Rugby League Cup Auckland and
Wellington both unsuccessfully challenged
Canterbury for the Rugby League Cup during the season. First, Wellington were thrashed 72–14 by Cup holders Canterbury on
Anzac Day. The Wellington side was weakened the day before the match when the four
Hutt Valley Firehawks players selected withdrew after a Lion Red Cup match. Wellington included
Paul Howell while Canterbury included
Tevita Vaikona,
Phil Bancroft,
Aaron Whittaker,
Marty Crequer,
Henry Suluvale and
Shane Endacott. Then Auckland, coached by Dominic Clark, lost 20–28 to Canterbury on Queen's Birthday. The Auckland team included
Solomon Kiri,
Whetu Taewa,
Bryan Laumatia,
Brian McClennan,
Fa'ausu Afoa,
Jason Palmada,
Stacey Jones,
Duane Mann,
Tony Tatupu,
Doc Murray and
Hitro Okesene. Canterbury included
Mark Nixon,
Logan Edwards,
Marty Crequer,
Tevita Vaikona and
Shane Endacott.
Lion Red Cup Buoyed by the acceptance of an
Auckland team into the
1995 Australian Rugby League competition, the
New Zealand Rugby League launched a twelve-team national club competition in 1994. Known as the
Lion Red Cup for sponsorship reasons, this competition proved to be hugely expensive and lost a million dollars in 1994.
The Teams • The
North Harbour Sea Eagles were sponsored by
Just Jeans and coached by
Graeme Norton. Their two main feeder clubs were the Fox Memorial-winning
Northcote Tigers and the
Hibiscus Coast Raiders. Notable players included
Ken McIntosh,
Brian McClennan, captain
Duane Mann,
Fa'ausu Afoa,
Paul Rauhihi,
Jason Palmada,
Don Stewart, Richard Stewart,
Tony Tatupu,
Latham Tawhai and
Joe Vagana. • Despite making the final of the pre-season competition, the
Waitakere City Raiders were easily the worst of the Auckland sides, especially in the first round of the competition. Coach
Ron O'Regan blooded a group of young players in the second round and performances improved enough for them to finish in seventh place. Forty Four players were used overall in their season, including
Tony Tuimavave,
Peter Lima,
Robbie and
Henry Paul,
Willie Swann,
Willie McLean,
Julian O'Neill,
David Bailey,
Brady Malam,
Anthony Swann and
Paki Tuimavave. • After winning the Pepsi Max Knockout Cup the
Auckland City Vulcans started the season as favourites. However the
Gary Prohm coached side ended the season in fifth place and were then quickly eliminated from the playoffs by the Canterbury Cardinals in Christchurch.
Stacey Jones foreshadowed his
1995 season with the Auckland Warriors by taking over the halfback position during the season from established New Zealand Sevens captain Vinnie Weir. Other notable players included
Mark Faumuina,
Aaron Lester,
Eugene Bourneville,
Danny Lima,
Jason Mackie,
Doc Murray,
Meti Noovao and
Mike Setefano. • The
Counties Manukau Heroes started the season as the least favoured Auckland club but ended up in the grand final and produced five
New Zealand Residents representatives, two
New Zealand national rugby league team, the coach of the year and the competition's top pointscorer. They were coached by former
Marist coach
Stan Martin and ended up losing 10 players to professional clubs at the end of the season. The players were:
Des Maea,
Gus Malietoa-Brown,
Hitro Okesene,
Whetu Taewa and
Solomon Kiri to the
Auckland Warriors,
Jason Temu and
Wilson Marsh to
Oldham,
Kerry Pomare to
Widnes,
Paul Okesene to France and
Bryan Laumatia to the
Cronulla Sharks. Other notable players included
Esau Mann,
Matthew Sturm,
Matthew Tuisamoa and
Willie Wolfgramm. • The
Waikato Cougars were coached by Joe Gwynne and captained by
Tukere Barlow. The team finished second after the regular season but a series of injuries saw them perform poorly in the playoffs and they were quickly eliminated. Notable players included
Gavin Hill, Tama Hohaia,
Francis Leota,
Martin Moana and Aaron Tucker. • The
Bay of Plenty Stags finished the season in last place, winning only two matches in twenty two rounds. They were coached by Neil Joyce and the squad included
Alex Chan and
Russell Stewart. The Stags drew players from both the
Bay of Plenty Rugby League and the
Coastlines Rugby League competitions. • The
Taranaki Rockets were widely regarded as the competitions easy beats until they made the semifinals of the pre-season competition. They performed well for the first nine weeks, with five wins and four losses until they suffered a run of injuries and coach Teri Tamati stepped down for health reasons. Despite this, under caretaker coach Alan Marshall, the Rockets recovered to finish sixth and just miss the playoffs. Notable players included
Robert Piva,
Mark Woods and
Willie Talau. • Coached by
Gary Kemble, the
Hawkes Bay Unicorns finished a disappointing tenth. Notable players included captain
Mike Dorreen and 17-year-old Charlie Kennedy, who both signed contracts with the
Auckland Warriors at the end of the season, as well as
Joe Faimalo, who signed with Oldham, and
Nathan Picchi. • The
Firestone Hutt Valley Firehawks finished a disappointing eighth in the Lion Red Cup. They were coached by Tyrone Paikea and included
Zane Clark, captain
Peter Edwards,
David Ewe and
Denvour Johnston. • The
Wellington City Dukes were coached by
James Leuluai and included
Paul Howell,
Earl Va'a,
Riki Cowan,
Darren Rameka and Arnold Lomax. • Coached by former Kiwi
Wayne Wallace, the
Christchurch City Shiners were clearly the "second" Canterbury team in the competition and finished in eleventh place. The team included
Simon Angell,
Tane Manihera,
Andrew Vincent and
Marty Crequer. • The
Canterbury Country Cardinals were coached by
Gerard Stokes and included few players from the champion 1993
Canterbury provincial side after many accepted contracts overseas or with other Lion Red Cup teams. Notable players included
Glen Coughlan,
Logan Edwards,
Shane Endacott,
Paul Johnson,
Mark Nixon,
Phil Bancroft,
Maea David,
Blair Harding,
Henry Suluvale,
Tevita Vaikona and
Aaron Whittaker.
Challenge Cup Before the season began a pre-season "
Pepsi Max Challenge Cup" was held. This involved all twelve teams and was held on a knock out basis.
Auckland City won the tournament, defeating
Waitakere City 22–18 in the final on March 13.
North Harbour and
Taranaki were the two defeated semi-finalists.
Season standings The
Counties Manukau Heroes finished the season as minor premiers.
The Playoffs Grand Final Counties Manukau started the match as favourites, however by halftime the North Harbour Sea Eagles had opened up a 20-6 lead and held on to win 24–16.
Awards National Provincial Championship With the advent of the Lion Red Cup, the National Provincial Championship was run as a second division for provincial sides who did not have a team in the Cup. Six teams participated with the West Coast winning the Championship after an undefeated season. The Gisborne-East Coast Lions won their first game since May 1991.
National Secondary Schools Cup St. Paul's College won the National Secondary Schools Cup after they defeated
Wainuiomata College 33–10 in the final. 23 Schools took part in the inaugural national competition with
Huntly College and
Aranui High School also making the semi-finals. The final was played as a curtain-raiser to the Lion Red Cup grand final. St. Paul's included
Stacey Jones in their side and also won the Auckland Rugby League title. == Club competitions ==