South American Rugby Championship

Summary

The South American Rugby Championship refers to the continental rugby union championships for South America, organized by Sudamérica Rugby.[1][2] The current name of the championships is South American Six Nations, implemented in 2018. Throughout history, South American Championships have also existed for lower divisions of the rugby union championships, as well as youth and women tournaments, and editions for rugby sevens.

South American
Rugby Championship
SportRugby union
First season1951
Organising bodySudamérica Rugby
No. of teams13
Most recent
champion(s)
 Argentina
(2020)
Most titles Argentina (36 titles)
Related
competitions
Americas Championship
Tournament formatRound robin

History edit

The South American Rugby Championship is a round-robin tournament, with each team playing each other once at a designated host stadium. The top level championship for men's rugby union, disputed annually, has received a number of different titles in history. It began in 1951 as Sudamericano de Rugby, which lasted until 1998. From 1951 to 1998, only Argentina, Chile and Uruguay were the core teams in the tournament. They competed alongside occasional additions of Brazil, Paraguay and Peru, with the winner being decided on which team finishes with the most table points.

In 2000, a second division was added, which meant the bottom placed team of the A division had a play-off match with the top placed team of the B division, although this did not apply to every tournament due to the Rugby World Cup qualification formats. In 2012, a third Division was added, which meant up until 2014, the bottom placed team of the B division would play a play-off match against the top placed C Division team. Although like A and B, this did not apply to every tournament due to the Rugby World Cup qualification format.

 
2016 Second level of South American Rugby Championship match between Uruguay and Chile

In 2014, the tournament became a four-tiered competition, with Argentina no longer competing as a regular. However, the tournament would keep the same format for promotion and relegation. The top placed team from Division C would play a play-off match against the bottom placed team from Division B to determine which Division those teams are in for the succeeding tournament. The winner of the play-off match would earn a place in Division B for the succeeding tournament; the loser would play in Division C the following year. This worked in the same way for Divisions A and B. The top placed team of Division B would play a play-off match against the bottom placed team from Division A to determine which divisions those teams would play in for the succeeding tournament. The winner of the play-off match would earn a place in Division A for the succeeding tournament, while the loser would play in Division B the following year.

However, the top two teams of Division A would compete at a separate competition, the CONSUR Cup, alongside Argentina, the following year regardless of their positions of that year. The CONSUR Cup was staged in 2014 and 2015, and the events were the de facto South American Championships for those years. In 2016 and 2017, the CONSUR Cup was renamed to Sudamérica Rugby Cup, but the format was kept intact. The Sudamérica Rugby Cup, in 2016 and 2017, can also be considered the de facto South American Championships for those years. In 2018, the format of the tournament was changed once again: six teams (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay and Uruguay) would play in the top division, which was renamed to South American Six Nations.

Argentina is the most dominant nation at the South American Championships, winning 34 of 40 editions, as well as the two editions of the CONSUR Cup, and the two editions of the Sudamérica Rugby Cup. Uruguay won the tournament four times (1981, 2014, 2016 and 2017), while Chile (2015) and Brazil (2018) won the South American title once.[3]

Results edit

List of tournaments edit

The first edition of the South American Rugby Championships was organized in 1951 as a parallel competition to the inaugural edition of the Pan American Games, in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In 2000, a second division was added, which changed the name of the first and main division of the tournament to Mayor A (Senior A), while the second division was called Mayor B (Senior B). Teams from Central America were also allowed to compete at the South American Championships. In 2012, a third division, Mayor C (Senior C) was added. In 2018, the tournament was renamed to South American Six Nations.

Tournament names:
  • Sudamericano de Rugby (1951–98)
  • Mayor A (2000–17)
  • South American Six Nations (2018–19)
  • South American Four Nations (2020)
Ed. Year Host Winner Runner-up Third Place Fourth Place
1
1951 Argentina   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
2
1958 Chile   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay   Peru
3
1961 Uruguay   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay   Brazil
4
1964 Brazil   Argentina   Brazil   Uruguay   Chile
5
1967 Argentina   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay
6
1969 Chile   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay
7
1971 Uruguay   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay   Brazil
8
1973 Brazil   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
9
1975 Paraguay   Argentina   Chile   Uruguay   Brazil
10
1977 Argentina   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
11
1979 Chile   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
12
1981 Uruguay   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay   Brazil
13
1983 Argentina   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
14
1985 Paraguay   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
15
1987 Chile   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
16
1989 Uruguay   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
17
1991 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
18
1993 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Paraguay   Chile
19
1995 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
20
1997 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
21
1998 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
22
2000 Uruguay   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile
23
2001 No fixed host   Argentina XV [n 1]   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
24
2002 Argentina
Chile
  Argentina XV   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
25
2003 Uruguay   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Paraguay
26
2004 Chile   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Venezuela
27
2005 Argentina   Argentina XV   Uruguay   Chile
28
2006 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile
29
2007 No fixed host   Argentina [n 2]   Uruguay   Chile
30
2008 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile
31
2009 Chile
Uruguay
  Argentina XV   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
32
2010 Chile   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
33
2011 Argentina   Argentina XV   Chile   Uruguay   Brazil
34
2012 Chile   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
35
2013 Uruguay   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile   Brazil
36
2014 No fixed host   Uruguay[n 3]   Paraguay   Brazil   Chile
37
2015 No fixed host   Chile   Uruguay [n 3]   Paraguay   Brazil
38
2016 No fixed host   Uruguay   Chile [n 3]   Brazil   Paraguay
39
2017 No fixed host   Uruguay [n 3]   Chile   Brazil   Paraguay
40
2018 No fixed host   Brazil   Argentina XV   Chile   Uruguay XV
41
2019
No fixed host   Argentina XV   Uruguay XV   Chile   Brazil
42
2020 Uruguay   Argentina XV   Chile   Uruguay XV   Brazil
Notes
  1. ^ "Argentina XV" (nicknamed Jaguares) is the second national side.
  2. ^ In 2007, the competition was not completed due to difficulties in finding a date for the match between Argentina and Uruguay, as it was the first time they participated in the final phase of the Rugby World Cup.
  3. ^ a b c d From 2014 to 2017, the Mayor A division of the championships excluded Argentina. The top team of the Mayor A division would be considered the winner of the first stage, and would later play the CONSUR/Sudamérica Rugby Cup, alongside the second placed team in Mayor A division, and Argentina.

Statistics by team edit

Team Titles Years won
  Argentina
36
1951, 1958, 1961, 1964, 1967, 1969, 1971. 1973, 1975, 1977, 1979, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2019, 2020
  Uruguay
4
1981, 2014, 2016, 2017
  Chile
1
2015
  Brazil
1
2018

CONSUR/Sudamérica Rugby Cup edit

From 2014 to 2017, the first division of the South American Championships, Mayor A (Senior A), excluded Argentina. The top two teams of the Mayor A division would then join Argentina in a future tournament, the CONSUR Cup (in 2014 and 2015) or the Sudamérica Rugby Cup (in 2016 and 2017). The winner of the CONSUR/Sudamérica Cup would then be the de facto best team of the continent for that year.

Tournament names:
  • CONSUR Cup (2014–15)
  • Sudamérica Rugby Cup (2016–17)
Ed. Year Host Winner Runner-up Third Place
1
2014 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile
2
2015 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Paraguay
3
2016 No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile
4
2017
No fixed host   Argentina   Uruguay   Chile

Lower divisions edit

Mayor B edit

Ed. Year Host Winner Runner-up Third Place
1
2000 Brazil   Brazil   Venezuela   Peru
2
2001 No fixed host   Brazil   Venezuela   Peru
3
2002 Peru   Brazil   Peru   Venezuela
4
2003 Colombia   Venezuela   Brazil   Colombia
5
2004 Brazil   Paraguay   Brazil   Peru
6
2005 Paraguay   Paraguay   Brazil   Peru
7
2006 Venezuela   Brazil   Colombia   Venezuela
8
2007 Peru   Brazil   Peru   Colombia
9
2008 Peru   Brazil   Paraguay   Venezuela
10
2009 Paraguay   Colombia   Venezuela   Peru
11
2010 Costa Rica   Peru   Venezuela   Colombia
12
2011 Colombia   Venezuela   Peru   Colombia
13
2012 Peru   Paraguay   Colombia   Venezuela
14
2013 Paraguay   Paraguay   Colombia   Peru
15
2014 Colombia   Colombia   Venezuela   Peru
16
2015
Peru   Colombia   Peru   Venezuela
17
2016
Peru   Colombia   Venezuela   Peru
18
2017
Colombia, Peru   Colombia   Venezuela   Peru
19
2018
Guatemala   Peru   Guatemala   Costa Rica
2019
2020
2021
2022
Colombia   Brazil   Colombia   Paraguay
2023
Paraguay   Brazil   Paraguay   Chile XV

Mayor C edit

Ed. Year Host Winner Runner-up Third Place
1
2012 Guatemala   Costa Rica   Guatemala   Ecuador
2
2013 Costa Rica   Ecuador   Costa Rica   Guatemala
3
2014 Panama   El Salvador   Guatemala   Costa Rica
4
2015
El Salvador   Guatemala   Costa Rica   El Salvador
5
2016
Guatemala   Guatemala   Costa Rica   Panama

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mazlenaz - Championships history
  2. ^ Tercer Tiempo Rugby (in Spanish)
  3. ^ Sudamericano Mayor A: Resultados 1951–2016 (archived)