Swiss Rugby has officially announced the 28-player squad selected for their opening match of the Rugby Europe Championship 2026 , as the Edelweiss XV prepare for a campaign that carries more weight than ever before.
Swiss Rugby has officially announced the 28-player squad selected for their opening match of the Rugby Europe Championship 2026, as the Edelweiss XV prepare for a campaign that carries more weight than ever before.
Switzerland begin their Championship journey on Saturday, 8 February 2026, hosting reigning champions Georgia at the Stade Municipal in Yverdon-les-Bains. After a heavy opening defeat to Georgia in the same fixture last year, this match — and the tournament as a whole — will be closely watched as Switzerland confront both progress and peril in Europe’s premier second-tier competition.
The Rugby Europe Championship remains the highest level of European international rugby outside the Six Nations, and with the Finals Day structure now influencing relegation outcomes directly, each result matters. Last season, Switzerland’s campaign was defined early by a heavy loss to Georgia — a game that cast a long shadow over subsequent performances.
This time, with a largely similar core squad but heightened expectations, Swiss rugby faces mounting pressure. No longer is REC participation treated as experimental development — this is about survival, identity, and earning results week-to-week.
If there’s one moment from REC 2025 that lived long in the memory — and on Swiss TV playlists — it’s Jules Porcher’s drop goal against Germany at the death. The strike ignited belief, captured imaginations and became a shorthand for Swiss resilience.
But moments don’t keep teams in the Championship — results do.
Switzerland now need consistency, composure and growth across 80 minutes and 6 matchdays if they’re to establish themselves as a true REC competitor.
Head Coach Oliver Nier has opted for continuity over overhaul, showing confidence in the group that has taken Switzerland this far while still integrating fresh faces and depth where needed. However, with such a small player pool available, vast overhauls are unlikely for some time.
Up front, the pack retains plenty of experience and hard-earned cohesion. In the backs, tactical creativity and physicality are balanced with players who bring both domestic firmness and overseas experience.
This is a squad built for battles, not just lineups. They will have to find a way to replace the stalwart of Cyril Lin, his passion and identity of Swiss Rugby needs to be taken on by someone else in this group!
Here’s Switzerland’s squad for the opening Rugby Europe Championship clash:
Sean Boult – Basel RFC
Louis-Alexandre Chavanon – Servette
Thomas Coignat – RC Nîmes
Antoine Cramont – RC Courbevoie
Paul Davallet – RC Avusy
Antoine Duplan – GC Zürich
Cyril Flückiger – Bourges
Maxence Gisclard – Servette
Willy Gonnet – Servette
Jessy Jegerlehner – Biarritz Olympique
Ahmed Kane – SO Chambéry
Maxime Luçon – CA Pontarlier
William Meyer – Middleton RFC
Blessing Motaung – RC Yverdon
Nicolas Mousties – RC Narbonne
Amael Nicolet – Stade Lausanne RC
Tom Nublat – Valence Romans Drôme
Nathan Pelsy – US Annecy
Louis Pharaony – Stade Lausanne RC
Jules Porcher – Servette
Lilian Rousset – Servette
Lucas Schmid – GC Zürich
Samuel Sjoberg – GC Zürich
Harry Stevens – Stewart’s Melville RFC
Vincent Vial – Valence Romans Drôme
Jorn Vögtli – Oxford Quins RFC
Blane Wilson – GC Zürich
This squad carries a narrative of trust and transition. There are no wholesale changes — Switzerland’s management are banking on familiar structures and established combinations — but key rotation options and depth are included to help grind through a gruelling REC schedule.
Experienced operators like Jules Porcher and Harry Stevens will be crucial for leadership, while players such as Tim Voegtli, Simon Perrod and Jeremy To’a provide size, physicality and defensive grit.
The options on the bench signal an understanding that this Switzerland side must be resilient across all areas — scrum, lineout, midfield collisions, breakdown work and tactical kicking.
Every match in the Championship now feels like a final. With the possibility of relegation tied into the competition format, Switzerland must balance ambition with pragmatism, taking points where they can and staying disciplined in tight phases.
Can Switzerland avoid a slow start like last season?
Do they have the composure to close out tight games?
Will this squad translate flashes of promise into points on the board?
The answers will come on the field — but for the players, coaches and fans, the journey starts now.
Switzerland’s 2026 REC squad selection reflects a belief in continuity, a respect for experience, and a resolve forged from last season’s lessons. With relegation danger lurking and finals day implications on the horizon, this campaign will demand more than effort — it will require consistency, intelligence and belief.
If Switzerland are to secure their place among Europe’s second-tier elite, the performances this time must be tighter, sharper and better managed over 80 minutes.
This is no longer just about growth… it’s about establishing a rugby identity that lasts.