Spanish Regions Championship (rugby union)

The Spanish Regions Championship (Spanish:Campeonato de Selecciones Territoriales) is a rugby union competition in Spain featuring the representative teams of the autonomous communities. The competition is organised by the Spanish Rugby Federation. The Basque Country were the inaugural winners in 1983–84. They are also the competitions most successful team. The competition is usually played as a knockout tournament. However it has occasionally adopted a league system. [1][2][3]

Spanish Regions Championship
SportRugby union
Instituted1983 (1983)
Country Spain
Most titles Basque Country (14 titles)

Finals

Season Date Home Score Away Venue
1983–8426 February 1984 Basque Country24–12 Catalonia
1984–853 March 1985 Basque Country25–4 Catalonia
1985–8618 May 1986 Madrid13–12 Catalonia
1986–87 Madrid?
1987–885 June 1988 Catalonia16–9 Basque Country
1988–8928 May 1989 Catalonia21–20 Castile-León
1989–908 June 1990 Castile-León20–16 Catalonia
1990–9119 May 1991 Catalonia19–16 Castile-León
1991–92 Catalonia[Note 1]
1992–93 Castile-León[Note 1]
1993–94 Basque Country28–10 Catalonia
1994–95
1995–9619 Nov 1995 Basque Country25–17 Catalonia
1996–973 Nov 1996 Basque Country37–14 CataloniaGuernica
1997–987 December 1997 Basque Country29–8 CataloniaTudela, Navarre
1999–20005 December 1999 Catalonia10–9 AndalusiaCamp de la Foixarda
2000–01 Andalusia16–13 Basque Country
2001–02 Castile-León12–11 Basque Country
2002–03 Basque Country8–7 Castile-León
2003–04 Basque Country[Note 2] Castile-León
2004–05 Basque Country28–20 Andalusia
2005–06 Basque Country[Note 3] Andalusia
2006–07 Basque Country21–19 Andalusia
2007–08 Madrid35–32 Valencia
2008–09 Basque Country19–12 Andalusia
2009–10 Andalusia22–16 Madrid
2010–11 Basque Country24–6 Castile-León
2011–12 Madrid[Note 1]

Source:[3][4]

Notes
  • ^1 No final. League system used.
  • ^2 Basque Country won Group A. Castile-León won Group B
  • ^3 Basque Country won Group A. Andalusia won Group B

List of winners by team

Club Titles Seasons
 Basque Country 14 1983–84, 1984–85, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2008–09, 2010–11
 Catalonia 5 1987–88, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1991–92, 1999–2000
Madrid 4 1985–86, 1986–87, 2007–08, 2011–12
Castile-León 3 1989–90, 1992–93, 2001–02
Andalusia 2 2000–01, 2009–10
gollark: Or, well, the obvious alternative.
gollark: Maybe. On the one hand I at least like to think I'm vaguely better than average at actually paying attention to explanations for things and won't just immediately consign them to "outgroup → bad" or "not convention → bad". On the other hand probably most people think that since people are bad at comparing things. On the third hand, which I totally have, the alternative is to just assume people doing things are probably right, which seems wrong.
gollark: No, which is why I said I didn't care that much.
gollark: > that might be valid but itS' also an easy to abuse excuse to dislike almost anything> because you can always say that you don't see the pointThis is typically why people explain things.
gollark: I don't care a huge amount either way, but it's vaguely weird.

References

  1. "Historia". www.euskadirugby.org. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  2. "Historial Selecciones Euskadi" (PDF). www.euskadirugby.org. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  3. "Federación Española de Rugby – Palmares Nacional" (PDF). www.ferugby.es. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  4. "Partits de la selecció catalana de rugbi". ca.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.