Cardiff Blues celebrate their EDF Energy Cup final triumph
|
Gloucester bid to avenge their Anglo-Welsh Cup final defeat to Cardiff Blues when the teams clash in the opening round of this season's tournament. The Welsh club will travel to Kingsholm on the weekend of 7 November as they start their defence of the title. The new watered-down competition will be played on weekends during November and the Six Nations so sides will be without their international stars. The Cup will have four pools each made up of three English and one Welsh team. Regional Rugby Wales, the umbrella group of Wales' four regions, and Premier Rugby, the umbrella group for the 16 English sides, reached agreement over a two-year deal. Should the winner of the competition be an English club, they will qualify for the following season's Heineken Cup.
 |
606: DEBATE
|
The cross-pool competition will mean teams in Pool One will play teams in Pool Four and teams in Pool Two play teams in Pool Three. Each team is guaranteed four pool matches - two home and two away - with the top teams from each pool qualifying for the semi-finals. The teams have been seeded depending on their finish in last season's Guinness Premiership and Magners League and tournaments chiefs have tried to avoid fixture duplication with both leagues and the Heineken Cup. The last two competitions, known as the EDF Energy Cup, were won by Welsh regions as Cardiff Blues' 50-12 win over Gloucester in April came the season after the Ospreys overcame Leicester at Twickenham. "We are delighted to have reached agreement with PRL over the continuation of the Anglo-Welsh Cup," said RRW chief executive Stuart Gallacher. "Cross border fixtures between the professional rugby tiers of England and Wales have become a real highlight of the season and something that both the teams participating and supporters value enormously. "That last years winners, the Cardiff Blues, will also play Gloucester in the opening round, will give added prominence to the commencement of the competition. "The Cup will continue to remain a stand-out tournament in an increasingly congested season, but one that provides a unique spectacle both in terms of the quality of rugby and sense of occasion."
Pool 1: Leicester Tigers, Sale Sharks, Saracens, Ospreys Pool 2: London Irish, Gloucester, Newcastle Falcons, Scarlets Pool 3: Harlequins, London Wasps, Worcester Warriors, Cardiff Blues Pool 4: Bath, Northampton Saints, Leeds, Dragons Round 1 (weekend of November 7, 2009) Leeds v Leicester Tigers Newport Gwent Dragons v Sale Sharks Saracens v Bath Ospreys v Northampton Saints Gloucester v Cardiff Blues London Irish v London Wasps Worcester Warriors v Newcastle Falcons Harlequins v Scarlets Round 2 (weekend of November 14, 2009) Leicester Tigers v Newport Gwent Dragons Sale Sharks v Leeds Bath v Ospreys Northampton Saints v Saracens Cardiff Blues v London Irish London Wasps v Gloucester Newcastle Falcons v Harlequins Scarlets v Worcester Warriors Round 3 (weekend of January 30, 2010) Leicester Tigers v Bath Sale Sharks v Northampton Saints Newport Gwent Dragons v Ospreys Leeds v Saracens London Wasps v Scarlets Cardiff Blues v Newcastle Falcons Gloucester v Worcester Warriors London Irish v Harlequins Round 4 (weekend of February 6, 2010) Northampton Saints v Leicester Tigers Bath v Sale Sharks Ospreys v Leeds Saracens v Newport Gwent Dragons Scarlets v Cardiff Blues Newcastle Falcons v London Wasps Worcester Warriors v London Irish Harlequins v Gloucester Semi finals (weekend of March 13, 2010, venue TBC) Final (weekend of March 20, 2010, venue TBC)
|
Bookmark with:
What are these?