2014 Asian Five Nations

The 2014 Asian Five Nations, known as the 2014 HSBC Asian 5 Nations due to the tournament's sponsorship by the HSBC, was the 7th and final series of the Asian Five Nations rugby union tournament, before it shrinks to only include the top 3 Asian teams from 2015.

2014 Asian Five Nations
Date26 April – 25 May 2014
Countries Hong Kong
 Japan
 Philippines
 South Korea
 Sri Lanka
Final positions
Champions Japan (22nd title)
Tournament statistics
Matches played10
Websitewww.asian5nations.com
2013
2015

Japan, as victors, qualified for the 2015 Rugby World Cup as Asia 1 in Pool B, while the runner up, Hong Kong, qualified for the repechage playoffs, against Uruguay.[1] In additional qualifications, only the top three teams would play in the leading tier in 2015, after the ARFU reduced the top tier from five, to three.

Changes from 2013

edit
  • United Arab Emirates has been replaced with Sri Lanka, who earns promotion from Division 1.

Teams

edit

The teams involved are:

Nation Home stadium City Head coach Captain
  Hong Kong (26) Hong Kong Football Club Stadium Hong Kong   Leigh Jones Pale Tauti
  Japan (13) Mizuho Rugby Stadium
National Olympic Stadium
Nagoya
Tokyo
  Eddie Jones Toshiaki Hirose
  South Korea (23) Incheon Munhak Stadium Incheon   Kim Myung Joo
  Philippines (57) Eagles Nest Stadium Laguna   Jarred Hodges
  Sri Lanka (39) Colombo Racecourse Colombo   Johan Taylor Fazil Marija

Final Table

edit
2014 Asian Five Nations Champion
Relegated to Division One
Position Nation Games Points Bonus
points
Total
points
Played Won Drawn Lost For Against Difference
1   Japan 4 4 0 0 342 33 +309 4 24
2   Hong Kong 4 3 0 1 196 65 +131 3 18
3   South Korea 4 2 0 2 122 126 -4 2 12
4   Philippines 4 1 0 3 58 274 –216 1 6
5   Sri Lanka 4 0 0 4 48 258 –210 1 1

Points are awarded to the teams as follows:

Results Points
Win 5 points
Draw 3 points
4 or more tries 1 point
Loss within 7 points 1 point
Loss greater than 7 points 0 points

Fixtures

edit

Round 1

edit
26 April 2014
12:00 KST (UTC+09)
South Korea  59–3  Sri Lanka
Try: Jung Pil 2' m
Jeong Min (2) 6' c, 25' m
Eudum 17' m
Jong Yeul 39' m
Kwang Moon 53' c
Young Gi 59' c
Hyun Soo 67' m
Byeong Ho 78' c
Con: Eudum (2/6) 7', 54'
Won Yong (2/3) 60', 79'
Pen: Won Yong (2/2) 32', 64'
Report[2]Pen: Riza Mubarak (1/2) 27'
Incheon Munhak Stadium, Incheon
Referee: Taku Otsuki (Japan)

26 April 2014
18:00 HKT (UTC+08)
Hong Kong  108–0  Philippines
Try: Wei 2' m
Kam Shing 8' c
Brant 14' m
Lamming (3) 31' c, 49' c, 68' c
Phelps 35'
Hsieh 38' c
Jones 40' c
McColl (2) 42' c, 80' c
Varty 55' c
Mcqueen 59' m
McKee 64' m
Wheatley 72' c
Baddeley 78' m
Con: McAdam (11/16) 9', 32', 36', 39', 40', 43', 50', 55', 69', 73', 80'
Pen: McAdam (2/3) 10', 26'
Report[3]
Hong Kong Football Club Stadium, Hong Kong
Referee: Shuhei Kubo (Japan)
FB 15 Alex Mcqueen
RW 14 Rowan Varty
OC 13 Jake Phelps
IC 12 Lloyd Jones
LW 11 Yiu Kam Shing
FH 10 Chris McAdam
SH 9 Kenneth Hsieh
N8 8 Pale Tauti (c)
OF 7 Matt Lamming
BF 6 Alex Baddeley
RL 5 Paul Dwyer
LL 4 Bill Brant
TP 3 Stephen Nolan
HK 2 Alex Harris (c)
LP 1 Leon Wei
Replacements:
HK 16 Thomas Bolland
PR 17 James Cooper
PR 18 Alex Ng
LK 19 Terence Montgomery
FL 20 Nick Hewson
SH 21 Pete Mckee
FH 22 Nick Wheatley
CE 23 Tom McColl
Coach:
  Leigh Jones
FB 15 Alexander Aronson
RW 14 Gareth Holgate
OC 13 Justin Coveney
IC 12 Matthew Saunders
LW 11 Kenneth Stern
FH 10 Oliver Saunders (c)
SH 9 Jake Letts
N8 8 Samuel Bennetts
OF 7 Darran Seeto
BF 6 Christopher Anderson
RL 5 Ashley Heward
LL 4 Stephen Howorth
TP 3 Philip Sinclair
HK 2 Austin Dacanay
LP 1 David Robinson-Polkey
Replacements:
HK 16 Glenn Power
PR 17 Daniel Melrose
PR 18 Fergus Mitra
FL 19 Nathan Welch
FL 20 Timothy Kong
SH 21 Cleo Gomez
FH 22 Fritz Moschitz
WG 23 Rupert Zappia
Coach:
  Jarred Hodges

Touch judges:
Paul McKay (Singapore)
Macro Wu Wu Zhihong (China)

Round 2

edit
3 May 2014
15:30 PST (UTC+08)
Philippines  10–99  Japan
Report[4]
Eagles Nest Stadium, Laguna
Referee: Dewi Rowlands (Hong Kong)

Round 3

edit
10 May 2014
18:00 JST (UTC+09)
Japan  132–10  Sri Lanka
IRB[6]
Mizuho Rugby Stadium, Nagoya

Round 4

edit
17 May 2014
12:00 KST (UTC+09)
South Korea  5–62  Japan
Incheon Munhak Stadium, Incheon

Round 5

edit
24 May 2014
15:30 PST (UTC+08)
Philippines  22–52  South Korea
Eagles Nest Stadium, Laguna
25 May 2014
17:00 JST (UTC+09)
Japan  49–8  Hong Kong
National Olympic Stadium, Tokyo

Media coverage

edit

The tournament is broadcast live in many different countries.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Official RWC 2015 Site". Rugbyworldcup.com. Archived from the original on 2014-07-02. Retrieved 2013-11-08.
  2. ^ "asian5nations.com". asian5nations.com. Archived from the original on 2014-05-12. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  3. ^ "Hong Kong Rugby Union - All News". www.hkrugby.com. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  4. ^ "Official RWC 2015 Site". Archived from the original on 2014-05-03. Retrieved 2014-05-04.
  5. ^ "Official RWC 2015 Site". Archived from the original on 2014-05-03. Retrieved 2014-05-04.
  6. ^ "Official RWC 2015 Site". Archived from the original on 2014-05-12. Retrieved 2014-05-10.
  7. ^ "Official RWC 2015 Site". 12 May 2014. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
edit