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As it happenedended1560950468

Champions Cup rugby draw: Pool stage confirmed as Saracens face Munster, Exeter drawn with Glasgow

Re-live the Champions Cup and Challenge Cup draws from Lausanne

Jack de Menezes
Wednesday 19 June 2019 14:19 BST
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Saracens vs Leinster: Mark McCall hails Billy Vunipola for doing his talking on the pitch

The draws for next season's European Champions Cup and Challenge Cup were made on Wednesday afternoon to throw up a daunting campaign for reigning champion Saracens, as they were placed alongside two-time winners Munster and recent finalists Racing 92, as well as Welsh side Ospreys.

Having won the 2018/19 Champions Cup final last month against Leinster, Saracens' reward was arguably the toughest pool drawn out of the five that will make up next season's European group stage, which gets underway in mid-November following the Rugby World Cup. Elsewhere, Exeter Chiefs will take on Glasgow Warriors in pool two, resulting in Stuart Hogg heading back to his former club at the earliest opportunity, with two pair pooled alongside La Rochelle and Sale Sharks.

Pool one sees beaten finalists Leinster take on Lyon, Northampton Saints and Bentton Rugby, wile in pool three recently-crowned Challenge Cup winners Clermont Auvergne will face Ulster, Harlequins and Bath. In pool five, Toulouse take on Gloucester, Connacht and Montpellier. Re-live how the draw was made.

Follow the live draw below.

Champions Cup teams

England: Saracens, Exeter Chiefs, Gloucester, Northampton Saints, Harlequins, Bath, Sale Sharks.

France: Toulouse, Clermont Auvergne, Lyon, La Rochelle, Racing 92, Montpellier.

Italy: Benetton

Ireland: Leinster, Munster, Ulster, Connacht

Scotland: Glasgow Warriors

Wales: Ospreys

Challenge Cup teams

England: Wasps, Bristol Bears, Worcester Warriors, Leicester Tigers, London Irish.

France: Castres, Stade Francais, Toulon, Bordeaux-Begles, Pau, Agen, Bayonne, Brive.

Italy: Zebre

Scotland: Edinburgh

Wales: Scarlets, Cardiff Blues, Dragons

Continental Shield qualifiers: Enisei-STM, Rugby Calvisano

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Welcome to The Independent's live coverage of today's European rugby draws as the pool stages for next season's Champions Cup and Challenge Cup are unveiled.

The draw begins at 1pm BST (2pm CET) with the Challenge Cup, before being followed by the draw for the main event in the Champions Cup.

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 11:57
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The 2019/20 season is set to be the longest in living memory as Rugby World Cup preparations kick off this month, 11 months before the season-ending finals next month.

But the European season is set to do the opposite as the pool stages get underway a month later in November, meaning three consecutive double-headers in November, December and January before normal service resumes after the Six Nations.

With that in mind, here's how the European season shapes up in 2019/20:

EPCR weekends – 2019/20 season

Round 1: 15/16/17 November 2019

Round 2: 22/23/24 November 2019

Round 3: 6/7/8 December 2019

Round 4: 13/14/15 December 2019

Round 5: 10/11/12 January 2020

Round 6: 17/18/19 January 2020

Quarter-finals: 3/4/5 April 2020

Semi-finals: 1/2/3 May 2020

2020 finals – Stade de Marseille

Challenge Cup final – Friday 22 May

Heineken Champions Cup final – Saturday 23 May

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 12:35
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With the Champions Cup draw up the main event, let's take a closer look at who's in the mix.

Four-time champions Toulouse and Leinster both feature, with the Irish province missing out on the chance to become the first club to make it to five in last month's final defeat against Saracens, who by winning the showpiece event in Newcastle became only the fourth club to claim the European crown three times along with Toulon.

In total, there are 16 past titles in this year's competition, with other former champions coming in the form of Munster (twice), Northampton Saints, Ulster and Bath.

In terms of those sides to look out for who have not yet taken top honours, no side has come closer than Clermont Auvergne, having finished runners-up on three occasions. But after winning the Challenge Cup and reaching the Top 14 final last weekend only to come unstuck to Toulouse, Clermont look to be back on the way up.

La Rochelle are also a side who will not be a welcome team to draw, while Glasgow are possibly the most dangerous attacking side in the tournament who would cause major problems for the established sides.

Exeter Chiefs however will be one to watch, mainly as last year's European disappointment combined with the heartbreak of losing the Premiership final could either bring out the best or worst of them in Europe next season.

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 12:52
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One man looking for a European reunion is Lyon's back-row colossus Carl Fearns, who is holding out for a pool that includes his former club Bath.

The England exile will find out if he gets his wish shortly...

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 12:56
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With Europe's heavyweight clubs all in the mix for today's draw, it's only fair that we have some heavyweight names to carry it out.

Rugby World Cup winner Bryan Habana joins former France scrum-half and Heineken Cup winner Dimitri Yachvili as the men responsible for the draw, with BT Sport's Sarra Elgan Easterby and Matthieu Lartot of Stade2 hosting the draw.

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:00
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And as Elgan Easterby and Lartot welcome us to the draw, we're underway!

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:01
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We're beginning with the Challenge Cup, which last season saw an all-French final between Clermont Auvergne and La Rochelle play out at St James' Park. However, two English sides did make it through to the last four in the form of Sale Sharks and Gloucester, so will it be an Anglo-French affair once again or can one of the three Welsh teams get themselves in the mix, or perhaps the entries from Scotland, Italy and even Russia.

Here are the teams involved in the draw.

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:06
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So before we can get underway, we need to draw the tiers that will decide how the clubs are drawn.

Both Stade Francais and Cardiff Blues are drawn into the top tier, with Bristol and Leicester placed into tier two and Bordeaux-Begles put into tier three.

Tier One: Castres, Wasps, Scarlets, Stade Francais, Cardiff Blues

Tier Two: Toulon, Worcester, Edinburgh, Bristol Bears, Leicester Tigers

Tier Three: Pau, London Irish, Zebre, Bordeaux-Begles, Dragons

Tier Four: Agen, Bayonne, Brive, Enisei, Calvisano

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:11
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A bit of housekeeping: There can be no more than two clubs from the same league, apart from Rugby Calvisano who cannot go into the same pool as fellow Italians Zebre.

Here we go...

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:11
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Scarlets are drawn in Pool 2:

Pool 1:

Pool 2: Scarlets

Pool 3:

Pool 4:

Jack de Menezes19 June 2019 13:12

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