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RFU Statment on National One Future
THE Rugby Football Union believes that a professional league below the Guinness Premiership is the right way forward for English rugby.
A 12-team Championship, currently National Division One, will develop English players, coaches and referees in a competitive, professional and financially secure environment.
Funded by the RFU, Premier Rugby Ltd, the new five-year agreement with Sky Sports and sponsorship, Championship clubs will be financially better off in a structure that directly underpins the Guinness Premiership.
Negotiations with First Division Rugby, the umbrella organisation for National Division One clubs, have been ongoing for 12 months and, subject to approval by the RFU Council, the Championship will be established for the 2009-10 season.
RFU Management Board Chairman Martyn Thomas said: "The Championship will be a vital part of the structure of English rugby. For too long First Division Rugby has hovered between the community game and the Premiership, uncertain of both its standing in the structure and its future. Now is the time to establish its rightful place.
The RFU is fully committed to funding and supporting a professional and robust league with minimum entry criteria and a salary cap that will support the Guinness Premiership.
We will be increasing our funding to the new Championship from £1.65m a year to £2.3m and, under the new eight-year agreement, PRL have committed to a £1m per annum funding.
That significant investment, coupled with more matches and television coverage under the Sky Sports contract, will give the clubs more financial security than ever before and create a vibrant and viable structure to take the game forward."
Proposed Championship structure
Reduction from 16 to 12 clubs
22 regular season matches
Promotion play-offs for the top eight (each club to play minimum of six matches)
- two pools of four, playing home and away
- top two from each pool to play in Championship semi-finals
- winning semi-finalists to play in Championship final
- final could be played on a home and away basis or at Twickenham
- winner of Championship final promoted to Guinness Premiership subject to meeting Minimum Standards Criteria
Relegation play-offs for the bottom four (each club to play minimum of six matches)
- home and away fixtures
- bottom club in play-off pool relegated to newly-named National Division One (level three)
Anglo-Welsh Cup (each club/region to play minimum of four matches)
- 12 Guinness Premiership clubs, four Welsh regions, four Championship clubs (one relegated from GP, 2nd, 3rd and 4th place finishers in previous season's Championship, or National Division One for season 08-09)
- four pools of five (three GP, one Welsh Region, one Championship club)
- played on a home or away basis
- pool winners qualify for the semi-finals
- winning semi-finalists play in Cup final
Anglo-Welsh Trophy (each club to play minimum of six matches)
- eight Championship clubs, eight Welsh Principality Premiership clubs
- four regional pools of four to provide local derbies
- played on a home and away basis
- pool winners qualify for the semi-finals
- winning semi-finalists play in Trophy final
Championship clubs will be guaranteed a minimum of 32 or 34 matches, (depending on which Anglo-Welsh tournament they play in) including 16 home games. Teams reaching the finals of both the Championship play-offs and an Anglo-Welsh tournament will play an additional four/five matches.
Entry and eligibility
- clubs finishing 2nd to 11th in National Division One at end of season 2008-9 invited to join the Championship for 2009-10 along with relegated club from Guinness Premiership and promoted club from National Division Two
- minimum entry criteria based on simplified version of Premiership criteria
- salary cap based on simplified version of Premiership criteria
- if any clubs do not wish to join the Championship, invitations will be extended to the other four National Division One clubs and then top two from National Division Two based on league positions
Funding
- Rights fee share from Sky Sports for a new five-year agreement commencing in 2010-11
- PRL funding of £1m per annum to Championship over eight years
- RFU funding of £2.3m per annum comprising core funding in first two years to be then replaced by revenue for clubs fielding English Qualified Players and who invest in their facilities
National League competitions
The new National Division One will become a 16-team league comprising five clubs not included in the Championship, nine clubs from National Division Two, one promoted from National Division Three South, one promoted from National Division Three North.
The new National Division Two will become two leagues of 16 clubs THE Rugby Football Union believes that a professional league below the Guinness Premiership is the right way forward for English rugby.
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Leeds 56
Exeter 53
Nottingham 47
London Welsh 40
Bedford 39
Doncaster 36
Cornish Pirates 30
Plymouth Albion 30
Coventry 29
Moseley 27
Rotherham 23
Esher 16
Sedgley Park 15
Newbury 14
Manchester 5
Otley 5
15th November 2008
Bedford 37-9 Plymouth Albion
Coventry 48-3 Otley
Manchester 14-19 London Welsh
Moseley 12-19 Doncaster
Newbury 20-37 Exter
Sedgley Park 27-26 Esher
16th November 2008
Cornish Pirates 23-25 Leeds
Nottingham 33-13 Rotherham
22nd November 2008
Doncaster v Bedford
Exeter v Coventry
London Welsh v Nottingham
Manchester v Otley
Plymouth Albion v Esher
Rotherham v Newbury
23rd November 2008
Cornish Pirates v Sedgley Park
Leeds v Moseley
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