2004–05 European Challenge Cup
2004-05 European Challenge Cup | |
---|---|
Tournament details | |
Countries | England France Ireland Italy Portugal Scotland Spain |
Tournament format(s) | Knockout |
Date | 23 October 2004 – 21 May 2005 |
Tournament statistics | |
Teams | 28 |
Matches played | 57 |
Attendance | 177,521 (3,114 per match) |
Tries scored | 360 (6.32 per match) |
Top point scorer(s) | Paul Warwick (Connacht) (97 points)[1] |
Top try scorer(s) | Mark Cueto (Sale Sharks) (9 tries)[2] |
Final | |
Venue | Kassam Stadium, Oxford |
Attendance | 7,230 |
Champions | Sale Sharks (2nd title) |
Runners-up | Pau |
The 2004–05 European Challenge Cup (known as the Parker Pen Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the ninth season of the European Challenge Cup, Europe's second-tier club rugby union competition below the Heineken Cup. A total of 28 teams participated, representing seven countries.
The competition began with a series of matches on 23 October 2004 and culminated in the final at the Kassam Stadium in Oxford on 21 May 2005.
As in the previous two seasons, the competition was organised in a knockout format. Teams played each other on a home and away basis, with the aggregate points winner proceeding to the next round. The final was a single leg. This was the final season with a pure knockout format; in subsequent seasons the competition reverted to a pool stage followed by a knockout.
For the third and final time, a third tier tournament was held - the European Shield. This was contested between the first round losers from the European Challenge Cup.[3] As there were only 28 teams involved, the 2 "best" 1st Round losers were reprieved and proceeded to the 2nd Round.
The defending champions, England's NEC Harlequins, did not have a chance to defend their crown because they qualified to play in the Heineken Cup. Sale Sharks claimed a comfortable victory over Pau in the final and picked up their second piece of European Club silverware.
Teams
[edit]The allocation of teams was as follows:
- England: 5 teams — all teams from the Zurich Premiership that did not qualify for the 2004–05 Heineken Cup
- France: 10 teams — all teams from the Top 16 that did not qualify for the Heineken Cup
- Ireland: 1 team — the Irish team from the Celtic League that did not play in the Heineken Cup
- Italy: 8 teams — all the teams from the Super 10 that did not qualify for the Heineken Cup
- Portugal: 1 team
- Scotland: 1 team — the Scottish team from the Celtic League that did not play in the Heineken Cup
- Spain: 2 teams — drawn from the División de Honor de Rugby
England | France | Ireland | Italy | Portugal | Scotland | Spain |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Matches
[edit]All kickoff times are local to the match location.[4]
Round 1
[edit]1st leg
[edit]23 October 2004 14:00 |
AA Coimbra | 3 – 98 | Borders |
Report |
Estádio Municipal Sérgio Conceição Attendance: 400 |
2nd leg
[edit]Aggregate Results
[edit]Key to colours 14 winners and 2 best losers advance to 2nd Round. 12 other teams to Shield.
Winners | Match points | Aggregate score | Points margin | Losers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Borders | 4 – 0 | 205 – 6 | 199 | AA Coimbra |
Viadana | 4 – 0 | 147 – 10 | 137 | Valladolid RAC |
Clermont Auvergne | 4 – 0 | 116 – 6 | 110 | Leonessa |
Montpellier | 4 – 0 | 110 – 10 | 100 | Rovigo |
Béziers | 4 – 0 | 126 – 42 | 84 | Petrarca Padova |
Agen | 4 – 0 | 109 – 48 | 61 | L'Aquila |
Sale Sharks | 4 – 0 | 81 – 25 | 56 | Catania |
Pau | 4 – 0 | 66 – 37 | 29 | Bayonne |
Saracens | 4 – 0 | 60 – 31 | 29 | Gran Parma |
London Irish | 4 – 0 | 62 – 36 | 26 | Auch |
Grenoble | 3 – 1 | 27 – 26 | 1 | Leeds Tykes |
Brive | 2 – 2 | 55 – 39 | 16 | Worcester Warriors |
Connacht | 2 – 2 | 51 – 46 | 5 | Narbonne |
Overmach Parma | 2 – 2 | 48 – 46 | 2 | El Salvador |
Round 2
[edit]1st leg
[edit]4 December 2004 18:30 |
Narbonne | 15 – 33 | Sale Sharks |
Report |
Parc des Sports et de l'Amitié Attendance: 2,600 |
2nd leg
[edit]Aggregate Results
[edit]Proceed to Quarter-final | Match points | Aggregate score | Points margin | Eliminated from competition |
---|---|---|---|---|
Brive | 4 – 0 | 102 – 29 | 73 | El Salvador |
Clermont Auvergne | 4 – 0 | 78 – 37 | 41 | Borders |
Sale Sharks | 4 – 0 | 58 – 25 | 33 | Narbonne |
Grenoble | 4 – 0 | 65 – 38 | 27 | Béziers |
Connacht | 2 – 2 | 70 – 22 | 48 | Montpellier |
Saracens | 2 – 2 | 70 – 25 | 45 | Overmach Parma |
Pau | 2 – 2 | 41 – 38 | 3 | London Irish |
Agen | 2 – 2 | 40 – 37 | 3 | Viadana |
Quarter-finals
[edit]1st leg
[edit]2nd leg
[edit]Aggregate Results
[edit]Proceed to Semi-final | Match points | Aggregate score | Points margin | Eliminated from competition |
---|---|---|---|---|
Connacht | 4 – 0 | 45 – 24 | 21 | Grenoble |
Sale Sharks | 2 – 2 | 49 – 35 | 14 | Agen |
Pau | 2 – 2 | 50 – 47 | 3 | Clermont Auvergne |
Brive | 2 – 2 | 37 – 35 | 2 | Saracens |
Semi-finals
[edit]1st leg
[edit]2nd leg
[edit]Aggregate Results
[edit]Proceed to Final | Match points | Aggregate score | Points margin | Eliminated from competition |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sale Sharks | 4 – 0 | 84 – 27 | 57 | Connacht |
Pau | 2 – 2 | 50 – 43 | 7 | Brive |
Final
[edit]21 May 2005 12:45 |
Sale Sharks | 27 – 3 | Pau |
Try: Hodgson (2) 24' c, 68' m Titterrell 36' c Cueto 56' m Con: Hodgson (2/4) Pen: Hodgson (1) 3' | Report | Pen: Beauxis (1) 30' |
Kassam Stadium, Oxford Attendance: 7,230 Referee: Alan Lewis (Ireland) |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Amlin Challenge Cup: Points Scorers". Retrieved 29 January 2013.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Amlin Challenge Cup: Try Scorers". Retrieved 29 January 2013.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Challenge Cup European Champions". ERC. Archived from the original on 6 May 2008. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
- ^ "Challenge Cup Fixtures". ERC. Retrieved 30 January 2013.[permanent dead link ]
- 2004–05 European Challenge Cup
- 2004–05 rugby union tournaments for clubs
- EPCR Challenge Cup seasons
- 2004–05 in European rugby union
- 2004–05 in English rugby union
- 2004–05 in French rugby union
- 2004–05 in Irish rugby union
- 2004–05 in Italian rugby union
- 2004–05 in Spanish rugby union
- 2004–05 in Scottish rugby union
- 2004 in Portuguese sport
- 2005 in Portuguese sport