Current season, competition or edition: 2016-2017 |
|
Formerly | Divizia Naţională |
---|---|
Sport | Rugby union |
Founded | 1914 |
Inaugural season | 1914 |
Owner(s) | Romanian Rugby Union |
No. of teams | 7 |
Country | Romania |
Most recent champion(s) |
Timișoara (5th title) |
Most titles | Steaua (24 titles) |
TV partner(s) | Dolce Sport |
Sponsor(s) | CEC Bank |
Official website | SuperLiga.ro |
SuperLiga, officially known as the CEC Bank SuperLiga (for sponsorship reasons), is Romania's top level and professional men's rugby union competition. SuperLiga is run by Federația Română de Rugby (FRR – the Romanian Rugby Union) and it is contested by seven teams as for the 2016–17 championship. It was set up in 1914, a only two team competition by then (Tennis Club Român and Sporting Club, both from Bucharest), to expand and grow in the 1920s and 1930s (with a peak in the 1970s and 1980s), after Stadiul Român and seventeen more (other) teams were founded in Bucharest-only ever since. The championship took place on an annual basis, with some gap years caused by the two World Wars mostly.
The first team set up outside Bucharest (to play the top tier competition) was IAR Brașov in 1939, a team owned and run by the famous Braşov aircraft factory I.A.R. (Industria Aeronautică Română), but the first one to become champion of Romania was Universitatea Timișoara, only in 1972.
The European Champions Cup in its early years (1960s) used to be a Franco-Romanian affair, with Grivița Roșie (1964) and Dinamo (1967) grabbing their fair share of glory. In 1995 it was Farul Constanţa the team to represent Romania in the newly born Heineken Cup (splitting with Stade Toulousain the honour of playing on home ground the first ever match of the competition), but that was to be followed by no other participation of a Romanian side ever since (as for 2016). Nonetheless the Romanian teams turned to the European Challenge Cup but despite the downgrade they never actually advanced to the quarterfinals. To better cope with the strong clubs of the 6 Nations countries the Romanian Rugby Union pulled together an all-domestic franchise - Stejarii (The Oaks), to be later renamed Lupii (The Wolves) - but despite the healthy idea and some gleams of success, the mighty SuperLiga clubs forced the Romanian Rugby Establishment to back off and allow again the champion side to take part in the European Challenge Cup.