Championship becomes Champ Rugby in overhaul

5 hours ago 1

The Championship will be rebranded Champ Rugby from next season in an overhaul of English rugby union's second tier.

It will feature 14 teams, with the division's top six at the end of the season entering play-offs to decide the title.

The champions will then have the opportunity to earn promotion to the Premiership, via a play-off against the top tier's bottom side.

There will be automatic relegation to third-tier National 1 for the 14th-placed Champ Rugby side.

The 12th and 13th-placed side will also meet in a one-off game, with the losers playing National 1's runners-up, external for the final place in the second tier.

Richmond, National 1 champions in 2024-25, and Worcester, who have been resurrected after going bust in 2022, will join the league in 2025-26 to make it up to 14.

The announcement follows work done by the Tier 2 Board, chaired by Simon Gillham, who is vice-president of French Pro D2 side Brive.

Gillam stressed throughout the Champ Rugby launch briefing that "aspiration and jeopardy" were at the centre of the new format.

The Rugby Football Union hopes that Champ Rugby will become a stronger piece of its player pathway, and help to develop the next Henry Pollock, who spent some of last season with Bedford Blues.

The league has new branding and a promotional video, external that comes with the strap line "Welcome to the proving ground".

The play-off structures are similar but not identical to the movement between the Top 14 and Pro D2 leagues in France.

After 26 regular-season games, the sides finishing in third to sixth will play quarter-finals. The winners of those games will go into semi-finals against the teams who finished first and second, before a final to crown a Champ Rugby winner.

With no automatic promotion spot, the winner will then enter a two-legged play-off against the Premiership's bottom side if they meet the top flight's minimum operating standards., external

There was no play-off to be promoted from this season's 12-strong Championship after champions Ealing Trailfinders failed to meet the standards required to be admitted to the top flight.

Sixth-placed Coventry also fell short, with Doncaster, who finished fifth, being the only club who would have been eligible to play off against Premiership bottom side Newcastle.

Discussions are under way for a title sponsor and there are plans to stream the league's matches.

RFU funding for Champ Rugby and parachute payments for relegated sides from the Premiership are still to be confirmed, with no timeline given on when this will be decided.

The current Championship clubs saw their central funding cut from around £600,000 a year before the Covid-19 pandemic to about £160,000. This figure will remain the same for the 2025-26 season.

How the plans will work, with the Premiership currently looking at a franchise model, is unclear.

Nick Johnson, chief executive at Coventry, said closing the financial gap between Champ Rugby and the Premiership was "not a quick fix" but added: "We can sit back and whinge or we can get off our backsides and do something about it. That's what we're doing."

"We've noticed a step change in how seriously PRL [Premiership Rugby] are taking us because we've got our act together and our house in order. We've just got to keep doing that."

To help young players gain experience, Champ clubs will be permitted unlimited dual-registered players from Premiership sides.

However, this will be capped at a maximum six in any matchday squad.

The rule will be mirrored in the national leagues as well, but season-long loans will be excluded from the cap.

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