2019 Asia Rugby Championship

Last updated
2019 Asia Rugby Championship
Date18 May - 29 June
CountriesFlag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea
Final positions
ChampionsFlag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong (2nd title)
Tournament statistics
Matches played6
Tries scored52 (8.67 per match)
Top scorer(s) Flag of Hong Kong.svg Matthew Rosslee (44)
Most tries Flag of Hong Kong.svg Paul Altier (3)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Conor Hartley (3)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Callum McCullough (3)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Jack Neville (3)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Harry Sayers (3)
Website www.asiarugby.com
2018
2022

The 2019 Asia Rugby Championship is the fifth annual rugby union series for the top-level Asia Rugby nations. Hong Kong, South Korea and Malaysia shall compete in the 2019 series. The Asia Rugby Championship in 2019 does not include Japan who is hosting the 2019 Rugby World Cup. Other Asian nations played in the lower division tournaments.

Contents

The format of the tri-nations series is a double round-robin where the three teams play each other twice on a home and away basis. The team finishing on top of the standings at the end of the series is declared the winner.

Teams

The teams involved, with their world rankings prior to the 2019 tournament in brackets: [1]

NationHome stadiumCity
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong (25) Hong Kong Football Club Stadium Hong Kong
Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea (30) Incheon Namdong Asiad Rugby Field Incheon
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia (45) National Stadium Kuala Lumpur

Standings

2019 Asia Rugby Championship Champions
PosNationGamesPointsBonus
points
Total
points
PlayedWonLostDrawnForAgainstDiff
1Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong 440021237+175420
2Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea 4220103141-38210
3Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia 404054191-13711
Points were awarded to the teams as follows:
Win - 4 points
Draw - 2 points
4 or more tries - 1 point
Loss within 7 points - 1 point
Loss greater than 7 points - 0 points

Fixtures

Source: asiarugby.com [2]

Week 1

18 May 2019
16:00 KST (UTC+9)
South Korea  Flag of South Korea.svg52–14Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
Try: You Ji-hoon 24' m
Jang Seong-min 30' c
Lee Myung-jun 34' c
Lee Jin-seok 47' c
Na Kwan-young 61' m
Jeong Yeon-sik 72' c
Jang Jeong-min 76' c
Lee Jae-bok 80+1' c
Con: Han Gu-min 31', 35', 48' (3/5)
Park Ji-su 73', 77', 80+2' (3/3)
Report Try: Petrus 20' c
Wong 67' c
Con: Abdul Rahman 21', 68' (2/2)
Incheon Namdong Asiad Rugby Field, Incheon
Referee: Tim Baker (Hong Kong)
FB15Lee Jae-bok
RW14Jeong Yeon-sik
OC13Kim Jin-hyeok
IC12Jang Seong-min
LW11Jang Jeong-min
FH10Han Gu-min
SH9Lee Myung-jun
N88Cha Sung-kyun
OF7Kim Dae-hwan
BF6You Ji-hoon
RL5Yang Dae-yong
LL4Lee Jin-seok
TP3Lee Gyu-sang
HK2Kim Jeep
LP1Na Kwan-young (c)
Replacements:
16Son Young-gi
17Lee Hyun-su
18Kang Soon-hyuck
19Park Ye-chan
20Son Min-su
21Chae Min-seong
22Park Ji-su
23Kim Nam-uk
Coach:
Flag of South Korea.svg Seo Chun-oh
FB15Seru Pepeli Naqasima
RW14Wong Wye Wye
OC13Mohd Syahir Asraf Rosli
IC12Sakiusa Terence Gavidi
LW11Badrul Bin Muktee
FH10Mohd Fairuz Bin Abdul Rahman
SH9Mohamad Khairul Abdillah Bin Ramli
N88Etonia Vaqa Saukuru
OF7Samuel Rentap Meran
BF6Timoci Vunimoku
RL5Dineshvaran Krishnan (c)
LL4Muhammad Sameer Bin Muhammad Sani Surinder
TP3Lawrence Petrus
HK2Amirul Mukminim Amizan
LP1Bryan Wilfreddoline
Replacements:
16Mohd Nurazman bin Ramli
17Mohamad Akmal Yassin Chong
18Amirul Aiman Ihsan bin Abas
19Muhammad Danial bin Noor Hamidi
20Hashraffuddin Basir
21Mohd Nur Ikqwan bin Nordin
22Muhamad Amirul Aqil Kamsol
23Muhammad Hafizin Aiman Bin Halim
Coach:
Flag of New Zealand.svg Brad Mika

Week 2

25 May 2019
21:00 MST (UTC+8)
Malaysia  Flag of Malaysia.svg16–38Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea
Try: Mukminin Amizan 30' c
Con: Abdul Rahman 32' (1/1)
Pen: Abdul Rahman 26', 37', 53'
Report Try: Cha Sung-kyun 5' m
Yang Dae-yong 22' m
Na Kwan-young 34' c
Shin Hyeon-seong 40' c
Kim Nam-uk 58' c
Lim Jun-hui 77' c
Con: Park Ji-su 35', 40+1' (2/4)
Kim Ki-min 59', 78' (2/2)
National Stadium, Kuala Lumpur
Referee: Craig Chan (Hong Kong)
FB15Mohd Fairuz Bin Abdul Rahman
RW14Wong Wye Wye
OC13Mohd Syahir Asraf Rosli
IC12Sakiusa Terence GavidiYellow card.svg 38' to 48'
LW11Badrul Bin Muktee
FH10Seru Pepeli Naqasima
SH9Mohamad Khairul Abdillah Bin Ramli
N88Etonia Vaqa Saukuru
OF7Hashraffuddin Basir
BF6Timoci Vunimoku
RL5Dineshvaran Krishnan (c)
LL4Nathaniel Tan Aik-mingYellow card.svg 46' to 56'
TP3Amirul Aiman Ihsan bin Abas
HK2Amirul Mukminim Amizan
LP1Bryan Wilfreddoline
Replacements:
16Mohd Nurazman bin Ramli
17Lawrence Petrus
18Mohamad Akmal Yassin Chong
19Muhammad Danial bin Noor Hamidi
20Syahmi Afiq Edan
21Mohd Nur Ikqwan bin Nordin
22Muhamad Amirul Aqil Kamsol
23Muhammad Zharif Afendi Mohamed Zahib
Coach:
Flag of New Zealand.svg Brad Mika
FB15Lee Jae-bok
RW14Jeong Yeon-sik
OC13Lee Yong-un
IC12Kim Nam-uk
LW11Jang Jeong-min
FH10Park Ji-su
SH9Chae Min-seong
N88Cha Sung-kyun
OF7Son Min-su
BF6You Ji-hoon
RL5Yang Dae-yong
LL4Lee Jin-seok
TP3Lee Gyu-sang
HK2Kim Jeep
LP1Na Kwan-young (c)
Replacements:
16Son Young-gi
17Lee Hyun-su
18Kang Soon-hyuck
19Choi Seong-dok
20Lim Jun-hui
21Kang Min-jun
22Kim Ki-min
23Shin Hyeon-seong
Coach:
Flag of South Korea.svg Seo Chun-oh

Week 3

8 June 2019
16:00 KST (UTC+9)
South Korea  Flag of South Korea.svg10–47Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
Try: Jeong Yeon-sik 7' c
Con: Han Gu-min 9' (1/1)
Pen: Han Gu-min 34'
Report Try: Hartley (3) 20' m, 49' c, 80' m
Sayers 53' c
Altier 59' c
Jans 73' c
Con: Rosslee 50', 54', 60', 74' (4/6)
Pen: Rosslee 4', 16', 39'
Incheon Namdong Asiad Rugby Field, Incheon
Referee: Tasuku Kawahara (Japan)
FB15Lee Jae-bok
RW14Jeong Yeon-sik
OC13Kim Nam-uk
IC12Jang Seong-min
LW11Jang Jeong-min
FH10Han Gu-min
SH9Lee Myung-jun
N88Cha Sung-kyun
OF7Kim Yo-han
BF6Lim Jun-hui
RL5Yang Dae-yong
LL4Kim Dae-hwan
TP3Lee Gyu-sang
HK2Kim Jeep
LP1Na Kwan-young (c)
Replacements:
16Yeo Jae-min
17Lee Hyun-su
18Kang Soon-hyuck
19Park Ye-chan
20Choi Seong-dok
21Kang Min-jun
22Kim Jin-hyeok
23Baeg Jong-eun
Coach:
Flag of South Korea.svg Seo Chun-oh
FB15Paul Altier
RW14Harry Sayers
OC13Ben Axten-Burrett
IC12 Matthew Rosslee
LW11Conor Hartley
FH10 Jack Neville
SH9Liam Slatem (c)
N88Kane Boucaut
OF7Callum McCullough
BF6James Cunningham
RL5Kyle Sullivan
LL4Fin Field
TP3 Grant Kemp
HK2Alexander Post
LP1Ben Higgins
Replacements:
16Dayne Jans
17Dan Barlow
18Jack Parfitt
19Craig Lodge
20Cris Pierrepont
21Bryn Phillips
22Lewis Warner
23Robert Keith
Coach:
Flag of Scotland.svg Andrew Hall

Week 4

15 June 2019
16:00 HKT (UTC+8)
Hong Kong  Flag of Hong Kong.svg30–24Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
Try: Phillips 16' m
Purvis 36' c
McCullough 57' c
Andrews 64' m
Con: Altier 38' (1/2)
Neville 58' (1/2)
Pen: Altier 40+1'
Neville 79'
Report Try: Saukuru (2) 8' c, 68' c
Vunimoku 74' c
Con: Abdul Rahman 9', 69', 76' (3/3)
Pen: Abdul Rahman 26'
Hong Kong Football Club Stadium, Hong Kong
Referee: Teruhisa Kajiwara (Japan)
FB15Robert Keith
RW14Sam Purvis
OC13Lewis Warner
IC12Ben Axten-Burrett
LW11Sebastian Brien
FH10Paul Altier
SH9Bryn Phillips
N88Kane Boucaut
OF7Cris Pierrepont
BF6Callum McCullough
RL5Kyle Sullivan
LL4Craig Lodge
TP3Jack Parfitt
HK2Jamie Tsang (c)
LP1Dan Barlow
Replacements:
16Mitch Andrews
17Callum McFeat-Smith
18Keelan Chapman
19Sam Tsoi
20James Cunningham
21Jamie Lauder
22 Jack Neville
23Tyler Spitz
Coach:
Flag of Scotland.svg Andrew Hall
FB15Muhamad Amirul Aqil Kamsol
RW14Wong Wye Wye
OC13Mohd Syahir Asraf Rosli
IC12Sakiusa Terence Gavidi
LW11Badrul Bin Muktee
FH10Mohd Fairuz Bin Abdul Rahman
SH9Mohamad Khairul Abdillah Bin Ramli
N88Etonia Vaqa Saukuru
OF7Samuel Rentap Meran
BF6Muhammad Danial bin Noor Hamidi
RL5Dineshvaran Krishnan (c)
LL4Muhammad Sameer Bin Muhammad Sani Surinder
TP3Mohamad Akmal Yassin Chong
HK2Amirul Mukminim Amizan
LP1Bryan WilfreddolineYellow card.svg 47' to 57'
Replacements:
16Mohd Nurazman bin Ramli
17Syahmi Afiq Edan
18Lawrence Petrus
19Timoci Vunimoku
20Nathaniel Tan Aik-ming
21Mohd Nur Ikqwan bin Nordin
22Muhammad Hafizin Aiman Bin Halim
23Naivaluoni Raturibi
Coach:
Flag of New Zealand.svg Brad Mika

Week 5

22 June 2019
20:00 MST (UTC+8)
Malaysia  Flag of Malaysia.svg0–71Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
Report Try: Penalty try 6'
Sayers (2) 18' c, 65' m
Spitz 24' m
Post 34' c
Altier (2) 38' c, 51' c
Slatem 43' m
Boucaut 57' c
Neville 69' c
Warner 72' c
Con: Rosslee 19', 35', 39', 52', 58', 70', 73' (7/10)
National Stadium, Kuala Lumpur
Referee: Tasuku Kawahara (Japan)
FB15Muhamad Amirul Aqil Kamsol
RW14Wong Wye Wye (c)
OC13Seru Pepeli Naqasima
IC12Sakiusa Terence Gavidi
LW11Badrul Bin Muktee
FH10Mohd Fairuz Bin Abdul Rahman
SH9Mohd Nur Ikqwan bin Nordin
N88Etonia Vaqa Saukuru
OF7Samuel Rentap Meran
BF6Hashraffuddin Basir
RL5Muhammad Danial bin Noor Hamidi
LL4Timoci Vunimoku
TP3Mohamad Akmal Yassin Chong
HK2Amirul Mukminim AmizanYellow card.svg 16' to 26'
LP1Bryan Wilfreddoline
Replacements:
16Mohd Nurazman bin Ramli
17Amirul Aiman Ihsan bin Abas
18Lawrence Petrus
19Nathaniel Tan Aik-ming
20Naivaluoni Raturibi
21Mohamad Khairul Abdillah Bin Ramli
22Mohd Syahir Asraf Rosli
23Mohamad Faris bin Pead
Coach:
Flag of New Zealand.svg Brad Mika
FB15Paul Altier
RW14Harry Sayers
OC13Tyler Spitz
IC12 Matthew Rosslee
LW11Conor Hartley
FH10 Jack Neville
SH9Liam Slatem (c)
N88Kane Boucaut
OF7Callum McCullough
BF6James Cunningham
RL5Kyle Sullivan
LL4Fin Field
TP3 Grant Kemp
HK2Alexander Post
LP1Ben Higgins
Replacements:
16Mitch Andrews
17Dan Barlow
18Faizal Solomona Penesa
19Sam Tsoi
20Cris Pierrepont
21Jamie Lauder
22Ben Axten-Burrett
23Lewis Warner
Coach:
Flag of Scotland.svg Andrew Hall

Week 6

29 June 2019
16:00 HKT (UTC+8)
Hong Kong  Flag of Hong Kong.svg64–3Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea
Try: Neville (2) 10' m, 21' c
Brien 12' c
Axten-Burrett (2) 15' c, 70' c
Spitz 38' m
Rosslee 44' c
McCullough (2) 58' c, 72' c
Solomona Penesa 61' c
Con: Rosslee 14', 16', 22', 45' (4/7)
Neville 62', 71', 73' (3/3)
Report Pen: Han Gu-min 25'
Hong Kong Football Club Stadium, Hong Kong
Referee: Shuhei Kubo (Japan)
FB15 Jack Neville
RW14Sebastian Brien
OC13Tyler Spitz
IC12Ben Axten-Burrett
LW11Harry Sayers
FH10 Matthew Rosslee
SH9Liam Slatem (c)
N88Kane Boucaut
OF7Callum McCullough
BF6James Cunningham
RL5Kyle Sullivan
LL4Fin Field
TP3 Grant Kemp
HK2Alexander Post
LP1Ben Higgins
Replacements:
16Callum McFeat-Smith
17Mitch Andrews
18Faizal Solomona Penesa
19Craig Lodge
20Sam Tsoi
21Jamie Lauder
22Lewis Warner
23Robert Keith
Coach:
Flag of Scotland.svg Andrew Hall
FB15Lee Jae-bok
RW14Kim Nam-uk
OC13Kim Jin-hyeok
IC12Jang Seong-min
LW11Hong Sung-jong
FH10Han Gu-min
SH9Lee Myung-jun
N88Cha Sung-kyun (c)
OF7Kim Yo-han
BF6Choi Seong-deok
RL5Park Ye-chan
LL4Kim Do-kun
TP3Lee Gyu-sang
HK2Kim Jeep
LP1Lee Hyun-suRed card.svg 27'
Replacements:
16Yeo Jae-min
17Shin Ji-min
18Kang Soon-hyuck
19Park Joo-young
20Noh Ok-gi
21Kang Min-jun
22Kim Ki-min
23Shin Hyeon-seong
Coach:
Flag of South Korea.svg Seo Chun-oh

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Rugby Championship</span> International rugby union competition

The Rugby Championship is an international rugby union competition contested annually by Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. These are the four highest ranked national teams in the Southern Hemisphere; the Six Nations is a similar tournament in the Northern Hemisphere.

The Rugby Europe International Championships is the European Championship for tier 2 and tier 3 rugby union nations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippines national rugby union team</span>

The Philippines national rugby union team, nicknamed the "Volcanoes", represents the Philippines in international rugby union. The Philippines have been playing in the Asia Rugby Championship since 2006 when the team was first created. In 2012 they won the Division I championship and were promoted to the top 5 for the 2013 tournament where they earned 4th place and again in the 2014 tournament. The Philippines have yet to make their debut at the Rugby World Cup.

The Sri Lanka national rugby union team, known as the Tuskers, represents Sri Lanka in men's international rugby union. The team has yet to make their debut at the Rugby World Cup. They have the longest tradition of organised club rugby in Asia, dating back to 1879, which was just 8 years after the founding of the world's first rugby union in England. They regularly compete in the Asian Five Nations tournament and are currently in Division I. In the 2010 tournament, they made it to the finals beating Chinese Taipei 37 to 7.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Asia Rugby Championship</span>

The Asia Rugby Championship, or ARC, is an annual rugby union competition held amongst national rugby sides within the Asia Rugby region. The competition was originally known as the Asian Rugby Football Tournament when founded in 1969, and was called the Asian Five Nations from 2008 to 2014.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Americas Rugby Championship</span> Rugby union tournament of the Americas

The Americas Rugby Championship, often informally called the Americas' Six Nations, was an annual international rugby tournament between six North and South American nations: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, the United States and Uruguay. Originally competed by various interlocking combinations of club, second-tier national and top national sides, the current international tournament has the top national sides competing. The current format provides these top national teams with additional test matches to be counted in the World Rugby Rankings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Asia Rugby Sevens Series</span>

The Asia Rugby Sevens Series is an annual series of regional rugby sevens tournaments run by Asia Rugby featuring national sevens teams. It has been held regularly since 2009 to determine Asia's best men's national team in the sport of rugby sevens.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Serendib International Cup</span>

The Serendib International Cup was an international rugby union competition for emerging nations held in Sri Lanka in 2013. The Serendib Cup was contested by the hosts Sri Lanka and the Malagasy and Polish national rugby teams. The tournament was backed by the International Rugby Board and was played over three match days in Colombo between 26 October and 1 November, coinciding with the 2013 end-of-year rugby union tests.

For main Top 5 Division, see: 2008 Asian Five Nations

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 Rugby World Cup qualifying</span>

The qualification process for the 2019 Rugby World Cup in Japan began during the pool stages of the 2015 tournament in England, during which the top three teams from each of the four pools were awarded automatic qualification for the 2019 event. A further eight teams qualified through regional, cross-regional tournaments and the repechage process.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 Asia Rugby Championship</span>

The 2016 Asia Rugby Championship, or ARC, was the second annual tri-nations series for top-level rugby union in Asia and the twenty-ninth continental championship for the Asia Rugby nations. The Asia Rugby Championship replaced the former Asian Five Nations in 2015, with only three nations competing in the top division instead of the previous five. The 2016 series included Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea. Other Asian nations competed in the lower division tournaments.

Qualifying for the 2019 Rugby World Cup for Asia Rugby began in May 2016 and ended in early June 2018, where the winner of the qualification process advanced to a cross-regional play-off series against the winner of Round 2 of the Oceania qualification process in June 2018.

The 2017 Asia Rugby Championship, or ARC, was the third annual tri-nations series for top-level rugby union in Asia and the thirtieth continental championship for the Asia Rugby nations. The Asia Rugby Championship replaced the former Asian Five Nations in 2015, with only three nations competing in the top division instead of the previous five. The 2016 series included Hong Kong, Japan and South Korea. Other Asian nations competed in the lower division tournaments.

The 2018 Asia Rugby Championship was the fourth annual rugby union series for the top-level Asia Rugby nations. The Asia Rugby Championship in 2018 formed part of the World Cup qualifying process and, as such, did not include Japan who had already qualified as the 2019 Rugby World Cup host. Hong Kong and South Korea were joined by Malaysia, promoted from Division 1, to compete in the 2018 series. Other Asian nations played in the lower division tournaments.

The 2019 Asia Rugby Championship division tournaments refers to the divisions played within the annual international rugby union tournament for the Asian region. The Asia Rugby Championship (ARC) replaced the Asian Five Nations tournament in 2015. The main tournament is now contested by the top three teams in Asia. The other national teams in Asia compete in three divisions.

The 2022 Asia Rugby Championship was the sixth tri-nations series of rugby union matches for the top-level Asia Rugby nations. Due to impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the series was cancelled in both 2020  and 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rugby sevens at the 2022 Commonwealth Games</span>

Rugby sevens at the 2022 Commonwealth Games was held at the Coventry Stadium from 29 to 31 July 2022.

The men's tournament for the 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens was held in Cape Town, South Africa from September 9 to 11 at the Cape Town Stadium.

WXV is an upcoming women's international rugby union competition that will be held annually, scheduled to be launched in 2023. The competition will consist of three tiers, WXV 1, WXV 2, and WXV 3. Each tier will consist of six teams that will be divided into two pools and will run in a split pool format, where teams only face teams from the other pool.

The 2023 Asia Rugby Championship is the seventh annual rugby union series for the top-level Asia Rugby nations. Hong Kong, South Korea and Malaysia shall compete in the 2023 series. Other Asian nations played in the lower division tournaments.

References

  1. "Men's Rankings | World Rugby". Archived from the original on 2020-06-04. Retrieved 2019-04-09.
  2. "Asia Rugby Championship 2019". Asia Rugby. Retrieved 9 April 2019.