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Currie Cup




The Currie Cup Tournament is South Africa 's premier domestic Rugby Union competition, featuring teams representing either entire provinces or substantial regions within provinces.


HISTORY

The competition had its humble beginnings as an inter-town competition in 1884 , but when the South African Rugby Board was founded in 1889 it was decided to organise a national competition that would involve representative teams from all the major unions. The participating unions were Western Province , Griqualand West , Transvaal and Eastern Province . The first tournament was held in Kimberley and was won by Western Province. As prize they received a silver cup donated by the South African Rugby Board, now displayed at the SA Rugby Museum in Cape Town .

When the first overseas team to tour South Africa stepped ashore in 1891 they carried with them a particularly precious bit of cargo. Among the bags, boots and balls was a golden cup given to the British Isles squad by Sir Donald Currie , owner of Union-Castle Lines , the shipping company that transported them to the southern tip of Africa. The gold trophy was donated by Sir Donald Currie in 1891 before the arrival of the touring British Isles team. Sir Donald was clear with his instructions – hand this trophy over to the team in South Africa that gives you the best game and after a spirited display, Griqualand West became the first ever holders of the Currie Cup. To this day the trophy remains the holy grail of South African rugby. They then donated the trophy to the rugby board, and it became the prize for the Currie Cup competition. The inaugural Currie Cup tournament was held in 1892 with Western Province as the first winners.

While local unions battled for the Currie Cup from 1892 onwards it would take decades for an annual competition to be established. After years of occasional tournaments, dominated by Western Province, South Africa’s premiere provincial spectacle kicked off in earnest in 1968.

That year the Blue Bulls of Northern Transvaal, spearheaded by the legendary lock Frik du Preez, trampled neighbours Transvaal 16-3 in the final, heralding a period of overall dominance that has seen the men from Pretoria win the Currie Cup 16 times and share it on three occasions. This outstanding record is in no small part down to the most influential player to ever star in the competition – fly-half extraordinaire Naas Botha. Dictating play with supreme tactical awareness throughout a career that spanned three decades, Botha single-handedly kicked teams into submission, scoring all the Blue Bulls’ points (including four drop-goals) in 1987 as Transvaal were beaten 24-18 in the final.

Since the Currie Cup became an annual competition only one team has seriously challenged the Bulls’ supremacy – arch rivals Western Province. Wild parties broke out all over Cape Town when WP thrashed Northern Transvaal 24-7 in the 1982 final to kick-start their own golden age. Currie Cup heroes like Faffa Knoetze, Calla Scholtz and steam-rolling wing Neil Burger insured the trophy remained in the shadow of Table Mountain for a further four years before again heading north.

At the turn of the decade South African supporters were treated to two of the most memorable Currie Cup finals. In 1989 winger Carel du Plessis scored a last-minute try as WP managed to draw with the Blue Bulls 16-all.

The following year most people believed Northern Transvaal just needed to turn up to beat Natal. The banana boys made sure the Blue Bulls slipped up, though, as they snuck home 18-12, inspired by fly-half Joel Stransky.

The 1990s saw further improvement by Natal and the rise of Francois Pienaar’s Transvaal but, from the moment the Springboks were allowed back into the international fold in 1992, the significance of the Currie Cup steadily started to diminish.

These days the competition lags well behind the Super 12 and Tri-Nations in the order of importance for most of South Africa’s top players. Still, look at the toothy grins in the Blue Bulls camp as the team lifted the trophy for the third time in a row in 2004 and it’s clear that getting your hands on Sir Donald Currie’s golden cup is still mighty special.

In 2005, the Freestate won the Currie cup for the first time in 29 years. The Bulls came on a runners up, but nevertheless proved their worthiness in the Super 12


TEAMS

Currently, South Africa is divided into 14 unions. Four draw players from an entire province:

The Eastern Cape Province contains two unions:

as does Free State Province :

Western Cape Province has three unions:

Gauteng Province has two unions that draw exclusively from portions of that province:

Finally, one union draws players from part of Gauteng plus the entirety of another province:


COMPETITION FORMAT


WINNERS

  • 1889 Western Province (SARB Trophy)

  • 1892 Western Province

  • 1894 Western Province

  • 1895 Western Province

  • 1897 Western Province

  • 1898 Western Province

  • 1899 Griqualand West (WP and Transvaal did not compete)

  • 1904 Western Province

  • 1906 Western Province

  • 1908 Western Province

  • 1911 Griqualand West

  • 1914 Western Province

  • 1920 Western Province

  • 1922 Transvaal

  • 1925 Western Province

  • 1927 Western Province

  • 1929 Western Province

  • 1932 Border and Western Province

  • 1934 Border and Western Province

  • 1936 Western Province

  • 1939 Transvaal

  • 1946 Northern Transvaal

  • 1947 Western Province

  • 1950 Transvaal

  • 1952 Transvaal

  • 1954 Western Province

  • 1956 Northern Transvaal

  • 1957/59 Western Province (Contested over two seasons)

  • 1964 Western Province

  • 1966 Western Province

  • 1968 Northern Transvaal

  • 1969 Northern Transvaal

  • 1970 Griqualand West

  • 1971 Northern Transvaal and Transvaal

  • 1972 Transvaal

  • 1973 Northern Transvaal

  • 1974 Northern Transvaal

  • 1975 Northern Transvaal

  • 1976 Orange Free State

  • 1977 Northern Transvaal

  • 1978 Northern Transvaal

  • 1979 Northern Transvaal and Western Province

  • 1980 Northern Transvaal

  • 1981 Northern Transvaal

  • 1982 Western Province

  • 1983 Western Province

  • 1984 Western Province

  • 1985 Western Province

  • 1986 Western Province

  • 1987 Northern Transvaal

  • 1988 Northern Transvaal

  • 1989 Northern Transvaal and Western Province

  • 1990 Natal Sharks

  • 1991 Northern Transvaal

  • 1992 Natal Sharks

  • 1993 Transvaal

  • 1994 Transvaal

  • 1995 Natal Sharks

  • 1996 Natal Sharks

  • 1997 Western Province

  • 1998 Blue Bulls1

  • 1999 Gauteng Lions2

  • 2000 Western Province

  • 2001 Western Province

  • 2002 Blue Bulls

  • 2003 Blue Bulls

  • 2004 Blue Bulls

  • 2005 Free State Cheetahs3


  • 1.Northern Transvaal were renamed the Blue Bulls

  • 2.Transvaal were renamed the Gauteng Lions; now known as Golden Lions

  • 3.Orange Free State were renamed the Free State Cheetahs



OVERALL WINNERS (UP TO 2005)

  • Western Province: 32 times (four times shared)

  • Blue Bulls: 21 times (three times shared)

  • Lions: 9 (once shared)

  • Natal: 4

  • Griqualand West: 3

  • Border: 2 (twice shared)

  • Free State: 2



RECORDS

Most career points
  • Naas Botha (Northern Transvaal) 1699


Most career tries
  • Chris Badenhorst (Free State 1986-1999) 64


Most individual points in a season
  • Johan Heunis (Northern Transvaal - 1989) 268


Most team points in a season
  • Natal Sharks 792 (1996)


Most individual tries in a season
  • Carel Du Plessis (Western Province) 19


Most team tries in a season
  • Natal Sharks 112 (1996)


Most points in match
  • Jannie De Beer 46


Most tries in a match
  • Jacques Olivier 7 v SWD in 1996


Most Final appearances
  • Burger Geldenhuys 11 (between 1977 & 1989)

  • Naas Botha 11 (between 1977 & 1991)



EXTERNAL LINKS