Background Before 1996, a number of transnational competitions involving regional and provincial rugby union teams had taken shape in the southern hemisphere. The earliest of these was the
South Pacific Championship, which was launched in 1986 and continued until 1990.
Super 6 After the demise of the South Pacific Championship, with no tournament played in 1991, the competition was relaunched as the
Super 6 in 1992. The competition included three provincial teams from New Zealand:
Auckland,
Canterbury,
Wellington; along with two Australian state teams:
Queensland and
New South Wales; and also the
Fiji national team.
Super 10 In 1993, the Super Six competition was revamped and expanded into the Super 10 tournament. With
South Africa being readmitted into international sport following the dismantling of apartheid, there was an opportunity to launch an expanded competition which would also feature South Africa's top provincial teams. The inaugural competition featured the following teams:
Waikato,
Auckland,
Otago and
North Harbour (New Zealand);
Natal,
Northern Transvaal and
Transvaal (South Africa);
Queensland and
New South Wales (Australia) and
Western Samoa (
Pacific Tri-Nations winner). The Super 10 was won by
Transvaal (South Africa) in 1993, and by
Queensland (Australia) in 1994 and 1995.
SANZAR era Super 12 (1995–2005) The official declaration of professionalism in rugby union in August 1995 led to a restructuring of the Super 10 competition. Following the success of the
1995 World Cup, the rugby boards of Australia, New Zealand and South Africa formed SANZAR (South African, New Zealand and Australian Rugby) to administer an annual 12-team provincial/franchise based competition pitting regional teams from the three nations against each other. In addition it was decided to hold an annual
Tri-Nations Test Series between the three countries. A significant reason for the development of the Super 12 was the threat to
rugby union from rival football code
rugby league: part of the business model for the Foxtel pay TV network in Australia was to attract subscribers by offering an exclusive product (such as rugby union) which could not be seen on free-to-air broadcast television. By setting up the Super 12, the Unions had a product that was in demand from viewers, enabling them to sell a 10-year contract for exclusive television rights to News Corp for US$555 million, giving them both coverage and financial support to kickstart the new competition. With significant sponsorship, and rugby turning a professional sport in August 1995, the Super 12 competition successfully kicked off in
1996 with five New Zealand franchises, four South African provinces and three domestic Australian teams competing. New Zealand's dominance of the competition began in the first year when the
Auckland Blues won the inaugural competition defeating South African side the 45–21 in a home final. The Blues would repeat the success of 1996 beating Australian side the
ACT Brumbies 23–7 in the
1997 final. The Blues then reached their third successive final in
1998 but went down to fellow countrymen the
Canterbury Crusaders 13–20. This would mark the beginning of the Crusaders' three-year dominance as they went on to win the
1999 and
2000 finals over the
Otago Highlanders and
ACT Brumbies respectively. The
2001 season was the first in which no New Zealand franchise reached the final, being contested between the
ACT Brumbies and with the Brumbies convincing winners, with a 36–6 score line. The Crusaders won their 4th final in
2002 winning all 11 matches and missed out on their 5th in
2003 with a four-point loss to fellow countrymen the Blues. In
2004 the Brumbies took revenge on their 2000 final loss to the Crusaders defeating them 47–38 in front of a home crowd. The Crusaders would bounce back to win the
2005 final 35–25 against the Australian side the
New South Wales Waratahs who reached their first-ever final. This was the last year of the 12 team format. In the late
1990s and early
2000s, the
Australian Rugby Union (ARU) had been pushing for a fourth Australian team to enter the competition, based in either
Melbourne or
Perth. News reports also alluded to a potential format re-structuring alongside expansion, to a 20-team competition. In early 2000, the ARU moved to quash a prospective joint bid for a new Australian Super 12 franchise, which had proposed to stage matches across both Melbourne and Perth by the unions in their respective states. The ARU stated that it preferred a potential new Australian team to be based in one capital city. Any expansion plans were not expected to take place until at least 2003, with a fifth South African team also possible. On 11 December 2004, the
Perth-based
Western Force were admitted into the competition as a new franchise after receiving the endorsement of the ARU over a Melbourne-based franchise bid. In April the following year, the
Bloemfontein-based
Cheetahs were announced as the fifth South African franchise to join the competition. The Cheetahs, composed of the Free State,
Griqualand West and
Griffons Rugby Unions, were awarded the franchise ahead of the Southern and Eastern Cape delegation, which had the support of the South African
Sports Minister Makhenkesi Stofile. SARU investigated the viability of the Spears after discovering serious financial irregularities. A
High Court of South Africa ruling stated that the Spears had a valid contract to compete in the Super 14 and Currie Cup. However, because of the organisation's financial and administrative troubles, in November 2006 a settlement was reached. The Spears abandoned their legal case, and will continue to exist, but not compete in the Super 14. SANZAR rejected a proposal to split the Super 14 into two seven-team divisions, and decided to keep the competition in its traditional single-table format. Argentina and the Pacific Islands remained shut out of the competition. The two new teams did not perform all that well, the South African franchise the Cheetahs did the better of the two teams finishing 10th on the ladder notching up 5 season wins. The Australian franchise the Western Force only managed one victory and ended winning the wooden spoon as last placed 14th. The highlight for the Force was a 23-all draw against eventual champions the Crusaders, who defeated first-time finalists the
Hurricanes 19–12. During the 2007 season, 22
All Blacks missed the competition's first seven rounds as part of an All Black "conditioning programme" that was a part of the All Blacks'
2007 Rugby World Cup preparations, and every New Zealand franchise was without players for the first seven rounds. At the end of the regular season, for the first time since 1998, no Australian franchise had made the semi-finals. Although the Brumbies were strong and the Western Force experienced vast improvement, it was a poor season for the
Queensland Reds and
Waratahs who finished last and second last respectively. Also, the competition featured the first all-South African final as the
Sharks and
Bulls, who finished 1–2 on the season ladder, both won their respective semi-finals. The final, held
in Durban, saw the visiting Bulls win 20–19. During the time the competition was branded as the Super 14, only two teams won the tournament. The Crusaders winning the 2006 and 2008 tournaments; while the Bulls ended victorious in 2007, 2009, and 2010 respectively.
Super Rugby: 15 teams (2011–2015) SANZAR unveiled in 2009 its model for an expanded season that would begin in 2011. This model was based around the original ARU proposal for three national conferences: each side were to have played the other four teams from their own country twice and the other ten teams once each; the season has to end with a six-team finals series. There were four major compromises, however, designed to accommodate certain wishes of each country, that somewhat complicated the model: • Each team would only play four, instead of all five, teams in each of the other two national conferences, making sixteen regular season games for each team instead of eighteen, and allowing for a late February start, somewhat placating the ARU and NZRU who wanted a March start. • There would be a three-week gap for the June test (international) matches favoured by the SARU. • The season would finish in early August so as not to overlap new streamlined versions of New Zealand's and South Africa's domestic competitions. • The three conference winners and the three best performers of the remaining teams would qualify for a three-week finals series, with seedings deciding the match-ups. This system is a hybrid of the conference-based qualification system favoured by the SARU and the 'top six' model favoured by the ARU and NZRU. SANZAR announced in 2009 the addition of a fifth Australian team that would play in the expanded "Super Rugby" competition in 2011. The licence was awarded to
Victoria, Australia, and the team's name announced as the
Melbourne Rebels. The Australian start-up franchise was given the nod ahead of South Africa's
Southern Kings. Brian Waldron, former CEO of the
NRL club the
Melbourne Storm, was confirmed as the new CEO of the Rebels on 11 January 2010, but resigned on 23 April after a
salary cap breach was uncovered at the Storm.
SANZAAR era Expansion: 18 teams (2016–2017) In February 2012, SANZAR chief executive Greg Peters announced that the organisation was considering adding franchises in Argentina, Japan and the United States in 2016, the first year of SANZAR's next television contract. This was also the year that
rugby sevens entered the Olympics, which contributed towards increased interest in the sport in many countries, including Japan and the US. Australian sports broadcasting analyst Colin Smith noted that the addition of Japanese and American teams could result in a TV deal worth more than
A$1 billion beyond 2020. Specifically, he stated, "You could have a deal comparable to the other major sports in Australia. Rugby is
a college (university) sport in the US, if soccer can create
its own league there and sell teams for $40 million, imagine what you could do in 10–12 years with rugby in that market." Peters added that the conference-based structure was ideal for expanding the competition to new territories, either by adding new conferences or by adding teams to the current conferences. He also discussed the possibility that offshore Super Rugby teams could be a home for surplus players from the SANZAR countries, keeping them in the SANZAR fold and away from European clubs. Prior to Super Rugby's broadcast contracts expiring after the 2015 season, SANZAR considered several alternatives for the competition's future organisation: • Retention of the conference system that was in place for 2011–15. • Expansion of the structure to include teams from Asia, the United States and/or Canada. • A split of the competition, with South Africa forming one competition with the likely addition of at least one Argentine side, and Australia and New Zealand forming another, with the possibility of including Asian teams. The last proposal, made by the
SARU, was reportedly driven by internal union politics. With only five guaranteed places in Super Rugby but six active franchises, the bottom team in the South African Conference faced a promotion/relegation playoff with the sixth franchise for a place in the next season's competition.
Australia and
New Zealand warmed to the SARU proposal, as a trans-Tasman competition would potentially allow for more regional derbies, fewer time zone complications and less player travel. SANZAR then announced on 20 November 2014 that Japan and Argentina would each be allocated a team from the
2016 season onwards. In 2017, the Australian Rugby Union was rebranded to
Rugby Australia.
Contraction: 15 teams (2018–2020) In April 2017, SANZAAR confirmed the competition would be reduced to 15 teams in
2018 with two South African and one Australian team to have their franchises withdrawn. Subsequently, four South African teams took part: the Bulls, Lions, Sharks and Stormers, with the Cheetahs and Kings losing their spots. The Cheetahs and Kings joined the Pro 12, which became the
Pro14 from the 2017–2018 season onwards. On 11 August 2017, Australia announced that the Western Force had lost their licence. On 21 March 2019, SANZAAR confirmed that 2020 will be the Sunwolves' last season of competition in Super Rugby.
COVID-19: Regionalisation (2020–2021) The
COVID-19 pandemic caused the
2020 Super Rugby season competition to be cut short. As health concerns eased, other professional sports returned to play. The Super Rugby season was unable to be resumed, however, due to border restrictions and the need for teams to be placed into
quarantine upon arrival in each country. This resulted in
New Zealand Rugby and
Rugby Australia forming their own domestic Super Rugby competitions starting in June and July 2020 respectively.
South African Rugby subsequently launched its own domestic competition known as
Super Rugby Unlocked, which started play in October 2020. •
Super Rugby AU (5 teams, Australia) •
Super Rugby Unlocked (7 teams, South Africa) Super Rugby Aotearoa featured all five New Zealand teams from Super Rugby: the Blues, Chiefs, Crusaders, Highlanders and Hurricanes. In September 2020, SA Rugby announced the withdrawal of all their teams from the Super Rugby, with plans for the four franchises to join an expanded
Pro14/United Rugby Championship competition in
Europe.
Super Rugby Aotearoa and
Super Rugby AU continued in 2021, with both franchises competing in a crossover competition in the
Super Rugby Trans-Tasman in May to June of that year.
Super Rugby Pacific (2022–present) In the aftermath of the pandemic, a 12-team competition was proposed, featuring five Australian, five New Zealand sides and two Pacific-based teams. In April 2021, it was announced that two licences had been offered to the
Fijian Drua and
Moana Pasifika ahead of the
2022 season. The new format was confirmed in August 2021, with the new competition branded as the Super Rugby Pacific. With the newly established league featuring 12 teams across the South Pacific region, the former conference system that had been in place since 2011 was dissolved and replaced with a round-robin tournament. In 2024, the
Melbourne Rebels, following a period of financial difficulties and being placed into administration, were shut down by Rugby Australia. The Rebels board challenged the decision to cut the team and took Rugby Australia to court (which is still ongoing as of ). The Rebels did not take part in the
2025 Super Rugby Pacific season, reducing Australia to four teams once again. In 2025, talks of expansion were mentioned in both the Australian and New Zealand
press after
World Rugby Chairman
Brett Robinson met officials in the
United States about the possibility of including an American team in the competition. Australian sports news website,
The Roar, wrote: "At the heart of
World Rugby's interest in the expansion is to ensure the
United States has a competitive national side by the time the
2031 Rugby World Cup moves to the Americas for the first time. It comes after the USA Eagles missed qualification for the first time in
2023 – five years after
Major League Rugby started in 2018." The team, which was reportedly in millions of dollars in debt, had an estimated annual operating cost of
NZ$7 million. The team's dissolution meant the Super Rugby Pacific would be reduced to ten teams from
2027, the lowest since the
Super 10 era in the early 1990s.
The Sydney Morning Herald and
The Australian posited that this development could pave the way for the introduction of a comprehensive eighteen-round, home-and-away format, alongside a relaxation of
Trans-Tasman player eligibility restrictions between Australian and New Zealand franchises. The former proposal was reportedly well received among some franchise bosses, with the latter proposal being more interested by broadcasters. ==Franchises==