The 'European Challenge Cup' in
rugby union, known as the Parker Pen Shield from 2001 to 2003 and Parker Pen Challenge Cup from 2003 to 2005, is the sister competition to the
Heineken Cup. It is competed for by teams from
England,
France,
Wales,
Ireland,
Scotland,
Italy,
Romania, and on some occasions,
Spain and
Portugal, on a pool, and then knock-out, basis. The current holders are French club
Clermont, who defeated
Bath 22-16 in 2007.
History
French dominance 1996-1999
European club rugby began with the launch of the
Heineken Cup in the summer of 1995
The Challenge Cup began as the 'European Conference' (later renamed the European Shield) in 1996 with twenty-four teams from England, France, Italy, Romania, Scotland and Wales divided into four groups of six. All seven of the French teams made it to the quarter-finals with English club Northampton Saints filling the other berth. Predictably, the final was an all-French affair with Bourgoin beating Castres Olympique 18-9 to win the shield.
The following year's competition had an increased entry with eight groups of four teams. Colomiers continued the French dominance of the European Shield, defeating Agen 43-5 in the final.
The absence of English and Scottish clubs in 1998/99 saw the competition reduced to twenty-one teams divided into three groups of seven teams with the
Spanish and
Portuguese national teams taking part. Once again, a French team was triumphant, with Montferrand beating holders Bourgoin 35-16 in the final held in Lyon.
With English and Scottish clubs back in the competition in 1999, there were 28 teams split in seven groups of four and London Irish and Bristol reached the semi-finals of the competition, but couldn't prevent another all-French final with Pau crowned champions after a 34-21 defeat of Castres.
A new era 2000-onwards
In 2000 for once there was no change in format, but the competition was without any teams from Romania. The semi-final draw was an all-English and all-French affair to leave NEC Harlequins and Narbonne contesting the first final on English soil.
NEC Harlequins ended French dominance of the European Shield, defeating RC Narbonne 27-26 after extra time in the final.
There was a new sponsor and a name change in 2001. The new 'Parker pen shield' saw thirty-two teams divided into eight groups of four competing for the title. For the first time there were two Spanish club teams and Romania was represented. Only one French club reached the quarter-finals along with five English and two from Wales and for the first time no French club reached the semi-finals after Pau lost to London Irish. For the first time a Welsh team, Pontypridd made it to the final but
Sale Sharks emerged victorious, coming from behind to win 25-22 at the Kassam Stadium in Oxford.
The league format was abandoned in 2002 and the tournament became a knock-out competition. This involved 32 clubs from eight nations, half of them seeded and drawn against an un-seeded team on a home and away basis. The name '
Parker Pen Shield' was now applied to a reprechage knock-out tournament for those teams that did not qualify for the second round of the Challenge Cup. The Parker Pen Challenge Cup winner now automatically qualified for the Heineken Cup.
London Wasps beat
Bath Rugby 48-30 to win the renamed 'Parker Pen Challenge Cup' by twenty points at the
Madejski Stadium, Reading.
In 2003/4 the
Welsh Rugby Union voted to create regions to play in the Celtic League and represent Wales in European competition. Henceforce Wales entered regional sides rather than the club sides which had previously competed. With a reduction from nine professional clubs to just five, there was no Welsh entry in that year's competition. Romania also did not take part in the Challenge Cup. NEC Harlequins won the cup with a 27-26 last-second victory over Montferrand at the Madejski Stadium to become the first side to win the tournament twice.
Sale eased to victory in the 2005 final 27-3 over a disappointing Pau side. In 2006, the tournament witnessed its closest final to date, when Gloucester edged out London Irish 36-34 after extra time.
The
Parker Pen Shield was abandoned in 2005 due to restructuring of the European Challenge Cup. The competition reverted back to being a league format followed by knock-out phase with five pools of four teams and home and away matches. Romanian interest returned to the competition in the form of
BucureÅŸti Rugby who had been formed to represent Romania in European competition, however there was no representation from Spain or Portugal.
Draw

Diagram showing how qualification is obtained for Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup.
England,
France,
Wales,
Ireland, and
Scotland set their own criteria for qualification for the
Heineken Cup. All the clubs that do not qualify for the
Heineken Cup enter the European Challenge Cup.
Italy enters 4 clubs: those finishing 3rd and 4th in the Super 10, and the winners of play-offs between 5th and 8th, and 6th and 7th.
Romania is represented by
BucureÅŸti Rugby who are specially formed for this competition.
There are five pools of four teams who play each other home and away matches. The winners of each pool and the three best runners up will qualify for the quarter-finals. The semi-finals will be one-off matches played at home venues and the final at a neutral venue.
2006-07 teams
Pool 1 –
Bayonne,
Bristol,
BucureÅŸti,
Newport Gwent Dragons
Pool 2 –
G.R.A.N. Parma,
Glasgow Warriors,
Narbonne,
Saracens
Pool 3 –
Brive,
Montauban,
Newcastle Falcons,
Petrarca Padova
Pool 4 –
Bath,
Connacht,
Montpellier,
Harlequins
Pool 5 –
Albi,
Clermont Auvergne,
Viadana,
Worcester Warriors,
2006/7 Quarter final & Semi final qualifiers
The Quarter finals will be played on the weekend of 30 / 31 March and 1 April:
★ ''Match A''
Clermont Auvergne vs
Newcastle Falcons
★ ''Match B''
Saracens vs
Glasgow Warriors
★ ''Match C''
Bath vs
Bristol
★ ''Match D''
Newport Gwent Dragons vs
Brive
The Semi finals will be played on the weekend of 21/22 April:
Final
Results
| Season | Winner | Score | Runner-up | Venue | Crowd |
|---|
| 1997 European Shield | 'Bourgoin' | '18-9' | Castres | Stade de la Méditerranée, Béziers | 10,000 |
| 1998 European Shield | 'Colomiers' | '43-5' | Agen | Stade des Sept Deniers, Toulouse | 12,500 |
| 1999 European Shield | 'Montferrand' | '35-16' | Bourgoin | Stade de Gerland, Lyon | 31,986 |
| 2000 European Shield | 'Pau' | '34-21' | Castres | Stade des Sept Deniers, Toulouse | 6,000 |
| 2001 European Shield | 'NEC Harlequins' | '42-33' | Narbonne | Madejski Stadium, Reading | 10,013 |
| 2002 Parker Pen Shield | 'Sale' | '25-22' | Pontypridd | Kassam Stadium, Oxford | 12,000 |
| 2003 Parker Pen Challenge Cup | 'London Wasps' | '48-30' | Bath | Madejski Stadium, Reading | 18,074 |
| 2004 Parker Pen Challenge Cup | 'NEC Harlequins' | '27-26' | Montferrand | Madejski Stadium, Reading | 13,123 |
| 2005 Parker Pen Challenge Cup | 'Sale' | '27-3' | Pau | Kassam Stadium, Oxford | 7,230 |
| 2006 European Challenge Cup | 'Gloucester' | '36-34 (aet)' | London Irish | The Stoop, London | 12,053 |
| 2007 European Challenge Cup | 'Clermont Auvergne' | '22-16 ' | 'Bath Rugby' | The Stoop, London | |
By total wins
Sources
★
Parker Pen Cup and Shield History
★
History from the official site
External links
★
Official site (in English)
★
Official site (in French)
★
Unofficial European club rankings