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Ranfurly Shield

New Zealand Rugby union football trophy

Ranfurly Shield

New Zealand Rugby union football trophy

FieldValue
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abovestylebackground-color:#EEDD82
aboveclasssummary
aboveRanfurly Shield
headerstylebackground-color:#EEDD82
labelstylewidth:33%;
image[[File:Ranfurlyshield.jpg150pxalt=The Ranfurly Shield]]
label1Sport
data1Rugby union
label2Presented by
data2New Zealand Rugby Union
label3Type
data3Provincial challenge trophy
label4First contested
data41904
label5Current holder
data5
label6Official website
data6provincial.rugby/ranfurly-shield
label7Current season
data7[](ranfurly-shield-2020-29-currentyear)

The Ranfurly Shield, colloquially known as the Log o' Wood, is a trophy in New Zealand's domestic rugby union competition. First played for in 1904, the Shield is based on a challenge system. The holding union must defend the shield in challenge matches, which are usually played at the shield holder's home venue, and if the challenger is successful in their challenge they will become the new holder of the Shield. There is a tradition for the first challenges of a new rugby season to be played against smaller associations from the Heartland Championship.

Although the professional era of rugby has seen other competitions, such as the NPC and Super Rugby, detracting from the pre-eminence of the Ranfurly Shield, many regard it as the greatest prize in New Zealand domestic rugby. This is mainly due to its long history, the fact that every challenge is a sudden-death defence of the Shield, and that any team has a chance to win.

The Shield is currently held by , who won it from in a 38–36 victory on 20 September 2025.

Canterbury hold the record of the highest number of successful Ranfurly Shield challenges with 17 wins, one more than . hold the record of the shortest Ranfurly Shield reign (six days).

History

In 1901 the Governor of New Zealand, The 5th Earl of Ranfurly, announced that he would present a cup to the New Zealand Rugby Football Union to be used as the prize in a competition of their choosing. When the trophy, a shield, arrived, the NZRFU decided that it would be awarded to the union with the best record in the 1902 season, and thenceforth be the subject of a challenge system. Auckland, unbeaten in 1902, was presented with the shield. The shield was designed as a trophy for association football, not rugby. The picture in the centrepiece was a soccer one, and was modified by adding goal posts on the soccer goal in the picture to create a rugby scene. The alterations to the centrepiece are still apparent.

Auckland were on tour in 1903 and did not play any home games, and thus did not have to defend the Shield. Their first defence was against Wellington in 1904, and was unsuccessful.

Since the introduction of the National Provincial Championship in 1976, all home games a Shield-holder plays in the NPC or Heartland Championship, during league play are automatically challenge matches.

Ranfurly Shield Visit to Shannon 1927

Auckland holds the record for the greatest number of consecutive Shield defences, 61 matches between 14 September 1985 and 18 September 1993. During this period Auckland took the Shield on tour to provincial unions that, mainly for financial reasons, would be unlikely to be able to mount a challenge for the trophy. While dismissed by some critics, usually because of the one-sided scores, it was mostly regarded as a success by those involved.

In 1994 when Canterbury wrested the Shield from Waikato, it was in battered condition, with large cracks, chips and peeled varnish. Nearly a century of use had taken its toll. Canterbury player Chris England, skilled in woodwork, fully renovated it, bringing it back into pristine condition.

In 2023 the Shield was restored over nine months by Tri Peek in Waikanae, Wellington, who had been repairing the trophy for several years before the full restoration decision. The original Oak shield was replaced with English Oak from the Hutt Valley in New Zealand, seasoned for 5 years. The badges, already recently replaced in 2012 were moved to the new shield.

The old Shield, which had gradually become worn down by 118 years of handling and an untold number of celebrations, has been blessed and decommissioned by NZ Rugby Māori cultural adviser Luke Crawford, recognising its status as a taonga in rugby. The replacement shield was accidentally broken after being dropped on a concrete floor in September 2023 just after Hawke's Bay had won it from Wellington.

Challenges

The Shield holder at the end of each season is required to accept at least seven challenges for the following year. All home games during league play, but not during knockout playoffs, in the NPC or Heartland Championship are automatic challenges. The remaining shield defences must be made up of challenges from unions in the other domestic competition. For example, since North Harbour, an Air New Zealand Cup (now NPC) team, held the Shield at the end of the 2006 Cup season despite losing their home quarter-final to Otago, they were forced to defend the Shield against Heartland Championship teams during the 2007 pre-season. Having successfully done so, all their home fixtures in the round-robin phase were Shield defences until they lost the shield to Waikato.

The Shield-holder is never forced to defend the Shield in an away match, although they may choose to, as Auckland, for example, did on a number of occasions during their record tenure between 1985 and 1993. In 2008, Auckland played both their mandatory defences against Heartland teams on the road.

If a challenger successfully takes the Shield, all of their home matches for the rest of the season are defences of it.

Proposed rule changes

In August 2008, the New Zealand Rugby Union released a competitions review that proposed dramatic changes to the Shield rules:

  • Once a team has successfully defended the Shield four times, all of the holder's subsequent matches in league play would be mandatory defences, whether home or away. The Shield will not be at stake in semifinals or finals.
  • If an Air New Zealand Cup team holds the Shield at the end of the league season, that season's winners of the Meads Cup and Lochore Cup, the two trophies contested in the second-level Heartland Championship, will receive automatic challenges in the following year.

The changes were not implemented but did receive support from Auckland, which held the Shield when the NZRU released its report.

Current teams

Just under half of the unions that can contest for the Ranfurly Shield do not have an alias. South Canterbury's emblem is their own Coat of Arms. But a soldier represents their green and black colour and current mascot, Tim and Ru. The mascots were originally used during wartime and were created by Ronald Murray. Many of the unions below have this situation, like Poverty Bay's Weka, it resembles their mascot after the 2011 squads post-match photo after the Lochore Cup final.

TeamEstablishedclass="unsortable"Aliasclass="unsortable"Areaclass="unsortable"StadiaFirst held
Auckland
A.R.U
Buller
B.R.U
Bay of Plenty
B.O.P.R.U
Canterbury
C.R.F.U
Counties Manukau
C.M.R.F.U
East Coast
E.C.R.F.U
Hawke's Bay
H.B.R.U
Horowhenua Kapiti
H.K.R.F.U
King Country
K.C.R.F.U
Manawatu
M.R.U
Mid Canterbury
M.C.R.U
Northland
N.R.U
North Harbour
N.H.R.U
North Otago
N.O.R.F.U
Otago
O.R.F.U
Poverty Bay
P.B.R.F.U
Southland
R.S
South Canterbury
S.C.R.F.U
Taranaki
T.R.F.U
Tasman
T.R.U
Thames Valley
T.V.R.F.U
Waikato
W.R.U
Wairarapa Bush
W.B.R.F.U
Whanganui
W.R.F.U
Wellington
W.R.F.U
West Coast
W.C.R.U

Results

MatchDateHolderScoreChallengerVenueDefences
1
6
30
37
53
55
58
83
86
89
91
100
104
106
122
125
127
132
141
142
148
160
179
180
181
182
185
192
193
200
206
230
235
237
251
  • Wairarapa's 1927-era saw them lose to Hawke's Bay 21–10 at Solway Showgrounds Oval, but was subsequently awarded the shield back on a residential breach.
Ranfurly Shield holdersUnionWonSuccessful defences
5 September 19590
23 September 19592
20 August 19601
31 August 196025
31 August 19630
7 September 196315
11 September 19653
27 August 19660
24 September 196621
27 September 19699
28 August 19711
18 September 19716
26 August 19720
5 September 19722
28 July 19736
17 August 19741
3 September 19741
21 September 197410
21 August 197613
12 September 19785
21 September 19796
7 September 19808
1 August 19814
18 September 198225
14 September 198561
18 September 19935
3 September 19949
23 September 19953
24 August 19961
8 September 19961
4 October 19966
5 October 199721
23 September 200023
11 October 20032
15 August 20041
5 September 200414
24 September 20063
24 August 20070
1 September 20071
29 September 20075
20 September 20085
29 August 20094
22 October 20096
9 October 20102
23 July 20112
24 August 20117
3 October 20124
23 August 20130
1 September 20130
7 September 20136
30 August 201411
9 October 20156
28 September 20167
6 October 20174
9 September 20182
13 October 20186
28 September 20192
19 September 20200
27 September 20200
4 October 202014
17 September 20227
30 September 20234
7 September 20242
6 October 20243
23 August 20250
31 August 20250
6 September 20251
****20 September 20251

Overall records

TeamWinsSuccessful defencesAverage defences
171428.35
161489.25
12594.92
11484.36
8496.13
8394.88
8232.88
77610.86
4143.50
3103.33
210.5
11313
166
166
133
122
122
111

Last updated: after Otago successfully defended the Shield on 27 September 2025.

References

  1. "Ranfurly Shield".
  2. (20 September 2025). "Otago snatch Ranfurly Shield off Canterbury on the back of second half surge". [[Stuff (website).
  3. (6 September 2025). "Ranfurly Shield rugby live updates: Southland v Canterbury". Radio New Zealand.
  4. (6 September 2025). "Ranfurly Shield: Canterbury end Southland’s short reign with Log o’ Wood". NZ Herald.
  5. Chester, Rod. (1987). "The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Rugby". Moa Publications.
  6. According to Dunedin engraver Brian Swan, who noted the "very low" crossbar in the centrepiece scene, quoted in "Shield victory recalls origins of famous rugby trophy" by anonymous columnist '[[Prester John]]' in ''[[Otago Daily Times]]'', 31 August 2013, p.35 (not published online).
  7. (2023). "2023 NZR Competitions Regulations Handbook". New Zealand Rugby Union.
  8. Howitt, Bob. (1992). "Radio New Zealand Sport Rugby Annual 1992". Moa Beckett.
  9. McLean, Glenn. (29 September 2011). "Ranfurly Shield runs out of room".
  10. Cully, Paul. (18 August 2023). "A new Log 'o Wood: Ranfurly Shield undergoes major restoration as old version is retired".
  11. Reive, Christopher. (1 October 2023). "Hawke's Bay Rugby Union says 'genuine accident' cause of broken Ranfurly Shield".
  12. (6 December 2007). "Auckland accepts two Ranfurly Shield challenges".
  13. (1 September 2013). "Hawke's Bay claim Ranfurly Shield glory". Fairfax NZ News.
  14. (24 February 2013). "Mascots back in green and black".
  15. (8 October 2011). "Lochore Cup Final - South Canterbury v Poverty Bay".
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