Celtic Cup (rugby union)

The Celtic Cup was a rugby union cup competition featuring regional and provincial teams from Ireland, Scotland and Wales that ran for two seasons between 2003 and 2005. The first edition of the competition was won by Ulster and the second by Munster, both from Ireland. After the Welsh teams agreed to join the English Premiership clubs to form the Anglo-Welsh Cup for the 2005–06 season, the Celtic Cup was discontinued. A separate competition under the same name was inaugurated in 2018 for Welsh and Irish development sides.

Celtic Cup
SportRugby union
Instituted2003
Inaugural season2003–04
Ceased2004–05
Number of teams12 (2003–04), 8 (2004–05)
Nations Ireland
 Scotland
 Wales
HoldersMunster (2004–05)
Most titlesMunster
Ulster (1 title)
Broadcast partnerBBC
Related competitionCeltic League

Formation

Following the inception of Welsh regional rugby ahead of the 2003–04 season, the format of the Celtic League tournament was changed so that each team would play each other twice, home and away, with the side that accumulated the most points during the season winning the title. This was a change from previous seasons, which culminated in a knock-out format competition leading to a final. In a bid to attract broadcasters, sponsors and the public by having a "showpiece" final, the Irish, Scottish and Welsh unions agreed to launch a new knock-out cup competition, naming it the Celtic Cup.[1]

2003–04 season

In the inaugural season, the competition was contested by all 12 Celtic League sides and ran concurrently with the league on four weekends between September and December 2003. The tournament was a knock-out format, played over one leg with the first team drawn in each fixture hosting the match. Due to the number of teams competing, eight teams contested the first round in mid-September, while four teams (Edinburgh, Munster, Ulster and Cardiff Blues) were given byes to the quarter-finals, where they would meet the winners from the first round.[2] The winning teams from the first round were Connacht, Glasgow, Leinster and the Llanelli Scarlets.

The quarter-finals took place on the first weekend of October, with Edinburgh, Glasgow and Connacht winning their games. Ulster and Leinster drew their game 23–23 after extra time, but Ulster progressed having scored three tries to Leinster's two.[3] The semi-finals took place in mid-November and saw both the away teams win, as Ulster beat Glasgow and Edinburgh beat Connacht. The final was played at Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh on 20 December 2003, and saw Ulster beat Edinburgh 27–21 to win the Celtic Cup.[4]

 
Preliminary roundQuarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
20 September – Llanelli
 
 
Llanelli Scarlets40
 
3 October – Llanelli
 
NG Dragons6
 
Llanelli Scarlets12
 
19 September – Galway
 
Connacht14
 
Connacht26
 
15 November – Galway
 
Borders21
 
Connacht25
 
 
Edinburgh26
 
 
3 October – Edinburgh
 
 
Edinburgh33
 
 
Cardiff Blues16
 
 
20 December – Edinburgh
 
 
Edinburgh21
 
20 September – Bridgend
 
Ulster27
 
Celtic Warriors9
 
3 October – Glasgow
 
Glasgow19
 
Glasgow18
 
 
Munster14
 
 
15 November – Glasgow
 
 
Glasgow13
 
 
Ulster20
 
 
3 October – Belfast
 
 
Ulster23 (3t)
 
20 September – Dublin
 
Leinster23 (2t)
 
Leinster35
 
 
Ospreys21
 

Final

20 December 2003
14:30 GMT
Edinburgh 21–27 Ulster
Try: Webster
Lee
Blair
Con: Paterson (3/3)
ReportTry: Best
Frost
Con: Humphreys (1/2)
Pen: Humphreys (5)
Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Attendance: 17,174
Referee: Nigel Williams (Wales)

2004–05 season

The format of the competition was changed for the 2004–05 season. It was moved to April and May to run after the conclusion of the Celtic League competition, and only the top eight teams from the league took part, again in a straight knockout format. The quarter-final fixtures were based on the teams' finishing positions in the Celtic League, with the league winners Neath-Swansea Ospreys hosting the eighth-placed side Ulster, second-placed Munster hosting seventh-placed Edinburgh, third-placed Leinster hosting sixth-placed Glasgow and fourth-placed Newport Gwent Dragons hosting fifth-placed Llanelli Scarlets. In this way, the tournament was similar to a play-off system, although the Celtic League and Celtic Cup remained trophies in their own right.

Rather than continuing with the automatic home advantage for the highest-seeded teams remaining in the semi-finals, the fixtures were instead decided by a draw.[5] Munster beat Leinster in Dublin, and the Scarlets won at home to the Ospreys. The final took place on 14 May at Lansdowne Road and saw Munster beat the Scarlets 27–16 to win the second Celtic Cup.[6]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
22 April – Dublin
 
 
Leinster33
 
29 April – Dublin
 
Glasgow24
 
Leinster17
 
22 April – Limerick
 
Munster23
 
Munster24
 
6 May – Dublin
 
Edinburgh14
 
Munster27
 
22 April – Newport
 
Llanelli Scarlets16
 
NG Dragons19
 
29 April – Llanelli
 
Llanelli Scarlets49
 
Llanelli Scarlets23
 
22 April – Swansea
 
Ospreys15
 
Ospreys23
 
 
Ulster16
 

Final

14 May 2005
17:30 IST
Munster 27–16 Llanelli Scarlets
Try: Horgan 6' c
O'Gara 22' c
Mullins 76' c
Con: O'Gara (3/3)
Pen: O'Gara 39'
Drop: O'Gara 40'
ReportTry: Phillips 34' c
Con: C. Thomas (1/1)
Pen: C. Thomas (3) 12', 42', 59'
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Attendance: 11,500
Referee: Joel Jutge (France)
FB15 Shaun Payne
RW14 Paul Devlin 64'
OC13 Mike Mullins
IC12 Rob Henderson
LW11 Anthony Horgan
FH10 Ronan O'Gara
SH9 Peter Stringer
N88 Anthony Foley (c)
OF7 David Wallace
BF6 Alan Quinlan
RL5 Paul O'Connell
LL4 Donncha O'Callaghan
TP3 John Hayes
HK2 Frankie Sheahan
LP1 Marcus Horan 28'
Substitutions:
HK16 Jerry Flannery
PR17 Gordon McIlwham 28'
LK18 Trevor Hogan
FL19 Denis Leamy 64'
SH20 Mike Prendergast
FH21 Paul Burke
CE22 James Storey
Coach:
Alan Gaffney
FB15 Barry Davies
RW14 Garan Evans
OC13 Matthew Watkins
IC12 Tal Selley
LW11 Aisea Havili 55'
FH10 Ceiron Thomas
SH9 Mike Phillips
N88 Andy Powell 55'
OF7 Gavin Thomas
BF6 Simon Easterby (c)
RL5 Chris Wyatt 64'
LL4 Vernon Cooper
TP3 John Davies
HK2 Matthew Rees 70'
LP1 Phil John
Substitutions:
PR16 David Maddocks
HK17 Aled Gravelle 70'
LK18 Adam Jones 64'
FL19 Gavin Quinnell 55'
SH20 Chris McDonald
FH21 Gareth Bowen
WG22 Salesi Finau 55'
Coach:
Gareth Jenkins

Demise

At the end of the 2004–05 season, the Welsh regions signed a deal to join the English Premiership clubs in an Anglo-Welsh Cup competition from the 2005–06 season. With clashing fixtures in the two competitions, the fallout led to the Irish and Scottish sides withdrawing from Celtic competition at the end of May.[7] Talks between the three countries in June led to an agreement to reinstate the Celtic League, but not the Celtic Cup.[8]

For the 2009–10 season, the Celtic League adopted a play-off format similar to that used for the 2004–05 Celtic Cup, but involving the top four teams in the league at the end of the season rather than the top eight. However the Celtic Cup name was not revived and the winners of the play-offs were instead crowned the overall Celtic League champions.

References

  1. "New Celtic League format agreed". BBC Sport. 6 May 2003. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  2. "Celtic rugby's brave new world". BBC Sport. 3 July 2003. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  3. "Ulster earn countback win". BBC Sport. 3 October 2003. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  4. "Ulster hold on for victory". BBC Sport. 20 December 2003. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  5. "Cup draw disappoints the Ospreys". BBC Sport. 22 April 2005. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  6. "Munster 27-16 Scarlets". BBC Sport. 14 May 2005. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  7. "Celtic League season cancelled". ESPNscrum. ESPN Enterprises. 31 May 2005. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  8. "Welsh back in the Celtic fold". ESPNscrum. ESPN Enterprises. 20 June 2005. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
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