Six Nations Championship History
The Six Nations history goes back to the late 1800s when
England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland were
the founding nations in the were known then as the Home
Internationals.
Since then the French flirted with the home nations
championship but entered full time after the second World
War and the tournament became known as the Five Nations and
more recently in the 1990s Italy became members of this
elite club of top flight Northern hemisphere teams and as it
is known today as the
6
Nations Championship.
The Six Nations History has been kind to England, Wales
and France with success rates in the region of 23%, 22% and
21% respectively calculated from the amount of tournaments
played in against the number of wins.
One very important Six nations history event took place
in 1893 when Wales beat all the other home nations and this
feat became known the
Triple
Crown
and it remains a very important feature of every Six Nations
Championship where any home nation team can win this if not
the title for that year.
During the duration of the Championships each country has
enjoyed a purple patch with
Ireland doing very well just after the
First World War in winning three outright titles and
consecutive Triple Crowns in 1948 and 1949. In the 1950s it
was the turn of the French to call the shots winning four
years in a row and in 1968 won their first Grand Slam. A
great time in
Welsh Rugby materialised between 1969 and
1979, and is considered a golden era of Welsh rugby.
In more recent times England and France have monopolised
the championship and as for
Scotland they have won the event fourteen
times in all.
The Six Nations is a tournament that is much loved
amongst rugby fans that support their nations with great
enthusiasm with many making weekends out of supporting their
team across Europe and today one of the hardest things to
come by are
Six Nations tickets for the big games.