championship] FIRA-AER website, accessed: 1 May 2010
  2. [http://mediaofficina.com/rugbyeu18/albo-doro/ 2010 European Under-18 Rugby Union Championship official website - History] {{webarchive. link. (2011-03-13 accessed: 1 May 2010)
  3. link. (February 3, 2010 IRB website, published: 16 April 2009, accessed: 2 May 2010)
  4. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/article-127.htm U18 - 6 Nations play off] FIRA-AER website, accessed: 6 April 2011
  5. "Statement - Suspension of Games & Tournaments {{!}} Rugby Europe".
  6. "Statement: Competitions Suspension Extended {{!}} Rugby Europe".
  7. "COVID-19 Statement: Board of Directors".
  8. [http://mediaofficina.com/rugbyeu18/calendario-fixtures/ 2010 European Under-18 Rugby Union Championship official website - Fixtures] {{webarchive. link. (2010-04-13 accessed: 1 May 2010)
  9. "Site Officiel de la FIRA A.E.R. - Compétitions Juniors".
  10. "Rugby Union European Competitions".
  11. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=43 FIRA-AER website - 2005 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  12. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=77 FIRA-AER website - 2006 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  13. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=96 FIRA-AER website - 2007 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  14. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=110 FIRA-AER website - 2008 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  15. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=146 FIRA-AER website - 2009 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  16. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition_detail.php?compet=166 FIRA-AER website - 2010 results] accessed: 3 May 2010
  17. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition-11.htm FIRA-AER website - 2011 groups] accessed: 6 April 2011
  18. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition-36.htm FIRA-AER website - 2012 groups] accessed: 5 April 2012
  19. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition-57.htm FIRA-AER website - 2013 groups] accessed: 30 March 2013
  20. [http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/competition-72.htm FIRA-AER website - 2014 groups] accessed: 30 March 2014
  21. [http://www.rugbyeurope.eu/competition-106.htm FIRA-AER website - 2015 groups] {{webarchive. link. (2015-04-08 accessed: 26 March 2015)
  22. [http://www.rugbyeurope.eu/group-288.htm FIRA-AER website - 2016 groups] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-04-06 accessed: 27 March 2016)
  23. [http://www.rugbyeurope.eu/competitions/2018-u18-men-xv-championship Rugby Europe website - 2018 edition] accessed: 31 March 2018
  24. [http://www.rugbyeurope.eu/competitions/2019-u18-men-xv-championship Rugby Europe website - 2019 edition] accessed: 20 April 2019
  25. [https://www.rugbyeurope.eu/competitions/2020-u18-championship 2020 - U18 Championship]
  26. "U18 Championship 2021".
  27. "U18 Championship 2022".
  28. "U18 Championship 2023".
  29. "U18 Championship 2024".
  30. "U18 Championship 2025".
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