The
Super 10 was a
rugby union tournament featuring ten teams from
Australia,
New Zealand,
South Africa,
Tonga and
Western Samoa, which ran for three years from
1993 to
1995. It was the predecessor of Super 12 and Super 14, now known as
Super Rugby.
History
The Super 10 replaced the
South Pacific Championship,
CANZ Series and
Super Six tournaments which had been organized by the Australian and New Zealand rugby unions during the 1980s and early 1990s. With South Africa being readmitted into international sport due to the dismantling of
apartheid (both
The Wallabies and the
All Blacks toured South Africa during 1992), there was an opportunity to launch an expanded competition also featuring South Africa's top provincial teams. The
South African Broadcasting Corporation's
Top Sport channel committed to a three year sponsorship of the competition, allowing it to be launched.
The official declaration of professionalism in rugby union in August 1995 led to a reworking of the competition.
SANZAR, a partnership between the
South African Rugby Union, the
New Zealand Rugby Union and the
Australian Rugby Union was formed, and in association with
Rupert Murdoch's
News Limited, they created the
Super 12. This fully professional competition featured teams from Australia, New Zealand and South Africa only, with one more team from each country being admitted, and was launched in 1996.
Past winners
Winners by year:
Organization
The ten teams for the competition were arranged as...
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