'Leave them at home': Cowbells a no-no at Super Rugby Pacific final
Photosport
The Crusaders don't want any Chiefs fans to bring cowbells to the Super Rugby Pacific final in Christchurch on Saturday.
The final is set up as the perfect crescendo to a compelling 2025 season, with the Chiefs, the number one ranked team in the round robin and second ranked Crusaders to duke it out.
The Crusaders have never lost a playoff match. Since Super Rugby began in 1996, they've gone unbeaten in 31 home finals and playoff games across three decades.
For the last 14 years, the 17,000-capacity Apollo Projects stadium has hosted the Crusaders but the franchise is set to move to the much bigger One New Zealand Te Kaha Stadium, when it opens next year.
In a LinkedIn post, Crusaders CEO Colin Mansbridge said Chiefs fans were welcome, but not their noisy cowbells.
"There's also the fact that it's tight. It's not FMG (Farmers Mutual Group) Stadium or Eden Park, New Zealand. It's tight. It's compact and there's just enough room to wave a really thin flag. There ain't no room to swing a bloody big cowbell and take out the person sitting in the seat beside you.
"This is going to be a game for the ages. It's going to be a game for fans to enjoy. All Chiefs Rugby Club fans are hugely welcome to come and enjoy the venue."
"No cowbells.
"I'll be asking Venues Ōtautahi to melt them down at the gate. So, seriously, leave them at home!"
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

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

RNZ News
17 minutes ago
- RNZ News
Girls dropping out of sport much more often than boys
Photo: RNZ / Tim Brown By age 14, girls are dropping out of sport at twice the rate of boys, a new study has found. The study found that in New Zealand, 95 percent of girls aged 11 to 17 aren't active enough, and by 17 they spend 28 percent less time being active than boys. Sports psychologist Dom Vettise said many girls he has worked with with feel discouraged by failure. He said during puberty there are significant differences between boys and girls. "Boys experience it as a time of strength whereas girls probably experience it more as a time of being self conscious and as a result try and increase perfectionism and internalise their stress and are really comparing themselves a lot more to others," Vettise told RNZ. Vettise suggested parents and coaches should focus on effort over outcome, and normalise showing courage during difficult moments. He said there were also still some societal pressures. "Sport is still built up to be competitive, and at that age where girls are looking for a place to belong and safe it doesn't quite align, and as a result we see them drop out more than boys. "It is essential that we see sport as a place to build that confidence, that resilience and that self belonging." Vettise said girls shouldn't be thinking that it has to be entirely about competition and parents can play their part there also. "What I've heard from a lot of girls, which is heartbreaking, is that 'my parents love me more when I do better at my sport'. With boys it might be about outcome, but with girls the focus needs to be more about effort over outcome, reinforcing the concept of courage." He said supporters should also back up the idea that mistakes provide an opportunity to learn. "Rather than talking about outcome, asking questions about who they enjoyed playing with and what did they learn." Vettise said it was also important that New Zealand's top female athletes get their message out to girls. "A lot of their messages are around variety and being confident in themselves and trying a lot of different things." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Sports Chat for 21 August 2025
Sports Chat with Nathan Rarere. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
Athletics: Tom Walsh pipped for podium in Switzerland
Tom Walsh during the Athletics Diamond League Silesia meeting, 2025. Photo: JAKUB PORZYCKI / AFP New Zealand shot putter Tom Walsh has finished fourth at the latest Diamond League meeting in Lausanne, missing the podium by just two centimetres. The indoor world champion recorded a best throw of 21.47m, just short of American Adrian Piperi's 21.49m, which was good enough for bronze. Piperi recorded his biggest distance with his final throw, pushing Walsh out of the bronze medal position. Walsh's best was 22cm short of his season best. American Olympic silver medallist Joe Kovacs won gold with a distance of 22.04m, and Italian Leonardo Fabbri took silver with 21.77m. Walsh will compete in the Diamond League finals in Zurich next week. The Swiss meeting was held in torrential rain, which forced an early finish to the non-Diamond League women's pole vault. New Zealand's Olivia McTaggart was one of five athletes who cleared 4.35m before the competition was called off. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.