Rugby league in Greece

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Rugby league in Greece
CountryGreece
Governing bodyGreek Rugby League Association
National team(s)Men's
Women's
First played2006
Registered players116 (in 2016/17)[1]
Clubs20 (in 2022)
National competitions

Rugby league is a team sport that is relatively new to Greece.

History[edit]

The Greek national team was formed in 2003 by Greek Australians. Rugby league was subsequently introduced to Greece in 2006. The first match played in Greece was contested by the Olympus Eels and Attica Tigers, with the teams consisting of a mixture of local rugby union players and Greek Australians. A few days later on 28 October 2006, Athens hosted an international match against Serbia, which Greece won 44–26.[2]

The initial attempt to find a Greek RL Federation, started by Colin Mylonas, in 2003. Mylonas and his associates spent a lot of money until 2007, but they failed to form a Greek-based Federation. Colin Mylonas was involved with the continued development of the game until 2010. This included Greece playing in the 2008 University Rugby League World Cup after Russia pulled out. Greece was made up of 10 Australian based players with Greek heritage and 10 players from Greece were flown out to Australia. They achieved great success beating France in the plate Final. In the same tournament, Greece beat Scotland Ireland and came very close in beating England only losing on the bell. This put Greece on the map in playing rugby league. Other achievements included winning the Mediterranean Cup in 2010 played in Sydney beating Italy in the final, in front of 3000 people. Greece also played Fiji in Sydney in 2009 losing but gaining respect as a nation on the rise.[citation needed]

Colin Mylonas in 2010 had decided to withdraw from the organisation due to differences in the direction of the Greek Rugby League.

In 2012, Anastasios Pantazidis, Konstantinos Tzevelekos, Ioannis Mavros, Matthew Ashill and Iordanis Bilikaidis have become the first Greek coaches to gain their Level 1 qualification after completion of a two-day course in Nikaia, North of Piraeus, the port area of the capital, Athens. It was organised following co-operation between the Greek rugby league committee and the Serbian Rugby League Federation.[3]

The Hellenic Federation of Rugby League (HFRL) was founded in 2013 by Anastasios "Tasos" Pantazidis. The body was recognised by an Athens court and was therefore accorded observer status within the RLEF in August 2013.[4] In February 2014, the HFRL was granted affiliate member status by the RLEF.[5]

In April 2016, the HFRL was suspended from the RLEF following a year-long investigation for "wilfully acting in a manner prejudicial to the interests of the RLEF and international rugby league."[6] The HRFL was expelled from the RLEF in August 2016 for failing to meet membership requirements.[7] The HFRL continued to organise a domestic competition through the Hellenic Federation of Modern Pentathlon (HFMP) with the recognition of the Ministry of Culture and Sports. Meanwhile, the RLEF ran a separate, recognised competition in the 2016/17 period.[8]

In March 2017, the Greek Rugby League Association (GRLA) was recognised by the RLEF as the official governing body for rugby league in Greece, and was granted observer status.[9] The conflict between the HFRL/HFMP and the RLIF continued until August 2022 when the GRLA was finally recognised as the official body for the sport by the Greek government.[10]

In December 2017, national team captain Stefanos Bastas became the first Greek domestic player to sign a professional playing contract when he secured a one-year deal with the Hemel Stags.[11]

Competitions[edit]

GRLA clubs[edit]

Greece's rugby league clubs are located in 4 cities.
Club Colours City Joined Notes
A.E.K.
Athens 2019/20[12] Former HFRL club (A.E.K. Kokkinias)
A.E.L.[13]
Larissa 2018/19
Aris Eagles
Athens 2016/17[14] GRLA founder; former HFRL club (Aris Petroupolis)
Athens City Raiders
Athens 2019/20[12]
Attica Rhinos
Athens 2016/17[14] GRLA founder; former HFRL club (Pegasus Neos Kosmos)
Patras Panthers
Patras 2016/17[14] Joined the inaugural GRLA competition in 2016/17
Rhodes Knights
Rhodes 2016/17[14] GRLA founder; former HFRL club

HFRL clubs[edit]

Club Colours City Joined Notes
A.E.K. Kokkinias
Athens 2013/14[15] Left the HFRL in 2019 and joined the GRLA
Agios Thomas Goudi
Athens (Goudi) 2015/16[16]
Argos Wolves
Argos 2014/15[17] Joined the 2nd division only; club folded
Aris Petroupolis
Athens 2013/14[15] Left the HFRL and founded the GRLA as the Aris Eagles
Haidari Lions
Athens (Haidari) 2014/15[17] Joined the 2nd division only; club folded
Neapoli Lakοnias
Neapoli Voion 2013/14[15] Joined the 2nd division only
Pegasus Neos Kosmos
Athens 2013/14[15] Left the HFRL and founded the GRLA as the Attica Rhinos
Promitheas Rendi
Athens 2013/14[15] Fielded only a 2nd division team in 2014/15[17]
Pyrrichios Aspropyrgou[18]
Aspropyrgos 2014/15[19]
Rhodes Knights
Rhodes 2013/14[15] Left the HFRL and founded the GRLA

The domestic XIII competition for 2017/18.

XIII Teams[edit]

No Club
1 Promitheas Nikaia / Rendis
2 Pyrihios Aspropyrgou
3 A.E.K.

9's Teams[edit]

No Club
1 Promitheas Nikaia / Rendis
2 Pyrihios Aspropyrgou
3 A.E.K.
2 Nemesis Thessaloniki
3 A.O. Kavala

http://www.rugbyleague.gr/omicronmualphadeltaepsilonsigma-teams.html

Promitheas, AEKK and Pegasus, participated in a regional 2012–2013 championship of Athens. In the 2013/2014 Promitheas, AEKK, Pegasus, Aris and Knights participated in the A' Division. Knights won the championship. In the B' Division, Neapoli, AEKK B', Promitheas B', Aris B' and Pegasus B' participated. Nepoli won the championship. For the 2014/15 season, there were ten teams taking part: Division 1: Rhodes Knights, AEK Kokkinias, Aris Petroupolis, Pyrrihios Aspropyrgou (1st team) and Pegasus Neos Kosmos. Pegasus won the championship. Division 2: Neapoli Lakonias, Argos Wolves, Haidari Lions, Pyrrihios Aspropyrgou ('B' team) and Promitheas Rentis.[20][21] For the 2015/16 season, a new formation was planned. South Group: AEK Kokkinias, Pyrrihios Aspropyrgos and Agios Thomas. Pyrrihios won the tournament. North Group: Filippos Vereea and 2 teams from Thessaloniki. Finally, the tournament did not operate. As a result, Pyrrihios was named 2015–2016 Greece Champions. Two RL 9's tournaments took place: a) in Nikaea, Piraeus (AEK Kokkinias won vs Pyrrihios and Agios Thomas) and b) in Thessaloniki (Agios Thomas won vs Lions/Kavala, Pyrrihios and Thessaloniki).

In 2016–2017 season, four teams participated in the XIII tournament: Pyrrichios Aspropyrgou, Aghios Thomas Goudi, A.O. Kavala and ASP Chalkidonikos http://www.rugbyleague.gr/epsilonpiiotasigmaetamuepsilonsigma-deltaiotaomicronrhogammaalphanuomegasigmaepsiloniotasigma--official-tournaments.html In the 9's tournaments, five teams participated (Promitheas, Pyrrichios, St. Thomas, Nemesis, Kavala. Pyrrichios won 2 of the cups and St. Thomas 1.

In 2017–2018 season, three teams participate in the XIII tournament: Pyrrichios Aspropyrgou, Promitheas Rendi and A.E.K.. http://www.rugbyleague.gr/epsilonpiiotasigmaetamuepsilonsigma-deltaiotaomicronrhogammaalphanuomegasigmaepsiloniotasigma--official-tournaments.html In the 9's tournaments, five teams participate (Promitheas, Pyrrichios, A.E.K., Nemesis, Kavala. A.E.K. won 1 cup and Promitheas 1.

An unofficial 7's tournament was also played on 9 February 2013. Participating teams apart from Promitheas and AEK PK included the newly formed team "Neapoli Lakonias" that was created in Peloponnese in 2013. Promitheas won the tournament.

National team[edit]

The first representative game involving Greece was played in 2003 against New Caledonia with Greece winning 26–10. The first representative game played in Greece was played in 2006 with Greece defeating Serbia 44–26 in Athens. These teams were not recognised by the Greek sports Authorities. In 2011 a touring GB Student "Pioneers" team played a game vs an unofficial "national" team consisting of players from the two Rhodes teams in Rhodes island. The Pioneers won. In October 2013 the Greece National Team (under the authority of the newly formatted HFRL) played an international against Hungary in Budapest.[22] The Greek team was a mixture of local players from the fledgling Greek national competition and heritage players from Australia. Greece won the game 90–0.[23]

In 2014, Greece participated in the RLEF European Championship C. Greeks won the tournament (32–18 vs Malta and 68–16 vs the Czech Rep.). In 2014, Greece won the Balkan Cup in Belgrade, Serbia (58–4 vs Bosnia/Herzegovina and 50–22 vs Serbia). In 2015 Greece withdrew from the RLEF European Championship C in Malta, due to financial reasons. Greeks played the home match vs Spain (lost by 4–76). That was the first Greek National team consisted only by domestic players. After the recognition of the sport by the Ministry of Culture and Sports in 2016, the Hellenic federation of Modern Pentathlon, formed a rugby league committee. As a result, the first recognised by the country's highest sport authority National Team, played twice vs Italy in L'Aquila and in Nikaea Piraeus. The opponent LIRFL is the only RL governing body recognised in Italy by the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI).

A women's national team was established in 2019 and played in the 2022 Rugby League Women's European Championship B.[24]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Rhodes claim Greek title as GRLA continues to build". European Rugby League. 30 June 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  2. ^ "International Window – Greece v Serbia 2006". International Rugby League. 28 October 2020. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  3. ^ "first-greek-coaches-qualified". https://europeanrugbyleague.com/articles/580/first-greek-coaches-qualified. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  4. ^ "Greek Rugby League Federation Formed and Accepted". RLEF. 26 August 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  5. ^ "RLEF Statement on International Calendar and SportAccord". RLEF. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  6. ^ "Greece suspended from RLEF". SBS. 8 April 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Hellenic Federation of Rugby League Excluded From RLEF". RLEF. 9 August 2016.
  8. ^ "Rugby League in Greece continues to develop". RLIF. 12 September 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  9. ^ "Greek Rugby League Association Awarded Observer Status". RLEF. 23 March 2017.
  10. ^ "Greek Rugby League Federation Finally Receives Official Recognition From Greek Government – Greek City Times". Greek City Times. 2 August 2022. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  11. ^ McLennan, Stuart (19 December 2017). "Gamble pays off for Greek rugby league player". Neos Kosmos. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  12. ^ a b McLennan, Stuart (5 February 2020). "Greece on the road to domestic bliss in the lead up to 2021 World Cup". Everything Rugby League. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  13. ^ "ΑΕΛ - Τμήμα Rugby". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d "Greece Is Back". Rugby League Review. No. 127. April–May 2017. p. 29.
  15. ^ a b c d e f "Hellenic Federation prepares for kick off". European Rugby League. 17 October 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  16. ^ "Greek XIII championship begins with new structure". European Rugby League. 5 November 2015. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  17. ^ a b c "Greek second division championship underway". European Rugby League. 29 October 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  18. ^ "Πυρρίχιος Rugby League". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  19. ^ "Greek championship kicks off". European Rugby League. 30 September 2014. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  20. ^ Επισημεσ Διοργανωσεισ / Official Tournaments – Ελλασ Ραγκμπυ Λιγκ – Hellas Rugby League
  21. ^ "RLEF". Archived from the original on 21 May 2015. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  22. ^ Rugby League Planet – Hungary and Greece prepare for first rugby league test match
  23. ^ RLEF
  24. ^ Whitelock, Adam (22 August 2022). "Greek Women returning to Turkey on a Rugby League mission". Everything Rugby League. Retrieved 24 August 2022.