Asia Rugby Women's Championship

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Asia Rugby Women's Championship
Upcoming season or competition:
Current sports event
ConfederationAsia Rugby
Most recent
champion(s)
 Japan
(2023)
Most titles Japan (5 titles)
 Kazakhstan (5 titles)

The Asia Rugby Championship for women's national fifteen-a-side teams is a

Rugby World Cup, and the WXV
.

History

The Asia Rugby Women’s Championship began in 2006, the first tournament was hosted by China in Kunming.[1] Hosts, China, won the inaugural tournament and since then, Kazakhstan has gone on to win five times, Japan four times, and China and Hong Kong has won one each.[1]

Format

The international test calendar was restructured to accommodate the upcoming WXV tournament.[2][3] Asia Rugby announced that the Asia Rugby Women’s Championship would now be played in two tiers as a pathway to the WXV tournament.[4]

The top team in the Championship division will compete in WXV 2 as Asia 1, and the runner-up in WXV 3.[4]

Previous winners

All-time summary

Up to and including the 2023 edition, the following women's teams' Championship division top-3 finishes in tournaments:

RankTeamChampionRunner‑upThird placeTotal
1 Japan53210
2 Kazakhstan5308
3 Hong Kong15410
4 China1102
5 Thailand0011
 Uzbekistan0011
Totals (6 entries)1212832

Asia Rugby Championship

Year  Edn Host •
Teams
Final placings
Asian Rugby Championship Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
2006 I Kunming 4  China  Hong Kong  Thailand  Singapore
2007 II Kunming 4  Kazakhstan  China  Japan  Singapore
2008 III Taraz 6  Kazakhstan  Japan  Uzbekistan  Singapore
2010* IV Tokyo 2  Japan  Hong Kong
Asian 4 Nations Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
2012 V Kunshan 4  Kazakhstan  Japan  Hong Kong  China
2013 VI Almaty 4  Kazakhstan  Japan  Hong Kong  China
2014 VII Hong Kong 4  Kazakhstan  Hong Kong  Japan  Singapore
Asia Rugby Championship Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
2015 VIII round-robin
home
or
away
3  Japan  Kazakhstan  Hong Kong
2016 IX 3  Japan  Hong Kong
2017 X 2  Japan  Hong Kong
2021
Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Asia[5]
2022 XI Hong Kong 2  Hong Kong  Kazakhstan
2023 XII Almaty 3  Japan  Kazakhstan  Hong Kong
2024 XIII TBC - TBD TBD TBD

Division tournaments

Year Div Host Teams Final placings
ARC Divisions Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
2010a 2 Sikuet 3   Laos  Philippines  Thailand
2011 2 Vientiane 4 § China  Thailand  Philippines  Laos
2012 2 Manila 4 § Singapore  Thailand  Philippines  Laos
ARC Div 1 Winner Runner-up Third Fourth
2018 1 Singapore 3 § Singapore  Philippines  India
2019 1 Calamba 4 § China  Philippines  India  Singapore
2024 1 TBC 3 TBC TBC TBC

Notes:

^* Some sources suggest that the match in Tokyo was for the 2010 ARFU Division 1 XV Championship.[6]

^ Relegated to the division below.

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

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

^a Development tournament organised by ARFU in 2010. The games were 40 minutes long and were not test matches.

Asia Pacific Championship

Year Host Teams Final placings
Winner Runner-up Third
2016 Hong Kong 3  Japan  Hong Kong  Fiji
2019 Lautoka, Fiji 3  Samoa  Hong Kong  Fiji

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Asia Rugby Women's Championship kicks off in Almaty". Asia Rugby. 2023-05-15. Retrieved 2023-05-15.
  2. ^ "Rugby World Cup 2025 set to break new ground as tournament expands to 16 teams". www.rugbyworldcup.com. 2020-11-30. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  3. ^ "Women's Rugby World Cup to be expanded to 16 teams from 2025". Sky Sports. 2020-11-30. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  4. ^ a b "Asia Rugby Releases Partial 2023 Tournament Calendar". RugbyAsia247. 2023-02-20. Retrieved 2023-03-26.
  5. ^ "Statement regarding Rugby World Cup 2021 Final Qualification Tournament". www.rugbyworldcup.com. Archived from the original on 2022-01-21. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  6. ^ http://www.fira-aer-rugby.com/forum2007/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3671&p=39686#p39686 [permanent dead link]