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The 2015–16 RFU Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the Greene King IPA Championship, is the seventh season of the professionalised format of the RFU Championship, the second tier of the English rugby union league system run by the Rugby Football Union. It is contested by eleven English clubs and one from Jersey in the Channel Islands. This is the third year of the competition's sponsorship with Greene King Brewery, which runs until 2017. The twelve teams in the RFU Championship also compete in the British and Irish Cup, along with clubs from Ireland and Wales. Some matches in the RFU Championship are broadcast on Sky Sports.
Moseley are relegated into the 2016–17 National League 1 after finishing bottom of the table. After seven years of trying for promotion (five of which they actually topped the league stage including during this season), Bristol finally did it. In front of a divisional and club record crowd of 16,084, Bristol managed to gain promotion to the Aviva Premiership despite losing 32–34 to away side (and league stage runners up), Doncaster Knights, due to an emphatic first leg victory, to go up 60 - 47 on aggregate.
Structure
The Championship's structure has all the teams playing each other on a home and away basis. The play-off structure will remain the same as the previous year. The top four teams at the end of the home-and-way season qualify for the promotion play-offs which follow a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system. The winners have to meet the RFU's Minimum Standards Criteria in order to be promoted to the Premiership. There is no promotion if grounds fail to meet the criteria. There are no relegation play-offs; the bottom team is automatically relegated. This the last year of a 2012 funding agreement with the RFU, where each club would have been given a grant of £380,000. Following claims, by Championship teams, including Plymouth Albion, that the current arrangement was not enough to sustain professional clubs, the RFU increased the annual funding to over £500,000 per club in a new agreement which will last until 2020.
Teams
Locations of the 2015–16 RFU Championship teamsGreater London RFU Championship teams clubs
Priory Lane Attendance: 1,092 Referee: Andrew Jackson
23 April 2016 15:00
(BP) Moseley
24 – 75
London Scottish (BP)
Billesley Common Attendance: 1,299 Referee: Jack Makepeace
Play-offs
Semi-finals
The semifinals follow a 1 v 4, 2 v 3 system – with the games being played over two legs and the higher placed team choosing which leg they play at home. Both Bristol and Doncaster elected to play the second leg at home and therefore visited Bedford Blues and Yorkshire Carnegie respectively in the first legs on 1 May. The grounds of three of the teams met the minimum standards required to play in the Premiership next season. If Doncaster Knights were promoted they would initially play their matches at the Keepmoat Stadium, the home of Doncaster Rovers while Bristol and Yorkshire Carnegie would continue to their current stadia. Bedford Blues did not apply to have their ground audited and, therefore, could not win promotion; if they had won the play-off final, the last-placed team in the Premiership (London Irish) would not have been relegated.
Castle Park Attendance: 4,759 Referee: Wayne Barnes
Second leg
25 May 2016 19:45
Bristol Rugby
32–34
Doncaster Knights
Ashton Gate Attendance: 16,084 Referee: Matthew Carley
Bristol won 60–47 on aggregate
Attendances
Includes playoff games.
Club
Home Games
Total
Average
Highest
Lowest
% Capacity
Bedford Blues
12
31,333
2,611
4,341
2,077
52%
Bristol Rugby
13
100,129
7,702
16,084
4,560
46%
Cornish Pirates
11
15,705
1,428
2,340
1,025
36%
Doncaster Knights
13
29,937
2,303
4,797
1,019
46%
Ealing Trailfinders
11
7,338
667
874
310
22%
Jersey
11
22,790
2,072
2,613
1,526
41%
London Scottish
11
12,809
1,164
1,850
884
26%
London Welsh
11
13,214
1,201
2,032
730
24%
Moseley
11
11,509
1,046
1,431
726
35%
Nottingham Rugby
11
11,202
1,018
1,864
623
51%
Rotherham Titans
11
12,980
1,180
1,721
887
48%
Yorkshire Carnegie
12
28,520
2,377
3,672
1,329
11%
Individual statistics
Note that points scorers includes tries as well as conversions, penalties and drop goals. Appearance figures also include coming on as substitutes (unused substitutes not included). Stats also cover playoff games.
Team Largest home win — 53 pts 63 - 10 Bristol Rugby at home to Ealing Trailfinders on 12 February 2016 Largest away win — 43 pts 75 - 24 London Scottish away to Moseley on 23 April 2016 Most points scored — 75 75 - 24 London Scottish away to Moseley on 23 April 2016 Most tries in a match — 11 75 - 24 London Scottish away to Moseley on 23 April 2016 Most conversions in a match — 10 London Scottish away to Moseley on 23 April 2016 Most penalties in a match — 6 (x3) Moseley away to London Scottish on 4 September 2015 Doncaster Knights away to Bedford Blues on 5 December 2015 Bristol Rugby away to Yorkshire Carnegie on 28 February 2016 Most drop goals in a match — 1 N/A - multiple teams Player Most points in a match — 25 EnglandJosh Bainbridge for Yorkshire Carnegie away to Bristol Rugby on 18 October 2015 Most tries in a match — 5 EnglandJosh Bainbridge for Yorkshire Carnegie away to Bristol Rugby on 18 October 2015 Most conversions in a match — 9 Ireland Peter Lydon for London Scottish away to Moseley on 23 April 2016 Most penalties in a match — 6 (x3) England Glyn Hughes for Moseley away to London Scottish on 4 September 2015 ScotlandDougie Flockhart for Doncaster Knights away to Bedford Blues on 5 December 2015 WalesGavin Henson for Bristol Rugby away to Yorkshire Carnegie on 28 February 2016 Most drop goals in a match — 1 N/A - multiple players
Attendances Highest — 16,084 Bristol Rugby at home to Doncaster Knights on 25 May 2016 Lowest — 310 Ealing Trailfinders at home to Nottingham Rugby on 28 November 2015 Highest Average Attendance — 7,702 Bristol Rugby Lowest Average Attendance — 667 Ealing Trailfinders