
Rugby's Peace Cup returns: Rotorua v Maniapoto in regional showdown
The 105 year-old Peace Cup is on the line in Rotorua this Saturday. Photo / Ben Fraser
While the Central North Island rugby landscape has changed dramatically over the last century, the legend of the Peace Cup will be kept alive by a one-off game between the Central Bay of Plenty and Maniapoto rugby sub-unions this Saturday.
The match between the Rotorua hosts and the King Country visitors takes place at Marist St Michael's Rugby & Sports Club.
The combined names of the Central Bay of Plenty sub-union, which was constituted from the Rotorua sub-union, have been engraved on the trophy at season's end on 12 occasions.
Rotorua had an unshakeable grip on the Peace Cup after their first victory in 1951.
The side held on to the trophy until Matamata took it in a direct challenge in 1955.
Central Bay of Plenty last lifted the Peace Cup in 2019 when they won the then Challenge trophy in a Stan Meads Cup contest.
Te Awamutu had held the Peace Cup for six seasons before Central Bay of Plenty came out on top with a 38-31 victory.
The Peace Cup visits a Rotorua school in 2004. Photo / NZME
Both sides scored five tries apiece with the difference being the Central Bay sharpshooter, who nailed all five conversions and added a penalty goal.
The first half had been a genuine arm wrestle with the home side holding a 10-7 advantage at the break in play.
Maniapoto have an even longer Peace Cup history than their rivals this weekend, having taken the cup into the summer break at the end of the 1943 rugby season.
The Te Kūiti-based sub-union were a dominant force in the Peace Cup stakes a half century later, after winning and holding the rugby prize between 1991 and 1995.
Last year's holders, Hamilton, have not fielded a team for this year's Peace Cup so Central Bay of Plenty will play Maniapoto for the trophy at Marist St Michaels Rugby & Sports Club at 2pm this Saturday.
'Ugliest' trophy in New Zealand
The Peace Cup trophy can lay claim to being the ugliest trophy in New Zealand sport.
On a permanent tilt, it looks like it has been taken to by a small hammer – and in some ways it has. It's been dragged behind buses, battered, beaten, taped up and thrown out of hotel rooms, while it went missing for 12 years before it was found by a farmer.
Famously, the cup was stolen in 2004.
An excerpt from the New Zealand Rugby Museum website reads: 'It was taken to a preliminary game between Hamilton and Te Awamutu to showcase, and subsequently disappeared without trace at the after-match function.
'A small storm of publicity followed and on the morning of the Peace Cup final, Kit Fawcett answered a knock on his front door.
'While no one was to be seen, a black rubbish bag sat on his doorstep. Inside was the Peace Cup, which was taken to the final.'
PEACE CUP WINNERS 1920 - 2018:
1920 – Thames
1921 – Thames
1922 – Thames
1923 – Hamilton
1924 - Hamilton
1925 - Thames
1926 - Thames
1927 -Hamilton
1928 – Morrinsville
1929 – Hamilton
1930 – Hamilton
1931 – Matamata
1932 – Morrinsville
1933 – Morrinsville
1934 – Matamata
1935 – Morrinsville
1936 – Thames
1937 – Thames
1938 – Morrinsville
1939 – Matamata
1940 – Waahi
1941 – Pukekohe
1942 – Pukekohe
1943 – Maniapoto
1944 – Hamilton
1945 – Morrinsville
1946 – Morrinsville
1947 – Morrinsville
1948 - Hauraki
1949 – Thames
1950 – Hauraki
1951 – Rotorua
1952 – Rotorua
1953 – Rotorua
1954 v Rotorua
1955 – Matamata
1956 – Thames
1957 – Rotorua
1958 – Paeroa
1959 – Morrinsville
1960 – Morrinsville
1961 – Matamata
1962 – Paeroa
1963 – South Waikato
1964 – South Waikato
1965 – South Waikato
1966 – Thames
1967 – Te Awamutu
1968 – South Waikato
1969 – South Waikato
1970 – Cambridge
1971 – Rotorua
1972 – Rotorua
1973 – Rotorua
1974 – Morrinsville
1975 – Te Awamutu
1976 – Te Awamutu
1977 – South Waikato
1978 – Hamilton
1979 – South Waikato
1980 – Tauranga
1981 – Te Puke
1982 – Tauranga
1983 – Tauranga
1984 – South Waikato
1985 – South Waikato
1986 – Tauranga
1987 – Te Awamutu
1988 – Te Awamutu
1989 – Te Awamutu
1990 – Te Awamutu
1991 – Maniapoto
1992 – Maniapoto
1993 – Ōtorohanga
1994 – Maniapoto
1995 – Maniapoto
1996 – Matamata
1997 – Matamata
1998 – Te Awamutu
1999 – Western Bay of Plenty
2000 – Western Bay of Plenty
2001 – Central Bay of Plenty
2002 – Hamilton
2003 – Hamilton
2004 – Central Bay of Plenty
2005 – Te Awamutu
2006 – Te Awamutu
2007 – Hamilton
2008 – Hamilton
2009-2018 – Te Awamutu
2019 – Central Bay of Plenty
2020-2024 – Hamilton
– SUPPLIED CONTENT
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NZ Herald
8 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Warriors v Bulldogs: Warriors fans tipped to outnumber Bulldogs faithful in top-four NRL clash
The Warriors faithful have been tipped to outnumber Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs supporters in their away top-four NRL blockbuster in Sydney. The Auckland-based franchise has suffered two crushing blows in the past two weeks, losing to the Gold Coast Titans and Redcliffe Dolphins in back-to-back home games at Go Media Stadium. But

1News
12 hours ago
- 1News
Trackhouse signs Shane van Gisbergen to multiyear NASCAR extension
After making the NASCAR Cup Series playoffs as a rookie, Shane van Gisbergen has earned a multiyear extension with Trackhouse Racing. The team announced Friday that the Kiwi would continue "for years to come". No further terms were released. With victories from the pole position at Mexico City, Chicago and Sonoma Raceway, van Gisbergen has secured the fourth seed in the 2025 playoffs with three races remaining in the regular season. "I feel like Trackhouse Racing is my home," van Gisbergen, 36, said in a release. After winning three championships in the Australian-based Supercars series, van Gisbergen was hired by Trackhouse two years ago as part of its Project 91 program to showcase international drivers in NASCAR's premier series. ADVERTISEMENT At the inaugural Chicago Street Race in July 2023, van Gisbergen became the first driver to win in his Cup debut since Johnny Rutherford in 1963. Van Gisbergen moved to NASCAR last year and made the Xfinity Series playoffs with two victories for Kaulig Racing. He moved up to Cup with Trackhouse this year in the No. 88 Chevrolet and became the winningest foreign-born driver in NASCAR history. In Monday's race at Watkins Glen International, van Gisbergen will seek to join Chase Elliott and Jeff Gordon as the only drivers with four consecutive Cup wins on road or street courses. "We are getting to watch one of the superstars of racing," Trackhouse Racing founder Justin Marks said in a release. "What we are asking him to do carries a high degree of difficulty. He's moved to the other side of the world, learned a new form of racing and at times dominated the competition. He's one of the greatest." No. 1 Chevy driver Ross Chastain and van Gisbergen are under contract for 2026, but Trackhouse has yet to announce who will drive its third car with Daniel Suarez leaving the No. 99 Chevrolet after the season. Xfinity Series points leader Connor Zilisch, who has five wins for JR Motorsports, will make his fourth Cup start Sunday for Trackhouse Racing and has been mentioned as a prime candidate to fill Suarez's ride.


NZ Herald
a day ago
- NZ Herald
Rugby's Peace Cup returns: Rotorua v Maniapoto in regional showdown
There has been almost unbroken competition for the rugby prize, except for 2006, with the Thames Valley, Waikato, Bay of Plenty and King Country sub-union representative sides engaging in Peace Cup battles. The 105 year-old Peace Cup is on the line in Rotorua this Saturday. Photo / Ben Fraser While the Central North Island rugby landscape has changed dramatically over the last century, the legend of the Peace Cup will be kept alive by a one-off game between the Central Bay of Plenty and Maniapoto rugby sub-unions this Saturday. The match between the Rotorua hosts and the King Country visitors takes place at Marist St Michael's Rugby & Sports Club. The combined names of the Central Bay of Plenty sub-union, which was constituted from the Rotorua sub-union, have been engraved on the trophy at season's end on 12 occasions. Rotorua had an unshakeable grip on the Peace Cup after their first victory in 1951. The side held on to the trophy until Matamata took it in a direct challenge in 1955. Central Bay of Plenty last lifted the Peace Cup in 2019 when they won the then Challenge trophy in a Stan Meads Cup contest. Te Awamutu had held the Peace Cup for six seasons before Central Bay of Plenty came out on top with a 38-31 victory. The Peace Cup visits a Rotorua school in 2004. Photo / NZME Both sides scored five tries apiece with the difference being the Central Bay sharpshooter, who nailed all five conversions and added a penalty goal. The first half had been a genuine arm wrestle with the home side holding a 10-7 advantage at the break in play. Maniapoto have an even longer Peace Cup history than their rivals this weekend, having taken the cup into the summer break at the end of the 1943 rugby season. The Te Kūiti-based sub-union were a dominant force in the Peace Cup stakes a half century later, after winning and holding the rugby prize between 1991 and 1995. Last year's holders, Hamilton, have not fielded a team for this year's Peace Cup so Central Bay of Plenty will play Maniapoto for the trophy at Marist St Michaels Rugby & Sports Club at 2pm this Saturday. 'Ugliest' trophy in New Zealand The Peace Cup trophy can lay claim to being the ugliest trophy in New Zealand sport. On a permanent tilt, it looks like it has been taken to by a small hammer – and in some ways it has. It's been dragged behind buses, battered, beaten, taped up and thrown out of hotel rooms, while it went missing for 12 years before it was found by a farmer. Famously, the cup was stolen in 2004. An excerpt from the New Zealand Rugby Museum website reads: 'It was taken to a preliminary game between Hamilton and Te Awamutu to showcase, and subsequently disappeared without trace at the after-match function. 'A small storm of publicity followed and on the morning of the Peace Cup final, Kit Fawcett answered a knock on his front door. 'While no one was to be seen, a black rubbish bag sat on his doorstep. Inside was the Peace Cup, which was taken to the final.' PEACE CUP WINNERS 1920 - 2018: 1920 – Thames 1921 – Thames 1922 – Thames 1923 – Hamilton 1924 - Hamilton 1925 - Thames 1926 - Thames 1927 -Hamilton 1928 – Morrinsville 1929 – Hamilton 1930 – Hamilton 1931 – Matamata 1932 – Morrinsville 1933 – Morrinsville 1934 – Matamata 1935 – Morrinsville 1936 – Thames 1937 – Thames 1938 – Morrinsville 1939 – Matamata 1940 – Waahi 1941 – Pukekohe 1942 – Pukekohe 1943 – Maniapoto 1944 – Hamilton 1945 – Morrinsville 1946 – Morrinsville 1947 – Morrinsville 1948 - Hauraki 1949 – Thames 1950 – Hauraki 1951 – Rotorua 1952 – Rotorua 1953 – Rotorua 1954 v Rotorua 1955 – Matamata 1956 – Thames 1957 – Rotorua 1958 – Paeroa 1959 – Morrinsville 1960 – Morrinsville 1961 – Matamata 1962 – Paeroa 1963 – South Waikato 1964 – South Waikato 1965 – South Waikato 1966 – Thames 1967 – Te Awamutu 1968 – South Waikato 1969 – South Waikato 1970 – Cambridge 1971 – Rotorua 1972 – Rotorua 1973 – Rotorua 1974 – Morrinsville 1975 – Te Awamutu 1976 – Te Awamutu 1977 – South Waikato 1978 – Hamilton 1979 – South Waikato 1980 – Tauranga 1981 – Te Puke 1982 – Tauranga 1983 – Tauranga 1984 – South Waikato 1985 – South Waikato 1986 – Tauranga 1987 – Te Awamutu 1988 – Te Awamutu 1989 – Te Awamutu 1990 – Te Awamutu 1991 – Maniapoto 1992 – Maniapoto 1993 – Ōtorohanga 1994 – Maniapoto 1995 – Maniapoto 1996 – Matamata 1997 – Matamata 1998 – Te Awamutu 1999 – Western Bay of Plenty 2000 – Western Bay of Plenty 2001 – Central Bay of Plenty 2002 – Hamilton 2003 – Hamilton 2004 – Central Bay of Plenty 2005 – Te Awamutu 2006 – Te Awamutu 2007 – Hamilton 2008 – Hamilton 2009-2018 – Te Awamutu 2019 – Central Bay of Plenty 2020-2024 – Hamilton – SUPPLIED CONTENT