European Nations Cup (rugby union)

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The European Nations Cup, also referred to as the "Six Nations B" or simply ENC, is a second-level competition for European nations where rugby union is still an amateur sport. It is administered by FIRA-AER.

Despite the name the European Nations Cup is in fact a series of 4 divisions of 6 teams with promotion and relegation between them. There is, however, at present little prospect of any of the teams being promoted to the Six Nations as the gap in terms of playing standards is simply too big. Division One usually uses the same weekends as the Six Nations Championship; other divisions play throughout the year.

Initially started as one-year competition, the championship is now decided over two years with each team playing each other home and away. The format change occurred at the end of the 2001 championship. Georgia is still regarded as the 2001 winner, but the results from that season count in the final standings of the 2001-2002 tournament.

Contents

[edit] Current divisions

Division 1
Division 2A
Division 2B
Division 3A
Division 3B
Division 3C
Division 3D

[edit] History of First Division championships

[edit] 2000

Romania won the first competition by a large margin, recording victories in all four matches.

Country GP W D L +/- Pts
 Romania 4 4 0 0 120-39 12
 Georgia 4 2 0 2 125-95 8
 Spain 4 2 0 2 94-86 8
 Portugal 4 1 0 3 65-97 5
 Netherlands 4 1 0 3 37-124 5

[edit] 2001

Georgia secured the title after a consistent performance, crowned with a decisive 31-20 win over Romania in Bucharest. As the competition format changed from one-year to two-years, Holland was not relegated after this season.

Country GP W D L +/- Pts
 Georgia 5 5 0 0 167-68 15
 Romania 5 4 0 1 152-143 13
 Russia 5 3 0 2 118-128 11
 Spain 5 2 0 3 118-128 9
 Portugal 5 1 0 4 77-165 7
 Netherlands 5 0 0 5 57-184 5

[edit] 2001-2002

Romania started in 2002 trailing Georgia after 2001 results, but managed to win all of the remaining five games, including a hard-fought 31-23 victory in Tbilisi.

Country GP W D L +/- Pts
 Romania 10 9 0 1 373-148 28
 Georgia 10 8 1 1 351-152 27
 Russia 10 6 1 3 332-230 23
 Spain 10 3 0 7 246-247 16
 Portugal 10 3 0 7 170-295 16
 Netherlands 10 0 0 10 84-484 10

[edit] 2003-2004

Portugal were surprise 16-15 winners over Romania in Lisbon and installed themselves on the top of the 2003 table. In the second half of the competition, Romania seemed back on track (36-6 against Portugal in Constanţa), but went down 24-33 to Russia in Krasnodar. Then Portugal clinched their first title with a last-minute 19-18 win over Russia in Lisbon. The Russia - Czech Republic game was rescheduled due to bad weather and was eventually cancelled.

Country GP W D L +/- Pts
 Portugal 10 9 0 1 245-180 28
 Romania 10 8 0 2 320-123 26
 Georgia 10 5 1 4 193-148 21
 Russia 9 4 0 6 198-175 15
 Czech Republic 9 3 0 7 139-263 15
 Spain 10 0 1 9 129-335 11

[edit] 2004-2006

The 2004-06 championships was also serving as a qualifiying group for the 2007 Rugby World Cup. Romania triumphed despite finishing level on points with Georgia, while Ukraine were relegated after losing all matches.

Country GP W D L +/- Pts
 Romania 10 8 0 2 294 26
 Georgia 10 8 0 2 228 26
 Portugal 10 6 1 3 20 23
 Russia 10 4 1 5 88 19
 Czech Republic 10 3 0 7 -131 16
 Ukraine 10 0 0 10 -499 10

[edit] See also

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