In association football, two-legged ties are used in the later stages of many international club tournaments, including the
UEFA Champions League and the
Copa Libertadores; in many domestic cup competitions, including the
Coppa Italia and the
Copa del Rey; in domestic league play-offs, including the
English Football League play-offs; and in national-team playoffs in some qualification tournaments, including
FIFA World Cup qualification. In
ice hockey, the
National Hockey League used two-game, total-goals series in the early years of its playoffs. It applied to all its playoffs from
1918 to
1926, and the early rounds until
1937, when it completed the switch to best-of-
n series;
Rendez-vous '87 (which pitted a team of NHL All-Stars against the
Soviet Union) was the only two-legged tie to be held in the league's history after 1937. The
NCAA Men's Ice Hockey Championship also used a two-game total goals format for much of its history. The
Champions Hockey League has been using two-legged ties for its playoffs (except for the final) since its first season in 2015. In
rugby union, two-legged matches are used in the qualifying stages of the
Rugby World Cup. The semifinals of the Italian
National Championship of Excellence are also two-legged, as are the semifinals and final of England's second-tier league, the
RFU Championship. In
basketball, the two top European club competitions, the
Euroleague and
Eurocup, both use two-legged ties in the qualifying rounds that determine the clubs advancing to each competition's group phase. The Eurocup also uses two-legged ties in its quarterfinal round, which will be a separate phase of the competition starting in
2009–10. The French
Pro A league used two-legged ties in all of its playoff rounds, except for the one-off final, until the 2006–07 season. At that time, all of its playoff rounds leading up to the final, which remained a single match through 2011–12, were changed to best-of-three series. The final changed to best-of-five starting in 2012–13. Other the seasons,
Gaelic football, two-legged finals were used for five seasons of the
National Football League, the last in
1988–89. The
International Rules Series was also two-legged in 1998–2013 and from 2017 onward. In
Canadian football, two-legged total point series were occasionally used by the
Canadian Football League and their predecessor leagues in the postseason, most recently in the
1986 playoffs. In
Arena football, the playoff semifinals (but not the
Arena Bowl itself) are decided, as of the
2018 season, by a two-legged total points playoff. In one 2018 semifinal, the first game ended in a tie, and went to overtime. However, the winner of the second game won by a larger margin (within regulation time) and was awarded overall victory based on total aggregate points. In
volleyball, two-legged ties are used e.g. in the
CEV Champions League. The team earning more points wins the tie. A win with 3–0 or 3–1 sets scores three points for the winner, a 3–2 gives two points for the winner, one for the loser. If both teams are equal on points after the second match, a single
golden set is played immediately after the second match to determine the winner of the tie. In
handball, two-legged ties with aggreate scores are used in competitions like the
EHF Champions League or the qualification to the
World Men's and
Women's Championships. Outside of sports, the American game show
Jeopardy! have used the two-legged tie in the final round of tournament play at some point in their history. ==Tiebreaking==