2016–17 British and Irish Cup


The 2016–17 British and Irish Cup was the eighth season of the annual rugby union competition for second tier, semi-professional clubs from Britain and Ireland. London Welsh are the defending champions having won the 2015–16 final against Yorkshire Carnegie 10–33 at Headingley Carnegie Stadium, Leeds on 10 April 2016. There have been six different winners and six different losing finalists in the seven seasons of its existence. The format of the competition is similar to last season with Scottish clubs not competing. For the second consecutive season the four Welsh teams are the reserve sides of the teams competing in the Pro12 competition instead of clubs from the Welsh Premier Division.

Competition format

The competition format is a pool stage followed by a knockout stage. The pool stage consists of five pools of four teams playing home and away matches. The top side in each pool, plus the three best runners-up, progress to the knockout stage. The eight quarter-finalists are ranked, with top four teams having home advantage. The four winning quarter-finalists progress to the semi-final draw. Most of the matches are played on the same weekends as the European Champions Cup and European Challenge Cup. First round matches began on 14 October 2016 and the final was held on the 21 April 2017.

Participating teams and locations

The allocation of teams is as follows:
ClubCountryLeagueStadiumCapacityArea
Bedford Blues EnglandRFU ChampionshipGoldington Road6,000Bedford
Cardiff Blues Premiership Select WalesN/ACardiff Arms Park
Sardis Road
The Wern
12,125
7,861
4,500
Cardiff
Pontypridd
Merthyr Tydfil
Connacht Eagles IrelandIrish Interprovincial Rugby ChampionshipGalway Sportsgrounds
Dubarry Park
9,500
10,000
Galway
Athlone
Cornish Pirates EnglandRFU ChampionshipMennaye Field4,000Penzance
Doncaster Knights EnglandRFU ChampionshipCastle Park5,000Doncaster
Ealing Trailfinders EnglandRFU ChampionshipTrailfinders Sports Ground3,020West Ealing, London
Jersey Reds England RFU ChampionshipSt. Peter4,000Saint Peter
Leinster A IrelandIrish Interprovincial Rugby ChampionshipDonnybrook Stadium6,000Dublin
London Irish EnglandRFU ChampionshipMadejski Stadium7,579Reading, Berkshire
London Scottish EnglandRFU ChampionshipRichmond Athletic Ground4,500Richmond, London
London Welsh EnglandRFU ChampionshipOld Deer Park5,850Richmond, London
Munster A IrelandIrish Interprovincial Rugby ChampionshipTowns Park
The Showgrounds
Old Chapel
Irish Independent Park
CIT Stadium
400
1,000
N/A
8,200
1,100
Midleton
Ennis
Bandon
Cork
Cork
Newport Gwent Dragons Premiership Select WalesN/APandy Park
CCB Centre
3,000
1,000
Crosskeys
Ystrad Mynach
Nottingham Rugby EnglandRFU ChampionshipLady Bay Sports Ground3,000Nottingham
Ospreys Premiership Select WalesN/AThe Gnoll
Talbot Athletic Ground
Llynfi Road
5,000
3,000
N/A
Neath
Port Talbot
Maesteg
Richmond EnglandRFU ChampionshipRichmond Athletic Ground4,500Richmond, London
Rotherham Titans EnglandRFU ChampionshipClifton Lane2,500Rotherham
Scarlets Premiership Select WalesN/AChurch Bank Playing Fields
Carmarthen Park
Parc y Scarlets
3,000
3,000
14,870
Llandovery
Carmarthen
Llanelli
Ulster A IrelandIrish Interprovincial Rugby ChampionshipShaw's Bridge
Eaton Park
Kingspan Stadium
1,300
1,000
18,196
Belfast
Ballymena
Belfast
Yorkshire Carnegie EnglandRFU ChampionshipSandhill Lane Stadium
Moor Lane
Silver Royd
N/A
N/A
1,950
Selby
Pontefract
Scalby

Pool stages

Pool 1

Round 1

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Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

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Round 5

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Round 6

London Welsh entered liquidation on 8 December 2016 and were disqualified from the competition and their results from rounds 1 and 2 annulled.

Round 1

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Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

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Round 2 (rescheduled game)

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Round 5

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Round 6

Pool 3

Round 1

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Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

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Round 5

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Round 6

Pool 4

Round 1

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Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

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Round 5

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Round 6

Pool 5

Round 1

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Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

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Round 5

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Round 6

Knock-out stage

The eight qualifiers were seeded according to performance in the pool stage. The four top seeds hosted the quarter-finals against the lower seeds, in a 1 v 8, 2 v 7, 3 v 6 and 4 v 5 format. If two teams qualified from the same group they could not be drawn together despite the seeding, therefore, Jersey Reds did not play against Ulster A. The quarter-finals were held over the weekend of 10/11/12 March 2017, the semi-finals were held over the weekend of 31 March and 1 & 2 April 2017 and the final was played on 21/22/23 April 2017.
Teams are ranked by:
SeedPool winnersPtsWinsPts diff
1 London Irish25557
2 Jersey Reds23587
3 Ealing Trailfinders23471
4 Scarlets Premiership Select22449
5 Munster A19466
SeedPool Runners–upPtsWinsPts diff
6 Cornish Pirates20489
7 Ulster A20429
8 Yorkshire Carnegie20426
9 Leinster A163123
10 Rotherham Titans51−25

Quarter-finals

The draw for the quarter-finals was made on 23 January 2017, with the matches to be played on the weekend of 10–13 March 2017.
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Semi-finals

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Final

Attendances

Individual statistics

Top try scorers

Season records

Team

;Largest home win — 77 points
84 – 7 Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Largest away win — 49 points
68 – 19 Leinster A away to Richmond on 15 October 2016
;Most points scored — 84 points
84 – 7 Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Most tries in a match — 12
Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Most conversions in a match — 10
Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Most penalties in a match — 5
Rotherham Titans at home to Doncaster Knights on 15 October 2016
;Most drop goals in a match — 1
Richmond away to Leinster on 20 January 2017

Player

;Most points in a match — 26
Rory Clegg for Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Most tries in a match — 4
Rob O'Donnell for Yorkshire Carnegie at home to Bedford Blues on 23 October 2016
;Most conversions in a match — 10
Rory Clegg for Ealing Trailfinders at home to Scarlets Premiership Select on 11 March 2017
;Most penalties in a match — 5
Lloyd Evans for Rotherham Titans at home to Doncaster Knights on 15 October 2016
;Most drop goals in a match — 1
Freddy Gabbitass for Richmond away to Leinster on 20 January 2017

Attendances

;Highest — 4,813
Ulster A at home to London Scottish on 13 January 2017
;Lowest — 200
Ulster A at home to Jersey Reds on 14 October 2016
Connacht Eagles at home to Cornish Pirates on 16 October 2016
Newport Gwent Dragons Premiership Select at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 22 October 2016
;Highest Average Attendance — 2,180
;Lowest Average Attendance — 283 Scarlets Premiership Select)