2018 Rugby Europe Championship | |||
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Date | 10 February 2018 – 18 March 2018 | ||
Countries | Belgium Georgia Germany Romania Russia Spain | ||
Tournament statistics | |||
Champions | Georgia (10th title) | ||
Grand Slam | Georgia (7th) | ||
Antim Cup | Georgia (11th title) | ||
Matches played | 15 | ||
Attendance | 139,003 (9,267 per match) | ||
Tries scored | 109 (7.27 per match) | ||
Top point scorer(s) | Yuri Kushnarev (45) | ||
Top try scorer(s) | Sione Faka'osilea (3) Paula Kinikinilau (3) Giorgi Kveseladze (3) Fernando López Pérez (3) Anton Rudoy (3) | ||
Official website | Rugby International Championship | ||
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The 2018 Rugby Europe Championship is the premier rugby union competition outside of the Six Nations Championship in Europe. This is the second season under its new format,[clarification needed] that saw Georgia, Germany, Romania, Russia, Spain and Belgium compete for the title.
This year's edition of the Rugby Europe Championship also served as a key stage of the European region qualification process for the 2019 Rugby World Cup. The team with the best record across the 2017 and 2018 Championships qualified as Europe 1.[1] As Georgia have already secured qualification automatically, results involving that team are discarded for the purposes of Rugby World Cup qualification.
Both the Championship and the Qualification Process were heavily affected by controversial disciplinary issues involving player eligibility and the selection of neutral officials (namely, Romanian referee Vlad Iordachescu in Belgium-Spain). In respect of matters relating to the eligibility of players, following a full review of the evidence, including statements and submissions from World Rugby, Rugby Europe, Belgium, Romania, Spain and Russia, the independent committee found:
In respect of sanctions, pursuant to Regulation 18, the independent committee determined the following:
The deduction of 5 points for any match in which a union fielded an ineligible player. in practice this meant the following
Therefore, based on a re-modelling of the Rugby Europe Championship tables in the context of Rugby World Cup 2019 qualifying, Russia would qualify as Europe 1 into Pool A replacing Romania and Germany will replace Spain in the European play-off against Portugal.[2]
Georgia's victory in the 2018 Rugby Europe Championship itself was unaffected. Germany's proposed promotion/relegation play-off with Portugal, however, becomes a Romania-Portugal play-off. Ironically, Germany would now face Portugal in the Rugby World Cup European qualification play-off.
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