Scotland & Germany promoted to WGPS
In the end the result was predictable, but still plenty of drama on and off the field.
Published by John Birch, July 23rd, 2017
4 minute read

One of the biggest stories in the second leg of the European Trophy happened before the start, when the team from Moldova – one of the key teams in the relegation battle – failed to appear, apparently due to problems at the Moldovan Rugby Union.
Their non-appearance resulted in all of their games being recorded as 0-25 (5-try) defeats, which is standard practice, but – as Israel were to discover – it is “penalty” that can impact harshly on other teams too.
Scotland and the Czech Republic swept through Pool A with little resistance from Finland and Malta. The Finns did manage a couple of scores against the Czechs, but that aside this was a pool of big, one-sided wins as Scotland ran up 124 unanswered points.
The truncated Pool C was similarly one-sided with Ukraine dismissing Latvia and Romania easily, while Romania had few problems seeing off the Latvians to join them in the quarter-finals.
Germany also pass the hundred in Pool B, but here the surprise was home team Hungary – who had done so well in the first leg – now struggled, drawing with Switzerland, being well-beaten 25-14 by Israel, and then hammered 53-5 by Germany in the day’s biggest score. The Swiss won the decisive game with Israel.
It was at this point the absence of the Moldovans kicked in when, despite not winning a game, Latvia were placed in the quarter-finals ahead of the Israelis after being awarded a 25-0 “no-show win” over Moldova, which also reduced their points difference below Israel’s. However, as the best team in the Challenge, Israel were granted a direct route to the Challenge final, with a minimum of three series points, which would be just enough to ensure their safety from relegation.
The relegation question was therefore answered before the start of the second day, with Malta joining Moldova in the drop.
On day two a huge shock was narrowly avoided by Germany, after Finland came back from 10-0 down to 15-14 in the final minute, before a mistimed pass allowed Germany to regain possession and see out the match. The same four teams from the first leg reached the semi-finals.
Ukraine miss out, but will be in the running again next year – and are, on this form, the only team likely to prevent Sweden or Netherlands (just relegated from the Grand Prix) returning to the top as there is a significant gap growing between the leading teams and rest of the section.
Results
Pool A:Scotland 41-0 Malta; Czech Republic 26-10 Finland; Scotland 38-0 Finland; Czech Republic 43-0 Malta; Scotland 45-0 Czech Republic; Finland 33-0 Malta
Pool B:Germany 26-0 Israel; Hungary 22-22 Switzerland; Germany 29-12 Switzerland; Hungary 14-25 Israel; Germany 53-5 Hungary; Switzerland 38-17 Israel
Pool C:Ukraine 31-0 Latvia; Romania 26-5 Latvia; Ukraine 29-7 Romania
Challenge semi-finalsHungary 43-5 Malta
Challenge finalIsrael 5-14 Hungary
Cup Quarter-finals:Scotland 50-0 Latvia; Switzerland 10-21 Romania; Germany 15-14 Finland; Ukraine 24-7 Czech Republic
5th/8th semi-finals: Latvia 0-31 Switzerland; Finland 5-22 Czech Republic
7th place final:Latvia 17-21 Finland
5th place final:Switzerland 12-24 Czech Republic
Semi-finals: Scotland 32-0 Romania; Germany 15-7 Ukraine
Bronze final: Romania 5-17 Ukraine
Gold final:Scotland 33-5 Germany;
Final placings
Series Points
Point difference
Scotland
40
473
Germany
36
99
Ukraine
32
171
Romania
28
-22
Czech Republic
22
13
Hungary
16
14
Finland
16
-22
Switzerland
16
-57
Latvia
9
-154
Israel
5
-74
Malta
3
-278
Moldova
0
-196