Rugby League National Leagues
From Freepedia
The Rugby League National Leagues (currently known as the LHF Healthplan National Leagues as a result of sponsorship) form the basis for rugby league competition in Great Britain below Super League. There are three leagues: Leagues One and Two are semi-professional, whilst League Three is "open"; professionalism is allowed, though most teams are in fact amateur.
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Structure
A play-off structure is used to determine the winners of League One, who are then eligible for promotion to Super League, being replaced by the team being relegated from that competition. One team is relegated from League One, being replaced by the team finishing top of League Two. There is also a play-off structure involving the second bottom team of League One and the team finishing behind the league leaders in League Two; this allows for a potential second promotion/relegation spot.
The play-offs for League One and League Two are a top-six format, whilst the National League Three play-offs involve 8 teams, and utilise the McIntyre System. In National League Two the position of "first place" in the play-off structure is taken by the team attempting to avoid relegation from NL1, as the top team is promoted automatically.
There is no promotion or relegation between Leagues Two and Three at the moment; current RFL policy is to expand the top two leagues gradually over time. When the 'gap' in playing standards between League Two and League Three is narrowed in 2007 or so, promotion and relegation will occur between these two divisions.
A cup competition, the National League Cup, is played for by all clubs in Leagues one and Two; in 2005 four League Three clubs were also admitted. The teams are organised into regional conferences, with knock-out stages following from the group stage.
History and future development
Most of the clubs in Leagues One and Two had previously played in a single division containing all professional clubs below the Super League. This was known as the Northern Ford Premiership.
At the end of the 2005 an extra team was relegated from Super League in order to accommodate Union Treiziste Catalane. In turn an additional team was relegated from National League One; thus the number of teams in this division remained at ten. In order to "even up" the numbers a new team will be admitted into the League Two, increasing this division to twelve team. This side was announced on June 22, 2005, to be a Welsh team called Celtic Crusaders based on the old rugby union team Celtic Warriors.
National League Three
Many of the teams in League Three, as well as London Skolars of League Two, came from the Rugby League Conference, an organisation of regional amateur teams throughout England and Wales including areas that have not traditionally been rugby league strongholds. Of the other League Three clubs four (Bradford Dudley Hill, Huddersfield Underbank Rangers, Sheffield Hillsborough Hawks and Warrington Wizards) came from the National Conference League. The NCL is an amateur division largely confined to the traditional areas of the game, though London Skolars had played in the competition prior to the formation of the Rugby League Conference.
One League Three club, Bramley Buffaloes, was admitted directly to the league as a new club, though they can also be considered as an reincarnation of the previous Bramley club, which had long played in the professional leagues.
After a number of national league three sides folded, were unable to meet their fixture commitments or prefered to spend their budget on development rather than travelling expenses and opted to 'move down' to the RLC Premier the competition looks like it will be restructured into a 'North 3' and a 'South 3'.
Results
See Rugby League Championship Second Division and Rugby League Championship Third Division for full lists of lower league championship winners (1895-date).
| Season | League One Champions | Relegated from League One | League Two Champions | Also promoted to League One | League Three Champions |
| 2003 | Salford City Reds | Dewsbury Rams | Keighley Cougars | none | Warrington Woolston Rovers |
| 2004 | Leigh Centurions | Keighley Cougars | Barrow Raiders1 | none | Coventry Bears |
| 2005 | Castleford Tigers | Barrow Raiders, Featherstone Rovers | York City Knights1 | none | Bradford Dudley Hill |
Footnote
- Denotes that championship was not decided using a play-off; league position alone determined the title-holder.
Teams for 2006
There are ten teams in leagues one and three, and twelve in league two.
League One |
League Two |
League ThreeProvisional |
See also
External links
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Competitions | |
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National teams | |
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Former competitions | |
| Rugby League National Leagues - National League One |
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Batley Bulldogs | Doncaster Lakers | Halifax RLFC | Hull Kingston Rovers | Leigh Centurions | Oldham Roughyeds | Rochdale Hornets | Whitehaven RLFC | Widnes Vikings | York City Knights | |
| Rugby League National Leagues - National League Two |
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Barrow Raiders | Blackpool Panthers | Celtic Crusaders | Dewsbury Rams | Featherstone Rovers | Gateshead Thunder | Hunslet Hawks | Keighley Cougars | London Skolars | Sheffield Eagles | Swinton Lions | Workington Town | |
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See also: Rugby League Championship Third Division |



