Union Cup

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The Union Cup is a biennial European, non-professional, gay rugby union tournament, bringing together teams and joint teams from all over Europe. It is held every odd-numbered year.

Contents

History

Montpellier 2005

The first edition was held in May 2005 in Montpellier, France. The participating teams were Les Artichauds, Manchester Village Spartans, Kings Cross Steelers, Emerald Warriors RFC, Cardiff Lions, Los Valents Montpellier, Les Gaillards, NOP Amsterdam (later became Amsterdam Lowlanders) and the competition was won by Les Artichauds over the Manchester Village Spartans.[ citation needed ]

Copenhagen 2007

The second edition was held in Copenhagen, Denmark in May 2007; the XVs competition was won by the Kings Cross Steelers London, while the 7s tournament was won by the Emerald Warriors RFC Dublin over the Cardiff Lions with a 10-5 final score.[ citation needed ]

London 2009

The third edition was held in London in 2009, with visiting teams from Amsterdam, Bristol, Cardiff, Copenhagen, Dublin, Edinburgh, Manchester, Montpellier, Newcastle, Paris and a Barbarians side; the XVs competition was won by the Kings Cross Steelers London in a hard fought 3-0 match against the Manchester Village Spartans, the Xs tournament was won by the Cardiff Lions who beat the Kings Cross Steelers Xs team 29-7 in the final, and the 7s tournament was won by the Bristol Bisons RFC in a 12-7 final against Les Coqs Festifs Paris.[ citation needed ]

Amsterdam 2011

The fourth edition was held in Amsterdam, Netherlands, hosted by the Amsterdam Lowlanders in June 2011 with visiting teams from Amsterdam, Bristol, Brussels, Dublin, Edinburgh, London, Lisbon, Lyon, Manchester, Montpellier and Paris. The XVs competition was won by the Kings Cross Steelers I London, over the Manchester Village Spartans and the Emerald Warriors RFC Dublin, while the Xs competition was won by the Los Valents Montpellier, over the Bristol Bisons RFC and the Kings Cross Steelers II.[ citation needed ]

A video was created by the students of a local art university, [1] and generally the competition found good coverage on the media, both on TV [2] [3] and on newspapers. [4] [5]

Bristol 2013

In July 2011, Bristol Bisons RFC were successful in their bid for the 2013 Union Cup over the Emerald Warriors RFC from Dublin, Ireland.

19 squads took part from 17 different teams. In the 10s tournament Birmingham Bulls, Dublin Emerald Warriors RFC 2nds , Lisbon Dark Horses, Montpellier Los Valents, Paris Coq Festifs. 15's teams, Amsterdam Lowlanders, Berlin Bruisers, Bristol Bisons RFC, Bruxelles Straffe Ketten, Cardiff Lions, Edinburgh Thebans, Dublin Emerald Warriors RFC 1st, London Kings Cross Steelers 1st XV, London Kings Cross Steelers 2nd XV, Lyon Les Rebelyons, Manchester Village Spartans, Newcastle Ravens, Northampton Outlaws RFC, Stockholm Berserkers RFC.

The Kings Cross Steelers won the Union Cup for the fourth time with a win over Dublin Emerald Warriors RFC

With 500+ participants from all over Europe this is the largest Union Cup thus far.

Brussels 2015

In April 2013, 3 teams / cities expressed bids for the Union Cup 2015 tournament. Caledonian Thebans From Edinburgh, Straffe Ketten From Brussels, Los Valents de Montpellier RFC From Montpellier. At 11.15pm BST, on 25 May 2013, it was announced in Bristol's "The Vault" venue, that Brussels - Straffe Ketten was the chosen city - club to host the Union Cup 2015. This will be the first time the Union Cup has been staged in Belgium. 700 players, fans and officials traveled to Brussels in May 2015 for the competition. The competition was held from the 21st to 23 May 2015, with opening and closing ceremonies being held at the Square near the Bozar in the centre of Brussels, and the tournament itself at the pitches of Forest Rugby Club in Bempt in the south-west of the city. Winners were: Cup: Kings Cross Steelers from London (24-3 against Manchester Spartans) Plate: Straffe Ketten from Brussels (8-7 against Caledonian Thebans from Edinburgh) Bowl: Cardiff Lions (7-0 against Kings Cross Steelers II)

Madrid 2017

For 2017 3 cities ran for the organisation of the Union Cup. Dublin withdrew before the official bids had to be in. The decision between Madrid and Newcastle was made in Brussels on May 23, 2015 in favor of Madrid. The Madrid Titanes Club de Rugby will be the hosts.

The Jozi Cats, from Johannesburg, South Africa became the first non-European team to participate in the cup.

Dublin 2019

For 2019 3 teams ran for the organisation of the Union Cup. The Manchester Village Spartans Manchester, The Cardiff Lions Cardiff and The Emerald Warriors Dublin, who won the bidding process after two attempts for the years 2013 and 2017. The tournament was broadcast by the Pundit Arena website. [6]

Birmingham 2023

After a two-year pause due to the pandemic, the Union Cup was announced [7] to take place in Birmingham, United Kingdom, and to be hosted by the City of Birmingham's Birmingham Bulls over the weekend of April 27th - 30th, 2023.

Tournament Summary

List of Union Cup Winners and Runners Up
Year & Host CityCup ChampionsCup Runners UpPlate or Xs ChampionsPlate or Xs Runners UpBowl or 7s ChampionsBowl or 7s Runners Up
2005 Flag of France.svg Montpellier Flag of France.svg Les Artichauds Flag of England.svg Manchester Village Spartans
2007 Flag of Denmark.svg Copenhagen Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of Ireland.svg Emerald Warriors Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Cardiff Lions
2009 Flag of England.svg London Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of England.svg Manchester Village Spartans Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Cardiff Lions Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers
2011 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Amsterdam Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of England.svg Manchester Village Spartans Flag of France.svg Los Valents de Montpellier Flag of England.svg Bristol Bisons
2013 Flag of England.svg Bristol Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of Ireland.svg Emerald Warriors
2015 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Brussels Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of England.svg Manchester Village Spartans Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Straffe Ketten Flag of Scotland.svg Caledonian Thebans Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg Cardiff Lions Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers II
2017 Flag of Spain.svg Madrid Flag of England.svg Kings Cross Steelers Flag of France.svg Los Valents de Montpellier Flag of France.svg Tou'Win Flag of England.svg Northampton outlaws Flag of France.svg Rebelyons Flag of England.svg Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents
List of Winning Teams
Year &

Host City

Challenger

Bowl Final

Challenger

Cup Final

Union Shield

Final

Cú Chulainn

Plate Final

Cú Chulainn

Cup Final

Cú Chulainn

Bowl Final

Union Bowl FinalUnion Plate FinalAnn-Louise Gilligan Bowl Final
2019 Flag of Ireland.svg Dublin Flag of England.svg Kings Cross

Steelers V

Flag of England.svg Manchester Village

Spartans

Flag of England.svg Kings Cross

Steelers III

Flag of England.svg Northampton Outlaws Flag of England.svg Leeds Hunters Flag of Scotland.svg Dunfermline Knights Flag of England.svg Birmingham Bulls Flag of England.svg Newcastle Ravens Flag of Ireland.svg DCU

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References

  1. "Union Cup 2011 Official presentation video". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021.
  2. "Amstelveen TV News". Archived from the original on 13 December 2021.
  3. "RTV N-H Nederland national TV sport news".
  4. "Homo-rugbyteam tackelt net zo hard" [Homosexual rugby team tackles just as hard]. AT5 Nieuws (in Dutch). Amsterdam. 3 June 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2012. Het bestaat al een paar jaar, maar voor het eerst wordt het dit weekend hier georganiseerd: een internationaal rugbytoernooi voor alleen maar homo's (It has existed for a few years, but organized here for the first time this weekend: an international rugby tournament only for homosexuals)
  5. "Newham Recorder News - UK".
  6. "Pundit Arena to Broadcast 2019 Union Cup". AdWorld.ie. 7 June 2019. Archived from the original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  7. Team, Central Bylines (25 November 2022). "Birmingham prepares to host an international LGBTQ+ rugby tournament". Central Bylines. Retrieved 27 April 2023.