Six Nations Championship

Six Nations Championship
Current season or competition:
2024 Six Nations Championship
The Guinness Six Nations logo
Sport Rugby union
Instituted 1883
(as Home Nations Championship)
1910
(as Five Nations Championship)
2000
(as Six Nations Championship)
Number of teams 6
Country England
France
Ireland
Italy
Scotland
Wales
Holders Ireland (2023)
Most titles England and Wales (39 titles)
Website sixnationsrugby.com

The Six Nations Championship (known as the Guinness Six Nations for sponsorship reasons) is an annual international men's rugby union competition between the teams of England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. The current champions are Ireland, who won the 2023 tournament.

The tournament is organised by the unions of the six participating nations under the banner of Six Nations Rugby, which is responsible for the promotion and operation of the men's, women's and under-20s tournaments, and the Autumn International Series, as well as the negotiation and management of their centralised commercial rights.

The Six Nations is the successor to the Home Nations Championship (1883–1909 and 1932–39), played between teams from England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, which was the first international rugby union tournament. With the addition of France, this became the Five Nations Championship (1910–31 and 1947–99), which in turn became the Six Nations Championship with the addition of Italy in 2000.

England and Wales have won the championship the most times, both with 39 titles, but England have won the most outright titles with 29 (28 for Wales). Since the Six Nations era started in 2000, only Italy and Scotland have failed to win the Six Nations title.

The women's tournament started as the Women's Home Nations in the 1996 season.

History and expansion

The tournament was first played in 1883 as the Home Nations Championship among the then four Home Nations of the United Kingdom – England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. However, England was excluded from the 1888 and 1889 tournaments due to their refusal to join the International Rugby Football Board. The tournament then became the Five Nations Championship in 1910 with the addition of France. The tournament was expanded in 2000 to become the Six Nations Championship with the addition of Italy.

Following the relative success of the Tier 2 nations in the 2015 Rugby World Cup, there were calls by Octavian Morariu, the president of Rugby Europe, to let Georgia and Romania join the Six Nations due to their consistent success in the European Nations Cup and ability to compete in the Rugby World Cup.

Format

The locations of the Six Nations participants

The tournament begins on the first weekend in February and culminates on the second or third Saturday in March. Each team plays every other team once (a total of 15 matches), with home ground advantage alternating from one year to the next. Before the 2017 tournament, two points were awarded for a win, one for a draw and none for a loss. Unlike many other rugby union competitions, a bonus point system had not previously been used.

A bonus point system was first used in the 2017 Championship. The system is similar to the one used in most rugby championships (0 points for a loss, 2 for a draw, 4 for a win, 1 for scoring four or more tries in a match, and 1 for losing by 7 points or fewer). The only difference is that a team that wins all their games (a Grand Slam) are automatically awarded 3 extra points - to ensure they cannot be overtaken by a defeated team on bonus points.

Before 1994, teams equal on match points shared the championship. Since then, ties have been broken by considering the points difference (total points scored minus total points conceded) of the teams. The rules of the championship further provide that if teams tie on both match points and points difference, the team that scored the most tries wins the championship. Were this decider to be a tie, the tying teams would share the championship. To date, however, match points and points difference have been sufficient to decide the championship.

The Wooden Spoon is a metaphorical award given to the team that finishes in last place, or alternatively by a team that loses all of its games in a championship. Since the inaugural Six Nations tournament in 2000, only England and Ireland have avoided finishing last. Italy have finished last 18 times in the Six Nations era, and have lost every match 13 times.

Home advantage in the Six Nations
Three home matches Two home matches
Even years France Ireland Wales England Italy Scotland
Odd years England Italy Scotland France Ireland Wales

Trophies

Championship Trophy

The Original Six Nations Championship Trophy (1993–2014) and The Triple Crown Trophy

The winners of the Six Nations are presented with the Championship Trophy. This was originally conceived by the Earl of Westmorland, and was first presented to the winners of the 1993 championship, France. It is a sterling silver trophy, designed by James Brent-Ward and made by a team of eight silversmiths from the London firm William Comyns.

It has 15 side panels representing the 15 members of the team and with three handles to represent the three officials (referee and two touch judges). The cup has a capacity of 3.75 litres – sufficient for five bottles of champagne. Within the mahogany base is a concealed drawer which contains six alternative finials, each a silver replica of one of the team emblems, which can be screwed on the detachable lid.

A new trophy was introduced for the 2015 Championship. The new trophy was designed and crafted by Thomas Lyte silversmiths and replaces the 1993 edition, which is being retired as it represented the nations that took part in the Five Nations Championship. Ireland were the last team to win the old trophy and the first team to win the new one.

Grand Slam and Triple Crown

A team that wins all its games wins the 'Grand Slam'.

The Triple Crown may only be won by one of the Home Nations of England, Ireland, Scotland or Wales, when one nation wins all three of their matches against the others. The Triple Crown dates back to the original Home Nations Championship, but the physical Triple Crown Trophy has been awarded only since 2006, when the Royal Bank of Scotland (the primary sponsor of the competition) commissioned Hamilton & Inches to design and create a dedicated Triple Crown Trophy. It has since been won four times by Ireland and Wales, and three times by England.

Rivalry trophies

Several individual competitions take place under the umbrella of the tournament. Some of these trophies are also awarded for other matches between the two teams outside the Six Nations. Only Scotland play for a 'rivalry' or challenge trophy in every Six Nations match, as well as for the oldest such trophy, the Calcutta Cup. Wales became the last nation to contest such a trophy, the Doddie Weir Cup in 2018, while the newest such trophy is the Cuttitta Cup introduced between Scotland and Italy in 2022.

Trophy Teams Since Notes
Calcutta Cup England and Scotland 1879 Made from melted-down Indian rupees donated by the Calcutta Club
Millennium Trophy England and Ireland 1988 Presented to celebrate Dublin's millennium in 1988
Centenary Quaich Ireland and Scotland 1989 Named for the quaich, a traditional Gaelic drinking vessel. Marked the centenary of the founding of the International Rugby Football Board.
Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy France and Italy 2007 Commemorated the 200th anniversary of the birth of Giuseppe Garibaldi, leader in the unification of Italy and volunteer in the French Republican Army against Prussia
Auld Alliance Trophy France and Scotland 2018 In memory of the war dead from the rugby communities of Scotland and France
Doddie Weir Cup Wales and Scotland 2018 In recognition of Doddie Weir, who founded the My Name'5 Doddie Foundation which supports research into motor neuron disease
Cuttitta Cup Scotland and Italy 2022 Commemorates Massimo Cuttitta, a former Italian captain and Scotland scrum coach, who died in 2021 at the age of 54 from COVID-19.

Currently the following matches have no additional trophy contested:

  • England matches with France, Italy or Wales.
  • France matches with England, Ireland or Wales.
  • Ireland matches with France, Italy or Wales.
  • Italy matches with England, Ireland or Wales.
  • Wales matches with England, France, Ireland or Italy.

Venues

The national rugby union stadiums of five of the six countries host the events. France will play all their matches away from their normal venue.

As of the 2024 competition, Six Nations matches are held in the following stadiums:

Team Stadium Location Capacity
England Twickenham Stadium London 82,000
France Parc Olympique Lyonnais Lyon 59,186
Stade Pierre-Mauroy Lille 67,395
Stade Vélodrome Marseille 67,394
Wales Millennium Stadium Cardiff 73,931
Italy Stadio Olimpico Rome 72,698
Scotland Murrayfield Stadium Edinburgh 67,144
Ireland Aviva Stadium Dublin 51,700

The opening of Aviva Stadium in May 2010 ended the arrangement with the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) that allowed the all-Ireland governing body for rugby union, the Irish Rugby Football Union, to use the GAA's flagship stadium, Croke Park, for its international matches. This arrangement was made necessary by the 2007 closure and subsequent demolition of Ireland's traditional home at Lansdowne Road; Aviva Stadium was built on the former Lansdowne Road site. During this construction, Croke Park was the largest of the Six Nations grounds, with a capacity of 82,300.

In 2012 Italy moved their home games from the 32,000 seat Stadio Flaminio, to Stadio Olimpico, also in Rome, with a capacity of 72,000.

The French Rugby Federation (FFR) had planned to build a new stadium of its own, seating 82,000 in the southern suburbs of Paris, because of frustrations with their tenancy of Stade de France. However the project was cancelled in December 2016. France played their 2018 match against Italy at Stade Vélodrome in Marseille.

In 2020, Wales played their final game at Parc y Scarlets in Llanelli due to the Millennium Stadium being used as Dragon's Heart Hospital in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results

Overall

 
England

France

Ireland

Italy

Scotland

Wales
Tournaments 127 94 129 24 129 129
Outright wins (shared wins)
Home Nations 5 (4) 4 (3) 9 (2) 7 (3)
Five Nations 17 (6) 12 (8) 6 (5) 5 (6) 15 (8)
Six Nations 7 6 5 0 0 6
Overall 29 (10) 18 (8) 15 (8) 0 (0) 14 (8) 28 (11)
Grand Slams
Home Nations 2
Five Nations 11 6 1 3 6
Six Nations 2 4 3 0 0 4
Overall 13 10 4 0 3 12
Triple Crowns
Home Nations 5 2 7 6
Five Nations 16 4 3 11
Six Nations 5 7 0 5
Overall 26 13 10 22
Wooden Spoons
Home Nations 7 10 5 6
Five Nations 10 12 15 15 10
Six Nations 0 1 0 18 4 1
Overall 17 13 25 18 24 17

Home Nations (1883–1909)

Year Champions Grand Slam Triple Crown Calcutta Cup Wooden spoon
1883 England Not contested England England Not contested
1884 England England England
1885 Not completed Not completed
1886 England and Scotland
1887 Scotland
1888 not completed England did not participate
1889 not completed England did not participate
1890 England and Scotland England
1891 Scotland Scotland Scotland
1892 England England England
1893 Wales Wales Scotland
1894 Ireland Ireland Scotland
1895 Scotland Scotland Scotland Ireland
1896 Ireland Scotland
1897 Not completed Not completed England
1898 Not completed Not completed
1899 Ireland Ireland Scotland England
1900 Wales Wales
1901 Scotland Scotland Scotland England
1902 Wales Wales England Scotland
1903 Scotland Scotland Scotland England
1904 Scotland Scotland
1905 Wales Wales Scotland England
1906 Ireland and Wales England
1907 Scotland Scotland Scotland England
1908 Wales Wales Wales Scotland
1909 Wales Wales Wales Scotland Ireland
  1. A team that loses all its games is "awarded" the Wooden Spoon.

Five Nations (1910–1931)

Year Champions Grand Slam Triple Crown Calcutta Cup Wooden spoon
1910 England England France
1911 Wales Wales Wales England Scotland
1912 Ireland and England Scotland France
1913 England England England England France
1914 England England England England
1915–19 Not held due to World War I
1920 Scotland, Wales and England England Ireland
1921 England England England England
1922 Wales England
1923 England England England England
1924 England England England England
1925 Scotland Scotland Scotland Scotland France
1926 Ireland and Scotland Scotland France
1927 Ireland and Scotland Scotland
1928 England England England England
1929 Scotland Scotland France
1930 England
1931 Wales Scotland

Home Nations (1932–1939)

Year Champions Grand Slam Triple Crown Calcutta Cup Wooden spoon
1932 England, Ireland and Wales England Scotland
1933 Scotland Scotland Scotland
1934 England England England Ireland
1935 Ireland Scotland
1936 Wales England Scotland
1937 England England England Wales
1938 Scotland Scotland Scotland Ireland
1939 England, Ireland, Wales England Scotland

Five Nations (1940–1999)

Year Champions Grand Slam Triple Crown Calcutta Cup Millennium Trophy Centenary Quaich Wooden spoon
1940–46 Not held due to World War II Not contested
1947 England and Wales England Scotland
1948 Ireland Ireland Ireland Scotland
1949 Ireland Ireland England
1950 Wales Wales Wales Scotland
1951 Ireland England
1952 Wales Wales Wales England Scotland
1953 England England Scotland
1954 England, France and Wales England England Scotland
1955 France and Wales England
1956 Wales England
1957 England England England England France
1958 England
1959 France
1960 England and France England England Ireland
1961 France England
1962 France
1963 England England
1964 Scotland and Wales Scotland
1965 Wales Wales
1966 Wales Scotland
1967 France England
1968 France France England Scotland
1969 Wales Wales England
1970 France and Wales Scotland
1971 Wales Wales Wales Scotland
1972 Not completed Scotland England
1973 England, France, Ireland,
Scotland, Wales
England
1974 Ireland Scotland
1975 Wales England
1976 Wales Wales Wales Scotland England
1977 France France Wales England Ireland
1978 Wales Wales Wales England Scotland
1979 Wales Wales
1980 England England England England
1981 France France England Ireland
1982 Ireland Ireland
1983 France and Ireland Scotland
1984 Scotland Scotland Scotland Scotland Ireland
1985 Ireland Ireland England
1986 France and Scotland Scotland Ireland
1987 France France England
1988 France and Wales Wales England
1989 France England Scotland
1990 Scotland Scotland Scotland Scotland England Scotland Wales
1991 England England England England England Scotland
1992 England England England England England Scotland Ireland
1993 France England Ireland Scotland
1994 Wales England Ireland
1995 England England England England England Scotland Wales
1996 England England England England Scotland
1997 France France England England England Scotland
1998 France France England England England Scotland Ireland
1999 Scotland England England Scotland

Six Nations (2000–present)

Year Champions Grand Slam Triple Crown Calcutta Cup Millennium
Trophy
Centenary
Quaich
Giuseppe
Garibaldi
Trophy
Auld Alliance
Trophy
Doddie Weir
Cup
Cuttitta
Cup
Wooden spoon
2000 England Scotland England Ireland Not contested Not contested Not contested Not contested Italy
2001 England England Ireland Scotland Italy
2002 France France England England England Ireland Italy
2003 England England England England England Ireland Wales
2004 France France Ireland England Ireland Ireland Scotland
2005 Wales Wales Wales England Ireland Ireland Italy
2006 France Ireland Scotland Ireland Ireland Italy
2007 France Ireland England Ireland Ireland France Scotland
2008 Wales Wales Wales Scotland England Ireland France Italy
2009 Ireland Ireland Ireland England Ireland Ireland France Italy
2010 France France Ireland Scotland France Italy
2011 England England Ireland Ireland Italy Italy
2012 Wales Wales Wales England England Ireland France Scotland
2013 Wales England England Scotland Italy France
2014 Ireland England England England Ireland France Italy
2015 Ireland England Ireland Ireland France Scotland
2016 England England England England England Ireland France Italy
2017 England England Ireland Scotland France Italy
2018 Ireland Ireland Ireland Scotland Ireland Ireland France Scotland Italy
2019 Wales Wales Wales England Ireland France France Wales Italy
2020 England England England England Ireland France Scotland Scotland Italy
2021 Wales Wales Scotland Ireland Ireland France Scotland Wales Italy
2022 France France Ireland Scotland Ireland Ireland France France Wales Scotland Italy
2023 Ireland Ireland Ireland Scotland Ireland Ireland France France Scotland Scotland Italy
  1. the team finishing in last place

Titles and awards

Grand Slams and Triple Crowns (All Time)
Nation Grand Slams Last Grand Slam Triple Crowns Last Triple Crown
England 13 2016 26 2020
Wales 12 2019 22 2021
France 10 2022
Ireland 4 2023 13 2023
Scotland 3 1990 10 1990
Italy 0
Grand Slams and Triple Crowns (Six Nations)
Nation Grand Slams Last Grand Slam Triple Crowns Last Triple Crown
Wales 4 2019 5 2021
France 4 2022
Ireland 3 2023 7 2023
England 2 2016 5 2020
Scotland 0 0
Italy 0

Wooden Spoon

Wooden Spoons (last place)
Team Wooden Spoons Last
Wooden Spoon
HNC FNC SNC
Ireland 25 1998 11 14 0
Scotland 24 2015 5 15 4
Italy 18 2023 18
England 17 1987 7 10 0
Wales 17 2003 6 10 1
France 13 2013 12 1

Six Nations

Wooden Spoon winners (last place)
Team Wooden Spoons Years awarded
Italy 18 2000, 2001, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023
Scotland 4 2004, 2007, 2012, 2015
Wales 1 2003
France 1 2013
England 0
Ireland 0

Bold indicates that the team did not win any matches.

Player awards

Player of the championship
Year Winner
2004 Gordon D'Arcy
2005 Martyn Williams
2006 Brian O'Driscoll
2007 Brian O'Driscoll (2)
2008 Shane Williams
2009 Brian O'Driscoll (3)
2010 Tommy Bowe
2011 Andrea Masi
2012 Dan Lydiate
2013 Leigh Halfpenny
2014 Mike Brown
2015 Paul O'Connell
2016 Stuart Hogg
2017 Stuart Hogg (2)
2018 Jacob Stockdale
2019 Alun Wyn Jones
2020 Antoine Dupont
2021 Hamish Watson
2022 Antoine Dupont (2)
2023 Antoine Dupont (3)

Records

Ireland's Johnny Sexton holds the record for most points in the competition, with 566. England's Jonny Wilkinson holds the records for individual points in one match (35 points against Italy in 2001) and one season with 89 (scored in 2001).

The record for tries in a match is held by Scotsman George Campbell Lindsay who scored five tries against Wales in 1887. England's Cyril Lowe and Scotland's Ian Smith jointly hold the record for tries in one season with 8 (Lowe in 1914, Smith in 1925). Ireland's Brian O'Driscoll has the Championship record for tries with 26.

The record for appearances is held by Sergio Parisse of Italy, with 69 appearances, since his Six Nations debut in 2004.

The most points scored by a team in one match was 80 points, scored by England against Italy in 2001. England also scored the most ever points in a season in 2001 with 229, and most tries in a season with 29. Wales hold the record for fewest tries conceded during a season in the Six Nations era, conceding only 2 in 5 games in 2008, but the 1977 Grand Slam-winning France team did not concede a try in their four matches. Wales hold the record for the longest time without conceding a try, at 358 minutes in the 2013 tournament.

Administration

The Championship is run from headquarters in Dublin, Ireland by Six Nations Rugby Ltd.

Former England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) CEO, Tom Harrison, was appointed the CEO of Six Nations Rugby in January 2023 following the resignation of Benjamin Morel in November 2022. Morel had held the position of CEO since November 2018, replacing John Feehan, who stepped down after sixteen years as CEO in April 2018. Harrison's tenure as CEO commenced from April. 2023.

Ronan Dunne was appointed as the Chairman for Six Nations Rugby in November 2021 with his tenure commencing from January 2022. Dunne has responsibility for the commercial and marketing operations for both the men's and women's Six Nations tournaments.

Marketing

Broadcasting rights

One of the most important rugby union tournaments in the world, the Six Nations Championship is broadcast in various countries in addition to the six participating nations.

In the UK, the BBC has long covered the tournament, broadcasting all matches (apart from England home matches between 1997 and 2002, which were shown live by Sky Sports with highlights on the BBC) until 2015. In addition, Welsh language coverage of broadcasts matches featuring the Welsh team shown by the BBC are shown on S4C in Wales in the United Kingdom. Between 2003 and 2015, the BBC covered every match live on BBC Sport either on BBC One or BBC Two with highlights also on the BBC Sport website and either on the BBC Red Button or late at night on BBC Two.

On 9 July 2015, in reaction to bids by Sky for the rights beginning in 2018, the BBC ended its contract two seasons early, and renegotiated a joint contract with ITV Sport for rights to the Six Nations from 2016 through 2021. ITV acquired rights to England, Ireland and Italy home matches, while the BBC retained rights to France, Scotland and Wales home matches. By ending its contract early, the BBC saved around £30 million, while the new contract generated £20 million in additional revenue for the Six Nations.

With the end of the contract nearing, speculation once again emerged in 2020 that Sky was pursuing rights to the Six Nations from 2022 onward; under the Ofcom "listed events" rules, rights to the tournament can be held by a pay television channel if delayed broadcasts or highlights are made available on free-to-air television. It was reported that the bid for CVC Equity Partners to purchase a stake in the Six Nations was being hindered by a desire for a more lucrative broadcast contract; a call for the Six Nations to be moved to Category A (which requires live coverage to air free-to-air) was rejected. In May 2021, the BBC and ITV renewed their contracts through 2025. The BBC will continue to broadcast home matches from Scotland and Wales and all women's and under-20s matches, with ITV airing England, France, Ireland and Italy home matches.

France, Ireland, and Italy listed the Six Nations as a major event with cultural significance and enacted national and EU laws to ensure coverage would be available on free-to-air channels.

In Ireland, each of Ireland’s games in the Six Nations may be held by a pay television channel, if the match is delayed broadcast and in full on free-to-air television. RTÉ have broadcast the championship since RTÉ's inception and continued to do so until 2017, while TG4 televised highlights. However, in late 2015 RTÉ's free-to-air rival TV3 was awarded the rights for every game from the Six Nations on Irish television from 2018 to 2021. In 2022 it was announced that RTÉ and Virgin Media would share broadcasting rights.

In France, the entire Six Nations rugby tournament must appear on free-to-air television. France Télévisions has covered the competition in France.

In Italy, Six Nations rugby matches involving the Italian national team must be broadcast on free-to-air television. Sky Italia broadcasts all matches while free-to-air TV8 only covers Italy fixtures.

In the United States, NBC Sports broadcasts matches in English. The tournament is also broadcast on DAZN in Canada, Premier Sports Asia in East and Southeast Asia, Sky Sport in New Zealand, Stan Sport in Australia and SuperSport in South Africa.

Territory Broadcaster Summary
France France 2 All matches
Ireland RTÉ All matches split between both channels
Virgin Media Television
Italy Sky All matches
TV8 Italy matches only
United Kingdom BBC One All home matches from Scotland and Wales
ITV1 All home matches from England, France, Ireland and Italy
S4C Wales matches shown by BBC in the Welsh language
Asia Premier Sports Asia All matches
Australia Stan Sport All matches
Baltic states and Nordic countries (including Poland) Viaplay All matches
Canada DAZN All matches
Caribbean ESPN All matches
Czech Republic (including Slovakia) Nova Sport All matches
Germanic Europe (including Luxembourg) More Than Sports All matches
Israel Sport 5 All matches
Japan Wowow All matches
Malta GO All matches
MENA Premier Sports Middle East All matches
Netherlands Ziggo Sport All matches
New Zealand Sky Sport All matches
Portugal (including Slovenia) Sport TV All matches
Romania Orange Sport All matches
Spain (including Andorra) Movistar Plus+ All matches
South America (including Argentina and Brazil) ESPN Latin America All matches shown in the Spanish language
ESPN Brazil All matches shown in the Portuguese language
Sub-Saharan Africa (including South Africa) SuperSport All matches
United States NBC Sports All matches
Worldwide TV5Monde France matches only

Sponsorship

Until 1998, the Championship had no title sponsor. Sponsorship rights were sold to Lloyds TSB Group for the 1999 tournament and the competition was titled the Lloyds TSB 5 Nations and Lloyds TSB 6 Nations until 2002.

The Royal Bank of Scotland Group took over sponsorship from 2003 until 2017, with the competition being branded the RBS 6 Nations. A new title sponsor was sought for the 2018 tournament and beyond. However, after struggling to find a new sponsor, organisers agreed a one-year extension at a reduced rate. As the RBS brand was being phased out, the tournament was named after the NatWest banking subsidiary, becoming the NatWest 6 Nations.

On 7 December 2018, Guinness was announced as the Championship's new title sponsor, with the competition to be named the Guinness Six Nations from 2019 to 2024. Due to the Loi Évin laws which prohibit alcohol sponsorship in sport, "Guinness" cannot be used as part of the branding of the tournament in France. The French-language logo for the tournament replaces the Guinness logo with the word "Greatness" in the same color and typeface as the Guinness wordmark.

See also