Jump to main content

Live Score Bar

Scarlets v Toulon

Scarlets will go toe to toe with Toulon in Europe once again

Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe

Scarlets will meet RC Toulon once again in Europe when they return to the Heineken Champions Cup this season. 

Share this page:

Meanwhile, the Dragons, back in the top flight for the first time since 2010/11, have games against Bordeaux-Begles and English Premiership runners-up Wasps.

Under the new format for this season the Heineken Champions Cup has been expanded to 24 teams. They are split into two pools of 12 clubs and each team will play two home and two away matches.

The top four teams will progress into the quarter-finals stages which, for the first time, will be played home and away. The semi-finals will also be two legged affairs, with the final being staged at Stade Velodrome in Marseilles on Saturday, 22 May, 2021.

The Scarlets will meet Toulon, who they faced in the quarter-finals of the European Challenge Cup last season after facing them twice in the pool stages, for the 11th time in the two European competitions. They will also face English ‘rag doll’ rivals Bath.

“It is almost like groundhog day being drawn with Toulon again. We’ve only just faced them in a quarter-final and also met them in the pool stages last season,” said Scarlets head coach Glenn Delaney.

“That said, we both enjoy playing against each other and we both have very passionate sets of fans. We ae really excited by the prospect of meeting them again.

“Bath are traditional rivals and are a typical, set-piece oriented Premiership club who are being guided by a new coaching team. They are always tough to beat, but The Rec is one of the best grounds to play at.”

The Dragons have won only three of their last 24 games in the Heineken Champions Cup and will face two top teams on their return.

“It’s fantastic and it’s going to be a great experience. When we were looking at the permutations there were some pretty high standard options available to us,” said Dragons head coach Dean Ryan.

“We’re just really excited to be at this level of the tournament. Bordeaux will be fantastic and we have some links back there as Luke Narraway coached there.

“I have plenty of links with Wasps and it will be great to go up against a side that have been on a fantastic trajectory over the last three or four months under Lee Blackett. It feels more real knowing who we will face and I can’t wait to get started.”

The Heineken Champions Cup holders, Exeter Chiefs, will launch their defence with games against Toulouse and Glasgow Warriors in the pool stages. Reigning Guinness PRO14 champions, Leinster, will face Montpellier and Northampton Saints in Pool A when the tournament kicks off again in December, while last season’s runners-up, Racing 92, are in Pool B where they will be up against Connacht and Harlequins.

Munster Rugby will renew their European rivalry with ASM Clermont Auvergne and Harlequins in Pool B, while Bristol Bears’ draw means a return to Galway for former Connacht coach Pat Lam. The Challenge Cup winners will also face Clermont.

For the purposes of the draw, the 24 clubs which qualified from the Premiership, the PRO14 and the TOP 14 were classified into four tiers based on their performances in the knockout phases of their respective leagues, and/or on their qualifying positions in their respective league tables.

Each tier contained six clubs with Tier 1 made up of the number one and number two ranked clubs from each league, and Tier 2, the number three and number four ranked clubs from each league, and so on.

Starting with Tier 1, the clubs were either drawn or allocated into either Pool A or Pool B so that each pool contained 12 clubs with no clubs in the same tier from the same league in the same pool.

The key principles regarding the pool stage fixtures are that clubs will only play against opponents in the same pool, and clubs from the same league cannot play against one another.

The Tier 1 and Tier 4 clubs which were drawn in the same pool, but which are not from the same league, will play one another home and away over four rounds. The same principle applies to the Tier 2 and Tier 3 clubs which were drawn in the same pool, but which are not from the same league.

The exact dates of the Heineken Champions Cup pool stage fixtures and the Challenge Cup preliminary stage fixtures, including venues, kick-off times and TV coverage, will be announced as soon as possible following consultation with clubs and EPCR’s partner broadcasters.

The four highest-ranked clubs from each Heineken Champions Cup pool will qualify for the quarter-finals which will be played over two legs, and the clubs ranked from number five to number eight in each pool will qualify for the Round of 16 of the Challenge Cup.

Today’s draw, which mapped out the first steps on the journey to the 2021 Marseille finals weekend, was conducted by EPCR Chief Executive, Vincent Gaillard, and by EPCR Commercial and Brand Manager, Anya Alderslade. The event scrutineer was Lausanne-based solicitor, Jean-Guillaume Amiguet.

2020/21 HEINEKEN CHAMPIONS CUP

POOL A (with opponents in brackets)
Bordeaux-Bègles (Dragons, Northampton Saints)
Leinster Rugby (Montpellier, Northampton Saints)
Wasps (Dragons, Montpellier)
Bath Rugby (La Rochelle, Scarlets)
Edinburgh Rugby (La Rochelle, Sale Sharks)
RC Toulon (Sale Sharks, Scarlets)
La Rochelle (Bath Rugby, Edinburgh Rugby)
Sale Sharks (Edinburgh Rugby, RC Toulon)
Scarlets (Bath Rugby, RC Toulon)
Dragons (Bordeaux-Bègles, Wasps)
Montpellier (Leinster Rugby, Wasps)
Northampton Saints (Bordeaux-Bègles, Leinster Rugby)

POOL B (with opponents in brackets)
Exeter Chiefs (Glasgow Warriors, Toulouse)
Lyon (Glasgow Warriors, Gloucester Rugby)
Ulster Rugby (Gloucester Rugby, Toulouse)
Bristol Bears (ASM Clermont Auvergne, Connacht Rugby)
Munster Rugby (ASM Clermont Auvergne, Harlequins)
Racing 92 (Connacht Rugby, Harlequins)
ASM Clermont Auvergne (Bristol Bears, Munster Rugby)
Connacht Rugby (Bristol Bears, Racing 92)
Harlequins (Munster Rugby, Racing 92)
Glasgow Warriors (Exeter Chiefs, Lyon)
Gloucester Rugby (Lyon, Ulster)
Toulouse (Exeter Chiefs, Ulster Rugby)

2020/21 season weekends

Round 1 – 11/12/13 December 2020
Round 2 – 18/19/20 December 2020
Round 3 – 15/16/17 January 2021
Round 4 – 22/23/24 January 2021
Heineken Champions Cup quarter-finals, 1st leg – 2/3/4 April 2021
Challenge Cup Round of 16 – 2/3/4 April 2021
Heineken Champions Cup quarter-finals, 2nd leg – 9/10/11 April 2021
Challenge Cup quarter-finals – 9/10/11 April 2021

Partners and Suppliers

Principal Partners
Principality
Admiral
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Vodafone
Go.Compare
Official Broadcast Partners
S4C
BBC Cymru/Wales
Official Partners
Guinness
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Heineken
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Official Suppliers
Gilbert
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Rhino Rugby
Sportseen
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Princes Gate
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Amber
Opro
Total Energies
Seat Unique
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe
Castell Howell
Glamorgan Brewing
Ted Hopkins
Hawes & Curtis
Groundhog day for Scarlets in Europe