Asia Rugby Championship


































Asia Rugby Championship
Recent season or competition
2018 Asia Rugby Championship
Asia Rugby Championship logo.png
Sport Rugby union
Formerly known as Asian Five Nations
Instituted 1969
2008 (as Asian Five Nations)
2015 (ARC)
Governing body Asia Rugby
Holders
 Hong Kong (2018)
Most titles
 Japan (25 titles)

The Asia Rugby Championship, or ARC, is an annual rugby union competition held amongst national rugby sides within the Asia Rugby region.[1] 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.


The winner of the competition's top division is recognised as the rugby champion of Asia. The top division, sometimes referred to as the Tri Nations, includes the top three Asian teams each season. Division 1 includes the next four teams and Division 2 includes the next four. Division three is further divided geographically, with each of the West, East and South Central divisions including three teams.


As of 2017, Japan is the most successful team, securing 25 out of a possible 30 titles since 1969. Japan has won all Asia Rugby Championships from 2004 onwards.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Asian Five Nations (2008–14)


    • 1.2 Asia Rugby Championship (2015 onward)




  • 2 Format


  • 3 Current divisions


  • 4 Previous winners


    • 4.1 Asia Rugby Championship


    • 4.2 Division tournaments




  • 5 See also


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





History


The competition was formed as the Asian Rugby Football Tournament in 1969.[1]Chinese Taipei, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea and Thailand contested the inaugural Asian title. Japan were the champions on that occasion.


The tournament was held biennially for the most of its first four decades. It wasn't until 1982 that South Korea became the second team to win the title. The number of teams participating varied from year to year, with as many as 12 teams competing as other Asian teams joined the competition. From 1969 to 1996, there was a single division split into two groups. But in 1998, a second division was introduced as the game began to grow in Asia.


In 2003, a second Asian competition called the Asian Rugby Series was formed. The Asian Rugby Series ran alongside the Rugby Championship to help determine divisional allocations for the Asian Rugby Championship. With more teams competing, a third division was added to the Rugby Championship in 2004. The dual competitions ran until 2007.




Asian Five Nations Logo



Asian Five Nations (2008–14)


In 2008, the ARFU merged the Rugby Championship and Rugby Series into the Asian Five Nations. The competition became an annual championship and a promotion-relegation format was introduced. The winner of Division 2 replaced the loser of Division 1, and the winner of Division 1 replaced the loser of the Five Nations. For its inaugural years, no Division 3 took place, though several regional divisions were implemented across Asia. During the time of this competition, the main Five Nations division was dominated by Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong; the only three teams never to have been relegated to a lower division.



Asia Rugby Championship (2015 onward)


The competition was revamped again for the 2015 season as the Asia Rugby Championship. Under the new format, the top three teams formed a Tri nations division. A promotion-relegation challenge was instituted whereby the Division 1 winner had to defeat the Tri nations third place-getter to gain promotion for the next season.



Format


The current format sees the competition separated into various divisions, with a promotion and relegation format operated into each division. However, this only applies to Division 1 through 3, as the loser of the Tri Nations Division will play a play-off match against the winner of Division 1 to determine the third Tri Nations team for the following year. Where as the winners of Division 2 will automatically replace the loser of Division 1, and the two bottom placed teams in Division 2 will both be relegated down to one of the three regions in Division 3; West, East or South Central. Each of the three regions are made up three teams, and as of 2015, only the winners of the South Central and East divisions can be promoted to Division 2. This is because, the teams competing in the West region, are not considered as full members by World Rugby.


In 2015 in the main Tri Nations division, each team played each other on a home and away basis, picking up 5 points for a win and 3 for a draw. 2 additional points are up for grabs through bonus points, but in order to earn them, teams need to score 4 or more tries in a match, or when losing, lose by 7 points or less. In 2016 the points awarded were changed to 4 points for a win and 1 point for a draw with bonus points the same. For all Divisions, 1 through to 3, nations will only play each other once, with one of the included teams hosting all matches at home. These teams will also aim to pick points up for a win or draw, and gain bonus points. For all divisions, the team with the most table points wins their respective divisions, and if possible, earns promotion to the next division.



Current divisions


As of 2018, the competition divisions are:














Tri Nations

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

 Malaysia

 Japan









Division 1

 Philippines

 Singapore

 Sri Lanka

 United Arab Emirates









Division 2

 Chinese Taipei

 India

 Thailand
 


 









Division 3








West

 Iran

 Jordan

 Lebanon

 Qatar









Central

 Kazakhstan

 Mongolia

 Pakistan

 Uzbekistan









East

 China

 Brunei

 Guam

 Laos



Previous winners



Asia Rugby Championship















































































































































































































































































































































Year

 Edn
Host Teams
Final placings

Asian Rugby Tournament

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

1969
I

Tokyo
5

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Thailand [2]

1970
II

Bangkok
7

 Japan

 Thailand

 Hong Kong [3][4]

 Singapore [3][4]

1972
III

Hong Kong
7

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 Thailand

 Singapore

1974
IV

Colombo
8

 Japan

 Sri Lanka

 South Korea

 Malaysia

1976
V

Tokyo
8

 Japan

 South Korea

 Chinese Taipei

 Thailand [5]

1978
VI

Kuala Lumpur
7

 Japan

 South Korea

 Singapore

 Thailand

1980
VII

Taipei
8

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

1982
VIII

Singapore
8

 South Korea

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 Malaysia

1984
IX

Fukuoka
8

 Japan

 South Korea

 Chinese Taipei

 Thailand

1986
X

Bangkok
8

 South Korea

 Japan

 Thailand [6]

 Chinese Taipei

1988
XI

Hong Kong
8

 South Korea

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

1990
XII

Colombo
8

 South Korea

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 Thailand

1992
XIII

Hong Kong
8

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

 Thailand

1994
XIV

Kuala Lumpur
8

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

1996
XV

Taipei
7

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

Asian Rugby Champs Div I

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

1998
XVI

Singapore
4

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

2000
XVII

Aomori
4

 Japan

 South Korea

 Chinese Taipei

 Hong Kong

2002
XVIII

Bangkok
4

 South Korea

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

2004
XIX

Hong Kong
4

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Chinese Taipei

2006
XX

Hong Kong
3

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong
N/A

Asian Five Nations

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

2008
XXI

round-robin
home
or
away

5

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Kazakhstan

2009
XXII
5

 Japan

 Kazakhstan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

2010
XXIII
5

 Japan

 Kazakhstan

 Hong Kong

Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf

2011
XXIV
5

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 United Arab Emirates

 Kazakhstan

2012
XXV
5

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 United Arab Emirates

2013
XXVI
5

 Japan

 South Korea

 Hong Kong

 Philippines

2014
XXVII
5

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

 Philippines*

 Asia Rugby Championship

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

2015
XXVIII

home
and
away

3

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 South Korea
N/A

2016
XXIX
3

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

2017
XXX
3

 Japan

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

2018 a
XXXI
3

 Hong Kong

 South Korea

*  Malaysia

Notes:



^* Relegated to the division below


^ Able to be challenged by the winner of the division below to play in a promotion-relegation play-off.


^a In 2018, Japan—as hosts of the next Rugby World Cup–did not defend their Asia rugby Championship title to allow the Trinations competition to form part of the 2019 Rugby World Cup – Asia qualification process.




Division tournaments




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Year

Div
Host Teams
Final placings

ARC Divisions

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

1998

2

Singapore
6

 Singapore

 Sri Lanka

 Thailand

 Malaysia

2000

2

Ōwani
4

 Singapore

 China

 Sri Lanka

 Thailand

2002

2

Bangkok
7

 Thailand

Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf

 Singapore

 Kazakhstan

2004

2

Hong Kong
4

 Singapore

 Thailand

 Kazakhstan

Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf

3
4

 China

 Sri Lanka

 India

 Pakistan

2007

2

Colombo
6

 Kazakhstan

 Sri Lanka

 China

 Chinese Taipei

3
3

 Iran

 India

 Pakistan
N/A

Asian Five Nations Divisions

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

2008

1

Taiwan
4

§ Singapore

 Chinese Taipei

 Sri Lanka

 China

2

Thailand
4

§ Thailand

 Malaysia

 India

  Pakistan

P

Guam
3

§ Philippines

§ Guam

 Brunei
N/A

C

Sri Lanka
3

§ Iran

 Uzbekistan

 Kyrgyzstan

SE

Indonesia
3

§ Indonesia

 Laos

 Cambodia

2009

1

Dubai
4

§Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf

 Chinese Taipei

 Sri Lanka

 Thailand

2

Malaysia
4

§ Malaysia

 China

 India

 Pakistan

3

Philippines
4

§ Philippines

 Guam

 Iran

  Indonesia

C

Uzbekistan
3

§ Uzbekistan

 Kyrgyzstan

 Mongolia
N/A

SE

Laos
3

§ Laos

 Brunei

 Cambodia

2010

1

Singapore
4

§ Sri Lanka

 Singapore

 Malaysia

 Chinese Taipei

2

India
4

§ Philippines

 India

 Thailand

 China

3

Indonesia
4

§ Iran

 Pakistan

 Guam

  Indonesia

4

Kazakhstan
4

§ Jordan

 Uzbekistan

Kazakhstan Almaty Select

  Mongolia

2011

1

South Korea
4

§ South Korea

 Singapore

 Philippines

 Malaysia

2

Thailand
4

§ Chinese Taipei

 Thailand

 Iran

 India

3

Indonesia
4

§ China

 Guam

 Indonesia

  Pakistan

4

Dubai
4

§ Qatar

 Lebanon

 Jordan

  Uzbekistan

5

Cambodia
Laos
2

§ Laos

 Cambodia
N/A
N/A

2012

1

Philippines
4

§ Philippines

 Sri Lanka

 Chinese Taipei

 Singapore

2

Malaysia
4

§ Thailand

 Malaysia

 Iran

 China

3

Indonesia
4

§ India

 Guam

 Indonesia

 Pakistan

4

Dubai
4

§ Qatar

 Lebanon

 Jordan

  Uzbekistan

5

Cambodia
3

§ Laos

 Brunei

 Cambodia
N/A

2013

1

Sri Lanka
4

§ Sri Lanka

 Kazakhstan

 Chinese Taipei

 Thailand

2

Malaysia
4

§ Singapore

 Malaysia

 Iran

 India

3

Malaysia
4

§ Qatar

 Guam

 Indonesia

  China

4

Dubai
4

§ Lebanon

 Pakistan

 Uzbekistan

  Laos

5

Cambodia
2

§ Cambodia

 Brunei
N/A
N/A

2014

1

Dubai
Hong Kong
4

  Kazakhstan
  Singapore
N/A

 United Arab Emirates
 Chinese Taipei

2

Qatar
4

  Malaysia

 Qatar

 Iran

 Thailand

3E

Laos
4

  China

 Guam

 Indonesia

 Laos

3W

Pakistan
4

  Lebanon

 Uzbekistan

 India

 Pakistan

4

Brunei
3

  Mongolia

 Cambodia

 Brunei
N/A

 ARC Divisions

Winner

Runner-up

Third

Fourth

2015

1

Philippines
4

  Sri Lanka

 Philippines

 Kazakhstan

 Singapore

2

Malaysia
4

§ Malaysia

 United Arab Emirates

 Chinese Taipei

 Thailand

3E

Indonesia
3

§ Guam

 China

 Indonesia
N/A

3SC

Uzbekistan
2

§ Uzbekistan

 India
N/A

3W

Lebanon
3

  Lebanon

 Iran

 Jordan

2016

1

Malaysia
4

  Malaysia

 Sri Lanka

 Philippines

 Singapore

2

Uzbekistan
4

§ United Arab Emirates

 Thailand

 Guam

 Uzbekistan

3E

Thailand
2

  Laos

 Indonesia
N/A
N/A

3WC

Qatar
3

  Qatar

 Lebanon

 Iran

3W

Jordan
3

  Jordan

United Arab Emirates UAE Shaheen

 Saudi Arabia

2017

1

Malaysia
4

§ Malaysia

 Sri Lanka

 Philippines

  United Arab Emirates

2

Taiwan
4

§ Singapore

 Thailand

 Chinese Taipei

  India

3W

Uzbekistan
3

  Lebanon

 Uzbekistan

 Iran
N/A

2018

1

Philippines
3

  Philippines

 Singapore
N/A

2

Thailand
3

§ Chinese Taipei

 Thailand

 India

3E

Brunei
3

  Guam

 China

 Brunei

3C

Kazakhstan
4

  Kazakhstan

 Pakistan

 Mongolia

 Kyrgyzstan

3W

Lebanon
4

   Lebanon

 Iran

 Qatar

 Jordan

Notes:



^ Relegated to the division below.


^§ Won promotion, or the right to a challenge play-off for promotion, to the division above.




See also




  • ARFU Asian Rugby Series – a former competition that was combined with the ARC in 2008 to become the Asian Five Nations.

  • Asia Rugby

  • Rugby union in Asia



References





  1. ^ ab "History". Asia Rugby. 2016. Archived from the original on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 24 December 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Asian Championship 1969". Rugby Archive. Retrieved 1 April 2018.


  3. ^ ab "Asian Championship 1970". Rugby Archive. Retrieved 1 April 2018.


  4. ^ ab >"Asian Championship 1970". ESPN Scrum. Retrieved 1 April 2018.


  5. ^ "Asian Championship 1986". Rugby Archive. Retrieved 1 April 2018.


  6. ^ "Asian Championship 1986". Rugby Archive. Retrieved 1 April 2018.




External links



  • Asia Rugby

  • ARFU Asian 5 Nations

  • New structure announced

  • World Rugby











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