2013–14 Rugby-Bundesliga


The 2013–14 Rugby-Bundesliga was the 43rd edition of this competition and the 94th edition of the German rugby union championship. In the Rugby-Bundesliga, twenty-four teams played in, initially, four regional divisions, the first stage of the competition, followed by a championship round of sixteen clubs and, finally, the play-offs consisting of twelve teams. The season started on 24 August 2013 and finished with the championship final on 21 June 2014 in Pforzheim, interrupted by a winter break from 8 December to 22 February. The regular season finished on 19 April and the play-offs started on 3 May, with the German championship final held on 21 June 2014, which was contested between TV Pforzheim and Heidelberger RK. Heidelberg won its fifth consecutive national championship when it defeated Pforzheim 43–20 in the final.
The defending champions were Heidelberger RK who defeated SC Neuenheim in the 2013 final to take out its ninth championship and fourth in a row. Heidelberger RK remained unbeaten throughout the 2013–14 regular season, as it had been all throughout the 2012–13 Rugby-Bundesliga season, having last lost in the Bundesliga on 1 November 2011, when HRK was beaten 26–24 by TV Pforzheim.

Overview

The league saw only minor changes compare to the previous season, playing at full strength of 24 clubs in 2013–14 instead of only 22. Promoted to the league were 08 Ricklingen/Wunstorf, TuS 95 Düsseldorf and Veltener RC while RC Luxembourg had withdrawn from the competition.
The first stage of the competition, the Vorrunde, saw four six-team groupes in which each team played the other five just once. This stage finished in late September after which the second stage started, the Qualifikationsphase, in which the top teams each from the southern and the western group play each other in one group while the top teams from the north and east play each other in another. A new addition compare to the previous season was that the fourth placed team from each division would play the fifth placed in the opposite group to determine the last two places in the second round. The six teams not qualified for the Qualifikationsphase entered the DRV-Pokal, the German rugby union cup, together with the top eight teams of the 2nd Bundesliga. The 2nd Bundesliga teams not qualified for the DRV-Pokal in turn played for the Liga Pokal.
In the second stage the teams within a group would play each other in a home-and-away format, with the teams that already played each other in the first stage carrying over those results. Of the sixteen clubs the best six in each group now qualified for the knock-out stage. The knock-out stage was played in a single-game format with the higher seeded team enjoying home advantage and the winner advancing to the next round.

Bundesliga tables & results

First stage

In the first stage twenty-four clubs played in four groups. Within each group each team played the other just once. The best three teams advanced directly to the second stage while the teams placed fourth and fifth had to play a qualifying decider.

North

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1DSV 78 Hannover550043926413525
2FC St. Pauli Rugby54011359540218
3SC Germania List530287153–66113
4TSV Victoria Linden520394180–86311
508 Ricklingen/Wunstorf510484187–10348
6Hamburger RC500559257–19811

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1Berliner Rugby Club550035621335525
2RK 03 Berlin540134876272418
3Berliner SV 92 Rugby5203132185–5339
4RC Leipzig520378283–20519
5Veltener RC510483304–22126
6USV Potsdam Rugby5104108236–12824

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1RK Heusenstamm550032543282424
2SC 1880 Frankfurt540125155196420
3ASV Köln Rugby530276162–86012
4RC Mainz5203125200–7519
5RC Aachen510475216–14126
6TuS 95 Düsseldorf500518194–17600

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1Heidelberger RK550028046234525
2TV Pforzheim540130579226418
3TSV Handschuhsheim5212112198–86111
4RG Heidelberg5203132177–45210
5SC Neuenheim5113120992137
6Heidelberger TV500547397–3500–2

Four qualifying matches were held to determine the last four clubs to enter the second stage. The fourth placed club in the southern division played the fifth placed team in the western division and the fourth placed western club the fifth placed southern team. The same system applied to the northern and eastern division. The winners of the four games advanced to the second stage while the losers had to enter the DRV-Pokal.

North-East

South-West

Second stage

In the second stage sixteen clubs played in two groups of eight clubs each. Within each group each team played the others home and away except for the match-ups that already had been played in the first round. The results of those were carried over. The best six teams in each group qualified for the play-offs and were seeded according to the final standings.

North-East

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1DSV 78 Hannover1212007541276271159
2Berliner Rugby Club12903466179287844
3RK 03 Berlin12804427179293941
4SC Germania List12606319399–80327
5FC St. Pauli Rugby12606264315–51024
6TSV Victoria Linden122010187443–25619
7Berliner SV 92 Rugby12101175895–82002
808 Ricklingen/Wunstorf000000000

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1Heidelberger RK14140011086810401470
2TV Pforzheim1412029222137091260
3SC Neuenheim1481542032694842
4RG Heidelberg14806390392–2638
5RK Heusenstamm14608342601–259630
6TSV Handschuhsheim14419285473–188523
7SC 1880 Frankfurt143011231733–502416
8ASV Köln Rugby14001496989–8920–2

In the play-offs the twelve qualified teams played four rounds. The best two clubs in each division received a bye for the first round and entered in the quarter finals stage. The first round was played on 26 April, with one game held a week later. The quarter finals were held on 3 May, except one game which was held on 10 May. The semi finals were held on 17 May, followed by a break of over one month before the final was played on 21 June:

''DRV-Pokal'' tables & results

The eight worst clubs in the first stage of the Bundesliga entered the DRV-Pokal for 2013–14, together with the eight best clubs from the 2nd Rugby-Bundesliga. The DRV-Pokal ranks as a second tier to the German championship but also functioned as a qualifying competition for the 2014–15 Rugby-Bundesliga. The modus for the DRV-Pokal was the same as for the German championship, with a second stage with two divisions of eight teams, followed by the play-offs made up of the best twelve teams, with the top two in each division receiving a bye for the first round.

Group stage

North-East

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1RC Leipzig1412025462263201159
2Hamburger RC1411035321793531155
3RU Hohen Neuendorf14824462272190844
4SG Siemensstadt/Grizzlies1471644936485737
5USV Potsdam Rugby14716313342–29636
6Bremen 1860143011239484–245416
7Veltener RC143011217613–396416
8DRC Hannover143011183461–278214

South-West

The division table:
ClubPlayedWDLPFPADiffBPPoints
1Heidelberger TV1413106051134921266
2RC Rottweil141103483194289751
3München RFC1481531822989438
4RC Aachen14707379249130735
5TSV Handschuhsheim II1460835032822630
6RC Mainz1450932529530626
7TuS 95 Düsseldorf144010143479–336016
8Eintracht Frankfurt Rugby141013116832–71626

The 2013–14 final was played on 28 June 2014 in Rottweil. The play-offs for the DRV-Pokal started on 10 May 2014. The final was originally to be contested between RC Leipzig and Heidelberger TV but Leipzig's semi final win against RC Rottweil was later converted into a win for Rottweil because the former used an ineligible player.