Ospreys
The Ospreys are Wales’ most successful rugby club in the professional era and the home club of none other than 2021 British and Irish Lions captain Alun Wyn Jones and a number of other Welsh rugby greats.
The Ospreys are Wales’ most successful rugby club in the professional era and the home club of none other than 2021 British and Irish Lions captain Alun Wyn Jones and a number of other Welsh rugby greats.
The Glasgow Warriors form the other half of Scotland’s only two professional rugby clubs alongside Edinburgh.
Built on the famous rugby legacy of Western Province dating back to 1883, the Stormers bring an exciting mix of history, a passionate fan base, and a current crop of Rugby World Cup-winning Springboks to the Vodacom United Rugby Championship.
Connacht is located in a province containing only 8% of the Irish population, hence they have always had a smaller base of players to draw from and historically have not been given the budgets of the other three Irish teams.
Edinburgh is one of only two professional rugby clubs in Scotland, with a history of over 145 years.
The Dragons breathed their first bit of rugby fire in 2003 when they were formed out of the new regionalisation of professional rugby in Wales.
Founded in 1889 as the Transvaal Rugby Club, the Lions were the first South African team to win the Super 10 in 1993, the forerunner of Vodacom Super Rugby.
Cardiff Rugby, formerly the Cardiff Blues before an official name change this year, are one of the four professional Welsh clubs and the pride of the capital city of Wales.
Hailing from South Africa’s Sunshine Coast city of Durban, the Cell C Sharks have a proud rugby history that dates back to their earliest roots as the Natal Rugby Union that was formed in 1890.
Pre-pandemic, many small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) were trading exclusively in the physical world, with little to no online presence