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Meads Cup
New Zealand rugby union trophy
New Zealand rugby union trophy
The Meads Cup is a rugby union trophy named after King Country and All Blacks player Colin Meads. It is contested during the Heartland Championship. It was first awarded in 2006, when the Heartland Championship format was introduced.
Competition
Regular season
At present, all 12 Heartland Championship teams play 8 games over 8 weeks before the finals. Once finished, the top 4 advance to the Meads Cup finals. The teams ranked 5–8 play for the Lochore Cup. Previously, a pool system was used between 2006 and 2010.
Finals
The Meads Cup winner is determined in four-team single-elimination tournament. The semi-final matchups are seeded 1–4 and 2–3, with the higher seed receiving home field advantage. The highest remaining seed hosts the Meads Cup final.
Winners
| Year | Winner | Score | Runner-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Wairarapa Bush | 16–14 | Wanganui |
| 2007 | North Otago | 25–8 | Wanganui |
| 2008 | Wanganui | 27–12 | Mid Canterbury |
| 2009 | Wanganui | 34–13 | Mid Canterbury |
| 2010 | North Otago | 39–18 | Wanganui |
| 2011 | Wanganui | 30–10 | East Coast |
| 2012 | East Coast | 29–27 | Wanganui |
| 2013 | Mid Canterbury | 26–20 | North Otago |
| 2014 | Mid Canterbury | 36–13 | Buller |
| 2015 | Whanganui | 28–11 | South Canterbury |
| 2016 | Whanganui | 20–18 | Buller |
| 2017 | Whanganui | 30–14 | Horowhenua-Kapiti |
| 2018 | Thames Valley | 17–12 | South Canterbury |
| 2019 | North Otago | 33–19 | Whanganui |
| 2021 | South Canterbury | 35–16 | Thames Valley |
| 2022 | South Canterbury | 47–36 | Whanganui |
| 2023 | South Canterbury | 40–30 | Whanganui |
| 2024 | Thames Valley | 37–29 | Mid Canterbury |
| 2025 | Mid Canterbury | 21-18 | Thames Valley |
In 2020 no competition was held due to COVID-19.
References
References
- (22 October 2022). "Meads Cup and Lochore Cup finals: Team Lists".
- "Whanganui fall short in Meads Cup final to South Canterbury".
- (14 October 2023). "South Canterbury make it a three-peat in the Meads Cup".
- "The Waikato Times".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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