Catégorie : Rapports de tournoi

EXCLUSIF : Coupe d'Europe de Roller Derby 2027

Last July, the global Roller Derby community descended on Olympiaworld in Innsbruck for the 2025 Roller Derby World Cup. It was an exhausting, 5 track logistical marvel that redefined the scale of the sport, taking over 1,600 people (including 1,000+ skaters and 600+ crew members!) to execute 80 historic games over 4 gruelling days.

But as the dust settled on that monumental event, a collective demand emerged across the continent: Europe needs its own dedicated battleground. Today, we can exclusively announce that the inaugural European Roller Derby Cup (ERDC) will take place in the autumn of 2027, pitting the continent’s fiercest national and borderless teams against each other.

ERDC 2027: At a Glance

Dates: September 24th – 26th, 2027.

Location: Riccione (a municipality in the province of Rimini), Italy.

Host: Lega Italiana Roller Derby (LIRD).

Tournament Format: 3 days, 2 tracks.

Size: Final bracket size to be confirmed.

From Leagues to Nations

Historically, European tournaments, like the WFTDA European Continental Cups, have been built exclusively for individual teams. What makes the 2027 European Roller Derby Cup unique is that it is a continental competition structure built specifically for National Teams and Borderless Teams. Eligibility is rooted in the RDNC’s (Roller Derby Nations Committee) ‘Definition of a Nation’. As of late 2025, there are 29 potentially eligible teams, with organisers planning a tight bracket to ensure maximum competition.

This means we can hope to see a dynamic mix of traditional country-based teams. We think this will be a great opportunity to see how much teams like Team Portugal, Team Denmark, and Team Netherlands will have grown and evolved since their 2025 World Cup appearances. Not to mention that the ERDC is a chance for brand new, European-level borderless teams to develop and showcase on the continent’s biggest stage.

Hosts Making it Happen: Lega Italiana Roller Derby

With the dates locked in, the real work begins. The ERDC Committee has selected Lega Italiana Roller Derby (LIRD) to take on the colossal task of hosting this premier event on the Italian coast. Who are LIRD? Interestingly, they are the primary governing body for Roller Derby in Italy, operating under the Federazione Italiana Sport Rotellistici (FISR).

Italy, officially recognised by the RDNC as a Type i Nation, boasts a deeply dedicated and highly organised Derby ecosystem under LIRD’s guidance. Their organisational achievements over the past two years prove they are more than ready to command the international spotlight.

As the organisers of the official national championship, “Brace for Impact,” their current season utilises a multi-weekend format to ensure teams get maximum track time. And they don’t forget about skater development, coordinating events like “Rodei 2.0” in Fanano, a national gathering that provided dedicated bootcamps and high-level bench clinics run by top European talent.

But most importantly, Lega Italiana actively champions, embraces and embodies the values that the European Roller Derby Cup demands. Their events tackle vital community topics head-on, dedicating real time to trans inclusion in sports, fighting fatphobia, and ensuring a safe space for all skaters and participants.

Want to know more about Italian Roller Derby? Read more here

Europe’s Momentum

The 2025 World Cup dramatically shifted the global narrative. Europe is making moves and now commands quite the presence in the world’s top slots. With England (#3), France (#4), and Sweden (#5) claiming elite positions, Europe now commands 50% of the world’s top 10 slots.

We also can’t forget that ‘Belgian Bounce,’ as Team Belgium staged a phenomenal recovery to finish 8th in the world, nor Team Finland claiming that final 10th spot. No doubt about it, the competitive density of European Roller Derby is higher than ever before.

But executing a 3 day, 2 track international event will require an immense logistical effort, including an estimated 100+ volunteers just to keep operations running. Fans, officials, Teams and skaters are encouraged to watch social media over the coming summer for team & volunteer applications, plus any further updates. And of course, EDN will be there, keeping you informed. For any immediate questions regarding the event, the organising committee can be reached directly at eurorollerderbycup@gmail.com.

Mark your calendars. If 2025 and 2026 were the years Europe took over the global stage, 2027 is the year we officially build a stage of our own.

Chaos de l'EuroClash

Tick, tock

It’s March 31st, and the dreaded WFTDA ranking freeze is just hours away. The frantic calculator maths of the weekend are over and skaters can relax knowing that they have finally left it all out on the track. But the maths doesn’t mean a thing until WFTDA officially rubber-stamps the standings at midnight tonight. Until that final page refreshes, no one is daring to exhale, and only then will the ink finally dry on those coveted invites to the European Championships in Namur.

Brutus #16 directing the Lomme defence. Photo by Life thu Argo’s lens

This past weekend, the Walker Dome in Newcastle played host to EuroClash 2026 once again. The ultimate, last-chance saloon for teams desperate to secure their postseason survival. We knew it was going to be a dramatic weekend of WFTDA bubble battles, but almost no one could have predicted the sheer chaos that actually unfolded on Tyneside.

Yet, looking at the WFTDA Live Beta Rankings today as we wait for the midnight freeze, there is a hilarious, agonising irony to it all. After an entire weekend of gruelling jams, shattered predictions, and physical exhaustion, the only two spots in the European Rankings that truly mattered didn’t move for a moment!

But numbers on a screen can never tell the full story. They don’t tell you about the cancelled flights, the depleted rosters, the organisers playing double-duty, or the sheer willpower required to stage the biggest comeback of the year.

Here’s the real story of EuroClash 2026…

Unpoppable: Resilience in the Face of Exhaustion

Lomme Roller Derby (Bad Bunnies) came into the weekend desperately clinging to the final European Championships invite spot at #12, with Göteborg Roller Derby breathing directly down their neck at #13. Both teams carried heavy burdens into Newcastle.

Lomme’s tournament almost ended before it began. On Friday night, the majority of the French squad was stranded at the airport due to a last-minute flight cancellation, forcing EuroClash organisers to scramble and rework the entire weekend schedule just to keep Lomme’s postseason dreams alive. Göteborg, meanwhile, arrived in Newcastle with only two of their regular rotation jammers. Against the grueling, slow-start, heavy-hitting defensive packs of EuroClash, having a depleted jammer rotation is a physical nightmare.

Despite the mental toll and exhaustion, both teams executed masterclasses against the highest-ranked team in the building, the Tiger Bay Brawlers. Lomme stunned the WFTDA world by beating Tiger Bay 158-138. The core of Lomme’s survival was Brutus. Formerly a star jammer, Brutus was a lethal pivot this weekend, taking Star Pass after Star Pass to rescue her team from the brink. Alongside the relentless slicing agility of MVP jammer Petit Bourrin and the impenetrable, “long-limbed” defense of MVP blocker L’Orage, Lomme fought through the exhaustion of their travel nightmare.

Long Limbs of Lomme – L’Orage #221. Photo by Life thru Argo’s lens.

Göteborg staged their own miraculous second-half comeback against Tiger Bay. Down by a massive 40 points at halftime and running on empty legs, Göteborg jammers Fred Finta, Bumblebee, and Prinsen put the team on their backs. The defining moment of the weekend happened in the final seconds of that game. Having taken a narrow 128-117 lead, Bumblebee secured Lead Jammer. Instead of racing around the track and risking a penalty or a turnover, Bumblebee simply stopped. Stood perfectly still on the track, staring down the pack, Bumblebee bled the final 36 seconds off the period clock to secure the upset of the year.

Göteborg’s Bumblebee #26 breaking through. Photo by Life thru Argo’s lens.

But the bubble’s fate ultimately came down to the direct clash between the two teams, which Lomme narrowly won (110-98). When the dust cleared and the math settled, the bubble seems to have held firm. Lomme looks like they survive at #12, leaving Göteborg likely heartbroken at #13.

Tiger Bay’s Trials

For the #8 ranked Tiger Bay Brawlers, EuroClash was a high-stakes heist that ultimately demanded too high a price. This has been an incredibly taxing year for elite European skaters, both physically and financially, heavily compounded by the demands of the Roller Derby World Cup. Tiger Bay’s captain, Evans, noted that the team had put “all their eggs in one basket” for this tournament, entering with fewer sanctioned games to protect their WFTDA Game Point Average (GPA).

That lack of a safety net became a terrifying reality on the track. The mental and physical fatigue was palpable. During Saturday’s games, they lost veteran core blocker Dos Santos to a nasty injury. By Sunday, they were also skating without the boundless, smiling energy of star jammer Geordie. You could see the sheer weight of the weekend on the shoulders of skaters like Rogue Runner, a true legend of the sport whose iconic speed and apex jumps are usually unstoppable, but who found herself repeatedly trapped in the unyielding tripods of Lomme and Göteborg.

Crash Landers #108 jamming for Tiger Bay. Photo by Life thru Argo’s lens.

Even with rising star Crash Landers putting up MVP numbers and Plant seemingly possessing the stamina of a marathon runner, the math was too cruel. Tiger Bay needed massive, blowout point differentials to maintain their GPA. Instead, they bled points, dropping down the WFTDA Live Rankings just days before the freeze.

In a poignant post-game moment, Tiger Bay skaters Sprints and Steph reminded the audience of the human element: they aren’t machines built to satisfy an algorithm. They are friends playing a sport they love, using this gruelling weekend not to obsess over the math, but to prepare their bodies and their strategies for their ultimate peak in June.

“Don’t forget the fun!” – Sprints & Steph, Tiger Bay Brawlers. Photo by Life thru Argo’s lens.

Hometown Heroes: Newcastle’s Foundation for the Future

If you want to know what the soul of grassroots roller derby looks like, look no further than the host league, the Newcastle Canny Belters. Newcastle entered the tournament ranked #19. They were the underdogs, the hosts meant to facilitate the Top 12 drama. Instead, they became the main characters.

The physical toll of hosting a WFTDA tournament is immense. Skaters are taping the floor, organising medics, wrangling officials, and selling merch – and then strapping on their skates to play the best teams in Europe. Look at Newcastle’s jammer Spangled, who sits on the league’s Board of Directors, organising the chaos behind the scenes before stepping onto the track to jam out of her skin against international defences.

Newcastle decided to trade a pristine, protected 8-0 season record to step into the fire and test themselves against elite teams. That bravery paid off. Backed by a roaring hometown crowd in the spiritual home of UK roller derby, Newcastle pulled off a sensational 165-140 victory over Bear City (who were led by their own phenomenal MVP jammer, Maya Mangleyou).

Throughout the weekend, the Canny Belters proved they are a rapidly rising threat. Their defensive duo of Drama Bomb (who took home Best Blocker) and Terri Sudron (Tournament MVP) put on a flawless clinic in penalty kills and immovable tripods. When Lomme needed to beat Newcastle by a massive 2.0 ratio in the final game of the weekend to feel safe in their WFTDA ranking, Newcastle refused to roll over, holding them to a 1.76 ratio and nearly gifting the #12 spot to Göteborg in the process. Newcastle climbed the rankings this weekend, building a concrete foundation for a European Championship run in the coming years.

Tournament MVP #86 Terri Sudron anchoring the Belters defence. Photo by Life thru Argo’s lens.

EuroClash 2026 Tournament Awards

After the dust settled on Sunday, it was time to recognise the standout skaters who defined the weekend….

Tiger Bay Brawlers

  • Best Blocker: Nuke
  • Best Jammer: Crash Landers
  • Tournament MVP: Evans

Bear City Roller Derby

  • Best Blocker: Bambickel
  • Best Jammer: Maya Mangleyou
  • Tournament MVP: Mia Missile

Lomme Roller Derby (Bad Bunnies)

  • Best Blocker: Girafon
  • Best Jammer: Petit Bourrin
  • Tournament MVP: Brutus

Newcastle Roller Derby (Canny Belters)

  • Best Blocker: Drama Bomb
  • Best Jammer: Eradi-cait
  • Tournament MVP: Terri Sudron

teborg Roller Derby

  • Best Blocker: Pain Gretzky
  • Best Jammer: Prinsen
  • Tournament MVP: Fred Finta

EuroClash 2026: The Final Scoreboard

For those keeping track of the WFTDA math at home, here is exactly how the chaos unfolded game-by-game over the weekend:

Day 1 (Saturday, March 28)

Game 1: Tiger Bay Brawlers 246 – 78 Bear City Roller Derby

Game 2: Göteborg Roller Derby 126 – 94 Newcastle Roller Derby

Game 3: Lomme Roller Derby 158 – 138 Tiger Bay Brawlers (called early due to injury, but officially sanctioned)

Game 4: Newcastle Roller Derby 165 – 140 Bear City Roller Derby

Game 5: Lomme Roller Derby 110 – 98 Göteborg Roller Derby

Day 2 (Sunday, March 29)

Game 7: Tiger Bay Brawlers 154 – 115 Newcastle Roller Derby

Game 8: Göteborg Roller Derby 128 – 117 Tiger Bay Brawlers

Game 9: Lomme Roller Derby 194 – 110 Newcastle Roller Derby

Looking Ahead to Namur

Maths = done. Bodies? Bruised. Flights home? Boarded. Aftermath? The chaos of EuroClash 2026 has proven one thing: European roller derby is deeper, more tactical, and more emotionally charged than ever before.

While we wait for WFTDA to confirm the final bracket seeding for the European Championships in Namur, the narrative is set. Top teams are bleeding, the underdogs are hungry, and bubble teams have everything to prove.

June 12-14, 2026, is going to be an unmissable weekend. Namur Roller Derby is officially putting on the WFTDA European Championships in Belgium. Last day for Early Bird tickets TODAY!!

Whether your favourite team is fighting for their lives to survive the first round or sitting at the top of the rankings hoping for a bye, Namur is where the European season will reach its ultimate peak. Don’t wait for the bracket to drop. Secure your seat, because if EuroClash taught us anything, it’s that hardly anything goes according to plan.

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Canny Cut-Off : Grands espoirs sur Tyneside

All season long, we’ve been warning you about the April 1st WFTDA ranking snapshot. We’ve called it a pressure cooker. We’ve talked about it looming over the season like a hydraulic blast door slowly closing on the European Top 12. And we’re not about to stop being dramatic about it now…

Folks, the warning sirens are blaring, and we are officially out of time. That door is shutting. This weekend (March 28-29) 5 teams are descending on the Walker Dome in Tyneside for EuroClash 2026.

For these teams, the maths is now simple, immediate, and terrifying:

8 games. 48 hours. One final chance to secure that postseason dream and keep the road to the World Championships in Malmö alive.

Unknown Bracket: Playing for Positioning

Adding to the chaos is the fact that we still don’t know exactly how the final rankings will affect the bracket seeding for the European Championships in Namur this June. Will the top four teams get a crucial first-round bye? Will the middle pack be thrown into a gruelling play-in scenario? Without a confirmed bracket structure from WFTDA, no one can afford to just “make the cut” at #12. Teams have to play for the absolute highest spot possible, just in case a single ranking position ends up being the difference between a simple, direct route through to Champs and an exhausting gauntlet.

Why Göteborg is the Sole Threat

A glance at the freshly updated WFTDA Live Beta Rankings reveals exactly why EuroClash is the most agonising tournament of the season. The gap between the European Top 12 and the rest of the continent has widened into a mathematical chasm – with one exciting or terrifying exception. (Depending on who you support)

Lomme (#12) is currently clinging to the final European Championships invite spot. Breathing directly down their neck is Göteborg (#13).

The harsh reality of the WFTDA algorithm is that Göteborg is the only team left in Europe capable of upsetting the invites. The gap to the next tier of teams – like Bear City (#14) – is simply too vast to bridge in a single weekend.

For the rest of the chasing pack, a trip to the European Championships in Namur is mathematically out of reach. But for Göteborg, a strong performance against Lomme could see them steal that 12th-place spot at the eleventh hour. Every single jam between these two teams matters; it’s a direct, zero-sum elimination game for a ticket to Belgium.

That’s not to say that the other games don’t matter for Göteborg. A big loss to Tiger Bay or not beating Newcastle by enough…that shot at 12th place could well be over.

“All-In” Gamble: Tiger Bay Brawlers (#8)

For the Tiger Bay Brawlers, EuroClash isn’t just a standard tournament; it’s a high-stakes heist. After a season stretched thin by the financial demands of the World Cup, Captain Evans admitted to EDN earlier this year that they’ve ended up with “all our eggs in one basket”.

With fewer sanctioned games under their belt than their continental rivals, Tiger Bay has absolutely no safety net, and the maths proves the jeopardy they are in. They currently sit at #8 with a GPA of 175.13.

But with Barcelona and Helsinki well within striking distance, and Stockholm not far behind, one bad jam, one missed apex jump, or a weekend of heavy point differentials could easily tank Tiger Bay’s average and plummet them 3 or 4 spots down the table. If that happens, they’ll be dragged right down to the edge of the bubble battle just days before the snapshot freezes.

For the Future: Newcastle Roller Derby (#19)

Newcastle entered February riding a white hot 8-0 streak, but as they warned us before the season ramped up: they weren’t interested in playing it safe. They took that pristine record to Belgium for Skate Around 7 and deliberately stepped into the fire against elite European defense.

While they took some tough losses in Namur, breaking their streak and adjusting them to #19 in the beta rankings, that crucible was exactly what they needed. Returning home battle-tested and hungry, the hosts are using the roar of a North East crowd to push themselves against top-tier opponents. They traded a protected record for the high-level points and physical experience required to build the foundation for their own future Top 12 campaign.

EDN’s Games to Watch

If you can’t glue yourself to the stream for all 48 hours, here are our picks for the most critical matchups of the weekend:

Lomme vs Tiger Bay Brawlers (Saturday, 09:30)

Why it matters: Setting the tone for the entire tournament. Tiger Bay is bringing their “all-in” pressure, while Lomme (#12) has a massive target on their back as they fiercely defend the most coveted seat in Europe.

Göteborg vs Lomme (Saturday, 13:30)

Why it matters: The absolute Bubble Battle. This is the zero-sum direct clash between #12 and #13. Göteborg has focused purely on mechanical precision and tactical adaptability for this exact moment. If there is one game you watch this weekend, make it this one.

Newcastle vs Lomme (Sunday, 15:00)

Why it matters: The grand finale of the weekend. The hosts taking on the #12 seed. Newcastle struggled with a Sunday slump at Skate Around 7, and this final game against a desperate Lomme squad will test their endurance and mental game.

EuroClash Full Schedule

Meanwhile in Finland: The Mid-Tier Glory

Yes, we’re all completely stressed over the EuroClash bubble battle on Tyneside, but do yourself a favor this weekend and set up a second screen. Over 1,300 miles away in Oulu, Finland, the Pasha Kaupunni Tournament (March 28-29) is serving up a mid-tier showdown!

Oulu Roller Derby is hosting an absolute festival of derby at the Ouluhalli. The hosts, the Shitty City Rollers, are throwing down against their historic domestic rivals, Helsinki’s Kallio Rolling Rainbow. Add in two international challengers making the trek, Manchester’s Rainy City Reckoning and the Rotterdam Harbour Honeys, and you’ve got a recipe for track magic.

While the top tier is fighting to survive the Champs cut-off, these teams are fighting to conquer the European mid-pack. Rotterdam and Rainy City are looking to level up and grab those high-value Game Points. Meanwhile, Oulu and Kallio are fighting for ultimate regional bragging rights and a big ol’ WFTDA rankings boost right before the freeze. A single massive upset, or a beautifully fought final jam in Finland, could completely rewrite the Top 20-40 European standings in an instant.

Secure Your Spot in Namur: Early Bird Tickets Are Live!

While we are all sweating over who will actually survive this weekend’s math and make the cut, one thing is already an absolute certainty: June 12-14, 2026, is going to be an unmissable weekend.

Our incredible hosts, Namur Roller Derby, are officially putting on the WFTDA European Championships in Belgium, and you definitely do not want to wait until the final bracket drops to secure your seat. Early Bird tickets are officially on sale right now!

Whether your favorite team is currently fighting for their lives in the Top 12 bubble battle or already sitting comfortably at the top of the rankings waiting for a bye, Namur is where the European season will reach its absolute peak.

Do your future self a massive favor: skip the post-freeze ticket panic. Grab your discounted Early Bird weekend passes via Namur Roller Derby’s website or socials today!

Don’t Just Watch. Witness.

This is THE Last Chance weekend. The atmosphere at the Walker Dome won’t just be electric; it will be desperate, tactical, and uncompromising. We’ll be there bringing you the news as quickly as possible, why don’t you join us?

Be there in person: Experience the hits that shake the floor. North East crowds are legendary for a reason. Get your tickets here!

Follow the Chaos: For direct stream links, BTS info, instant game updates and the final WFTDA rankings analysis as the dust settles, follow @euroderbynews on instagram.

The road to the World Championships in Malmö goes through the North East. On Tuesday night, the rankings freeze. This weekend, we find out who avoids getting left out in the cold.

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Mélange Super Sept

While the WFTDA algorithm remains blind to some of last weekend’s biggest matchups, the fans in Nantes, and us at home, got to see the reality of the European rankings play out exactly as it happened on the track.

One lesson we did take away from last weekend? Jammers don’t just get hit out anymore; they get hit out and down! Blockers are taking absolutely no chances. Doesn’t matter if you’ve only got 1 hand down if both your shoulders, or your bum, is down there too.

Samedi
Nothing Toulouse vs. London Brawling (Unsanctioned)

Toulouse set the tone for the weekend immediately on Saturday morning. As we discussed in our Super Seven preview (and have confirmed) Toulouse made the strategic decision to play all of their games this weekend as unsanctioned. We have reached out to Nothing Toulouse to find out what was behind this decision and will bring you any update they share with us.

So, we’re going to presume it was to protect their microscopic Game Point Average (GPA) lead. And, unburdened by the algorithm, off they went. Offensive and defensive switching? Utterly seamless, anchored by incredibly smart leadership from Sweenie #19 and flawless jammer tracking from Lilove #747. Toulouse took a comfortable 191-74 victory, while London used the unsanctioned game to dial in a highly disciplined, strict five-jammer rotation that they would rely on for the rest of the weekend.

Nantes vs. Rainy City All Stars (Sanctioned)

When the first sanctioned game of the weekend kicked off, Rainy City’s veteran wall immediately made its presence known. The hosts had a weekend of slow starts, but Rainy was suffocating. Putting up a defensive shutout for the first 8 jams of the game and holding Nantes under 20 points for nearly the entire first period. Nantes’ Adrénalinss (#12) and Pignouf #252 managed to find some momentum late, but Rainy secured a dominant 183-86 win.

Nantes vs. London Brawling (Sanctioned)

The most competitive sanctioned game of WTS 11 happened right in the middle of Saturday afternoon. Lifted by a phenomenally loud home crowd, Nantes and London threw down in a gritty, middleweight grinder.

The Streak vs. The Comeback

In the second period, Nantes went on an absolute tear, securing Lead Jammer 8 times in a row to build a commanding 34-point lead (128-94) with ten minutes left. But London’s penalty kill units held the line, and in Jam 21, London’s Ellis (#18) capitalised on a double power jam to drop 23 points. In the very next jam, Pip #91 followed up with a 14-point run to completely erase the deficit. Ultimately though, Nantes managed to claw back the final points to win a sanctioned nail-biter, 140-131.

Nothing Toulouse vs. Rainy City (Unsanctioned)

Saturday closed out with the most anticipated game of the weekend: a brilliant, unsanctioned heavyweight clash showcasing two completely different derby philosophies.

Toulouse launched their Aerial Assault, with Jammer Trash Panda (#49) spending the game leaping over any apex the blockers offered up, while Mac (#007) proved equally lethal on, and over, the inside line.

But they faced slick offense and Veteran walls. Rainy City countered with sheer experience and control. Jammer #02 Black was impossibly smooth, dropping crucial 10-point and 12-point jams in the first period to create separation in a dead-even game. When Rainy’s blockers set up, they were formidable, pulling off a narrow 157-142 victory to establish themselves as the true winners of the weekend.

Sunday Blowouts

By Sunday morning, the gap between the Breakaway Pack and the rest of the Top 10 turned into a chasm.

Rainy City vs. London Brawling (Sanctioned)

Rainy City’s blocker rotation of Penny Block, Lily Gaskell (#88), Rollo, El Nassar, Roberts, F.Batts, and MacBeth provided a masterclass in well-drilled defense. They held London’s jammers to just 15 points across 23 jams in the first period, cruising to a brutal 237-60 sanctioned win. (And a quick warning: Rainy’s #38 will exact revenge if you mess with their jammer.)

Nantes vs. Nothing Toulouse (Unsanctioned)

Toulouse closed out their unsanctioned weekend sweep by unleashing a devastating offensive against the hosts. Trash Panda’s very first jam out, repeatedly jumped the apexes, and put up 24 points, without a power jam. Nantes fought hard, relying on Valére #11 for relentless offense, but Toulouse walked away with a massive 255-70 victory.

WTS 11 By the Numbers & Rankings Twister

Taking a look at the raw data from the weekend, the classic stats tell the story of the current European hierarchy perfectly:

Highest Scoring Individual Jams:
Lead Jammer Battles:

The heavyweight fight between Toulouse and Rainy City was a statistical dead heat. Both teams fought tooth and nail, resulting in a perfectly even split of 20 Lead Jammer statuses each. Against the rest of the pack, Rainy and Toulouse both secured Lead over 75% of the time.

Biggest Differentials Overcome: London erasing a 34-point deficit in exactly two jams against Nantes is easily the comeback attempt of the weekend, proving that no lead is safe against a disciplined jammer rotation.

An Algorithmic Twist: Toulouse thought they played the maths perfectly. By keeping all three of their WTS 11 games unsanctioned, they protected their GPA from any potential dips. However, the algorithm waits for no one!

Because Rainy City played sanctioned blowout games against London and Nantes, they pumped their own numbers up enough to close that microscopic 4.85 point gap. According to the brand-new WFTDA live rankings, Rainy City has officially leapfrogged Toulouse to take the #1 spot in Europe.

And the shakeups didn’t stop there. Over in Belgium, Paris’s sheer dominance has officially bumped them up to the #3 spot, pushing Crime City down to #4. The math changes everything, but to truly understand why the math changed, you had to be in the building.

Luckily for us, we had someone on the inside! So, to get us the reality of the Antwerp Triple Header, we handed the mic over to our correspondent on the scene: the legendary dorkmistress (Tournament Head Announcer amongst many, many, many other job titles). Here is her dispatch from a bracket-busting weekend.

Heartbreak, Hope, and High Speeds – Antwerp Triple Header

An on-site event report from dorkmistress for EDN

Anyone interested in European roller derby had a tough weekend, in choosing which game to watch in the most packed weekend for elite roller derby.

The minute Antwerp announced a triple header with themselves, Crime City Rollers and Paris All-Stars, I booked my travel. With Paris beating Crime City at Capitol Clash in November 2025 and Antwerp consistently upping their game, this weekend would give a good understanding of where these most interesting teams in the WFTDA Europe Top #10 really sit. My conclusion after watching three fantastic games?

Those rankings don’t reflect where these teams are, which will most likely lead to brackets being broken all over the place in Namur.

Crime City Rollers v Antwerp One Love

Antwerp have been on the rise for some time with slow, steady progression up, and into, the top 10. But are they starting to bridge the gap between the two halves of the top 10. The GPA says they are a way behind but from the first whistle the action on track showed they are an increasing force to contend with. Antwerp were in control (and the lead) for 90 per cent of the game, matching Crime City jam for jam, securing Lead Jammer status an incredible 31 times compared to Crime City’s 22.

Anything Fanilla Slice #90 could do, Hipshot #89 could do as well, and often better. The length of jams were measured in seconds not minutes, as the other jammer would get out right behind and force a call off. Every single point mattered to these teams.

The data proves it: out of 53 total jams, 42 of them saw the lead jammer score 4 points or fewer before calling it off.

The noticeable thing in the pack across all three games was how fast blockers get across and along the track. No more juking to get the wall to one side and then speeding past them on the inside/outside. The speed and agility of blockers has been supercharged and now jammers need to know about how to break a wall down, not just move it to the side. Thrilling roller derby at its absolute finest.

In the end Antwerp had a crucial jammer penalty 5 minutes from the end, opening a door for Crime City who used all their experience in these moments. In the very next jam, Crime City’s Fanilla Slice secured a massive 19-point run to steal the lead and eventually secure the 137-124 win.

Crime City didn’t have all the blockers they wanted that day, and Antwerp had home team advantage, sure. But what I saw was two very closely matched teams. That gap between #3 and #7 never felt smaller.

Crime City Rollers V Paris All-Stars

20 minutes later Crime City had to brush off that experience and face up to their new nemesis – Paris.

Capitol Clash in November 2025 provided outside observers with a bit of shock when Paris took the win. But for people watching the French Elite Championships it was no more than an expected outcome.

Paris has been on fire for some time now. Heading into the game, many would expect Paris to squeak the win. Paris had other plans. Sheer dominance was their tactic, and from the start they simply shut Crime City down, ultimately winning 216-91.

No matter how much Crime City tried to change the game and the tactics, Paris had an answer to keep the Crime jammers in the pack, taking Lead Jammer 33 times to Crime City’s 14. Paris also excelled at positional blocking from the jam line, giving their jammer an entire lane from the whistle.

Crime responded in the only way possible, star passing to Rhino #23 at every opportunity to force the call off. (In fact, Crime City was forced into making 14 star passes throughout the game just to survive the onslaught).

I want to rewatch this game in slow motion to really understand how the Paris blockers worked the pack, as it was all going so fast I felt I was watching the game at 1.25 speed. Dynamic blocking doesn’t even begin to cover what we watched.

Crime City were effective in reducing the multiple scoring trips and worked hard to stop Paris opening a wider gap but in the end Paris were in full control of the game.

Crime City has time now to go and review, dissect and ponder before Namur. One thing we know is that they have a strategy genius on their bench who will come back fighting after this weekend. Down, but not even a hand out.

Paris All-Stars vs Antwerp One Love

In many ways, watching game 3 felt like a replay of game 2 – showing just how closely Crime City and Antwerp are matched at the moment.

Both faced similar challenges in dealing with the Paris steam train. With Paris winning this one 196-66.

I watched oddly familiar moments where Antwerp were able to wrest momentum and control back, securing Lead Jammer 18 times against this Paris powerhouse but they struggled blocking off the jam line. And a remarkably similar amount of energy, commitment and heart was displayed on track.

dork’s Conclusions

No matter what the Europe rankings show come April 1st, it will not reflect the current state of play. Rainy City & Nothing Toulouse are locked in for #1 & #2, no matter the order but now Paris Allstars have begun to separate themselves from the rest of the top 10 too.

Antwerp’s performance says ‘What gap?!’, so teams in the #4-#7 spots can only be separated by the width of a sheet of paper. And the same is true for #8-#13.

So if there are extra invites to Champs on the table in Namur, it will be IMPOSSIBLE to predict who would secure the extra invite(s). And heads up, get your eye in for watching blockers, because they now move close to the speed of light!

Editor’s Wrap-Up: Maths, Momentum, and the Road to Namur

dorkmistress is absolutely right, if the Super Seven weekend showed us anything, it’s that the WFTDA algorithm only tells half the story, and the physical speed of the European game has been fundamentally supercharged.

When we fired up the laptop on Monday to look at the new WFTDA Live Rankings, the landscape of Euro Derby had shifted. Toulouse tried to play the maths safely by relying on unsanctioned bouts, but Rainy City’s sheer sanctioned dominance propelled them into the coveted #1 spot in Europe. Meanwhile, Paris proved that their November upset was no fluke, steamrolling their way into the #3 spot and cementing themselves in the elite Breakaway Pack.

But as the numbers crunch and the Game Point Averages settle, the real takeaway from this weekend isn’t just who sits at the very top. It’s the terrifying, razor-thin margins of the middle of the pack. Crime City, London, Nantes, and Antwerp all proved that on any given weekend, they have the defensive grit, the deep jammer rotations, and the tactical agility to break a game wide open.

With the WFTDA European Championships in Namur looming on the horizon, the stakes have never been higher. The battle for those top 12 invites is officially a dogfight. If the tournament seeding ends up reflecting this weekend’s beautiful, brutal chaos, we are in for the most unpredictable postseason in European derby history.

Don’t miss a single jam on the road to Namur. Make sure you follow us on Instagram at @euroderbynews for real-time reactions and upset alerts as soon as WFTDA drops the official tournament bracket. And if you haven’t already, subscribe to the Substack to get our deep-dive analysis and rankings breakdowns delivered straight to your inbox!

Super Seven – L'Europe devient Super Saiyan

Euro rankings have reached a terrifying, beautiful boiling point. This weekend (March 7-8) isn’t just another set of games on the calendar. In an unprecedented scheduling bottleneck, the top seven teams in Europe are all taking to the track across two fantastic events.

We know the WFTDA European Championships are coming to Namur this June, and securing an invite requires surviving the brutal maths of the rankings. If you want to know what the postseason bracket will look like, you need to be watching West Track Story 11 and Antwerp’s Triple Header this weekend.

Can Toulouse stay on top?

Only the top 12 teams will punch their ticket to Belgium, making these March games vital for postseason qualification. Here is how the WFTDA algorithm shapes the stakes this weekend:

Battle for #1: – A Microscopic Margin

Can Toulouse be caught? Absolutely. In fact, they are in immediate danger!

#1 Nothing Toulouse: 453.69 GPA

#2 Rainy City All Stars: 448.84 GPA

The Gap: 4.85 points

Because they are playing each other this weekend at West Track Story 11, the maths is incredibly straightforward. Ahem. Well, the outcome will be. Whoever wins that heavyweight game will almost certainly emerge as the #1 ranked team in Europe.

HOWEVER, this is not actually a sanctioned/ranking game! But it will give us a good indication ahead of June.

Mind the Gap

After Rainy City, there is a massive 159-point cliff. Both Toulouse and Rainy City are mathematically insulated from the rest of the pack. Even if they have a terrible weekend, they are not dropping out of the top two spots.

Podium Scrap

This is where the maths gets incredibly tense. #3-#6 is tight:

Because rankings are based on score ratios, these margins are razor-thin. If Paris All Stars pulls off a win, or even a high-scoring narrow loss, against Crime City at the Antwerp Triple Header, they could steal the #3 spot. Similarly, Nantes is only 10 points behind London Brawling, meaning their direct matchup is likely to dictate who leaves with the #5 rank.

Bubble Bloodbath

While the Top 7 scramble for seeding, the fight for the final tournament spots is terrifying. Helsinki has firmly entrenched themselves as a Top 10 force at #9. However, for teams sitting just outside the top 12, this month is the final genuine opportunity to break the current deadlock. Lomme remains on the edge at #12, with Göteborg sitting just outside the bubble at #13. (Check out our ‘Fire & Ice’ February Review to see how their last matchups went.)

March concludes with EuroClash 2026, where teams like Lomme and Göteborg will have their last chance to fight for that ticket to Namur.

West Track Story 11 (Nantes, France)

With the European rankings tighter than ever, Nantes will host West Track Story 11, a tournament boasting a who’s who of elite talent. The Gymnase du Croissant (We swear, that really is the name. We checked!) will be ground zero for a mathematical scrap between #5 and #6.

Heavyweight Matchups

Nothing Toulouse (#1) vs. Rainy City All Stars (#2)

The undeniable main event of the weekend. Toulouse is sitting on a flawless 13-0 record. Rainy City is out to rain on that parade in particular. (Not sanctioned)

Nantes Duch.es (#6) vs. London Brawling (#5):

Good luck calling this one, it has the potential to be one of THE matchups of the weekend. When they met last April, London managed to pull away with a nail-biting 149-135 victory. With home-track advantage, Nantes will be looking for revenge and a chance to leapfrog Brawling in the standings.

Nantes Duch.es (#6) vs. Rainy City All Stars (#2): A big ask for the hosts. The last time these two met at a previous WTS, Rainy City dominated 193-69. However, Nantes put up 137 points against #1 Toulouse late last year. If they channel that offensive power, they could severely disrupt Rainy City’s GPA.

How to watch: We’ll be keeping our eyes on Nantes’ Youtube channel for any stream news and will share it with you as soon as we can.

Antwerp Triple Header (Antwerp, Belgium)

While Nantes hosts a full-blown, well established tournament, Antwerp Roller Derby is set to host a massive triple-header featuring European heavyweights Crime City Rollers and Paris All Stars. It’s a super tight scenario that could see significant movement at the very top of the table.

Crime City Rollers (#3) vs. Paris All Stars (#4):

All about that bronze. Paris has been on an absolute tear this season. Crime City won the WFTDA European Championships back in 2024, proving their quality. A win for Paris here would be a massive statement and could secure them a top-3 seed for the postseason.

Antwerp Love (#7) vs. Crime City Rollers (#3):

Antwerp is fighting to claw their way back up the rankings. Just looking for some more of that Belgian Bounce. They have been refining their tactical execution but will need to find a way to shut down Crime City’s star jammers early to keep the score differential tight.

Antwerp Love (#7) vs. Paris All Stars (#4):

A brutal endurance test for the hosts. Paris’s relentless offensive style will push Antwerp’s stamina to the limit. Surviving this triple-header with strong score ratios is absolutely vital for protecting Antwerp’s Game Point Average before the April cut off.

Catch it live: Antwerp is blessing us with a free stream over on Twitch (Click Here). Because this is a free broadcast, keep your expectations for production value in check. We’re talking raw, volunteer-powered derby stream energy. No matter the camera angle, you aren’t going to want to miss this.

When the Dust Settles…

By Monday morning, the landscape of European Roller Derby could be fundamentally altered. With the Top 7 teams all clashing on the same weekend, the GPA’s are going to be scrambled, streaks will be broken (or will they?!), and the roadmap to the European Championships in Namur will finally come into focus.

This isn’t just any old weekend of derby; this is a defining moment in the season.

Don’t miss anything!

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