Current season, competition or edition: 2025 Super Rugby Women's season | |
Sport | Rugby union |
---|---|
Founded | 2018 |
First season | 2018 |
Administrator | Rugby Australia |
No. of teams | 5 |
Countries | Australia (4 teams) Fiji (1 team) |
Most recent champion(s) | New South Wales Waratahs (5th title) (2024) |
Most titles | New South Wales Waratahs (5 titles) |
TV partner(s) | Nine Network Stan Sport |
Super Rugby Women's is an annual professional women's rugby union club competition organised by Rugby Australia. It is contested by four clubs from Australia and one club from Fiji, who play a single series of round-robin matches to determine the four participants of a single-elimination tournament. The competition replaced the representative National Women's Championship with five teams owned by the Australian Super Rugby franchises, and began play in the 2018 season as an amateur league known as the Super W. The 2022 season saw the addition of a team from Fiji, and the introduction of salaries for players. The league adopted its current name in the 2024 season. The New South Wales Waratahs are the current champions (2024) and hold the most titles with five.
The league commenced in the 2018 season as an amateur league. [1] Buildcorp were named as the league's naming rights partner, [2] while Gilbert were named as the official supplier of the league's rugby balls.[ citation needed ] For the inaugural season, the teams' playing lists were constructed from scratch throughout the later stages of 2018. Clubs were asked to nominate a list of desired players, with the Super W assigning two of these "marquee" players to each club. In addition, clubs were able to sign a number of players with existing connections to the club, or with arrangements for club sponsored work or study.[ citation needed ] In the 2019 season, the Western Force were replaced by a team representing RugbyWA. [3]
The 2020 season was suspended following the fifth and final round of the regular season, due to lockdowns imposed by various state governments in late March, following the outbreak of COVID-19 in Australia. [4] The planned playoff between the second-placed Reds and third-placed Brumbies, and the subsequent grand final, were cancelled in April; the first-placed Waratahs were declared champions once more. [5] [6] The Waratahs would finish a fourth straight undefeated season in 2021, [7] which was played almost entirely at Coffs Harbour International Stadium in a pool format, and featured the temporary addition of a "President's XV" team composed of players from New South Wales and Queensland. [8] [9] The Western Force returned to the league, [10] but withdrew after the first round to avoid the continuing COVID-19 pandemic in New South Wales. [11] [12]
On 2 October 2024, Rugby Australia confirmed that the Melbourne Rebels will not compete in the Super Rugby Women's competition in 2025, with Rugby Australia stating that an investigation into the viability of maintaining the Rebels women's program did not identify a financially viable option for either Rugby Australia or Rugby Victoria to sustain the program in 2025. [13]
This section needs to be updated. The reason given is: Fijiana Drua location, stadium and capacity are listed as TBA after the season has concluded..(May 2024) |
Five Super Rugby franchises, including five from Australia and one from Fiji, will field teams in the 2025 season of Super Rugby Women's. Players in the competition are required to be seventeen years of age or older.[ citation needed ]
Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|
ACT Brumbies | Canberra | Canberra Stadium | 25,011 |
Viking Park | 7,000 | ||
Fijiana Drua | TBA (Fiji) | TBA | TBA |
New South Wales Waratahs | Sydney | Sydney Football Stadium | 45,000 |
Concord Oval | 5,000 | ||
Queensland Reds | Brisbane | Lang Park | 52,500 |
Ballymore Stadium | 8,000 | ||
Western Force | Perth | Perth Rectangular Stadium | 20,500 |
UWA Sports Park | 4,000 |
Season | Champions | Final | Runners-up |
---|---|---|---|
2018 | NSW Waratahs | 16–13 | Queensland Reds |
2019 | NSW Waratahs | 8–5 | Queensland Reds |
2020 | NSW Waratahs | — [a] | Queensland Reds |
2021 | NSW Waratahs | 45–12 | Queensland Reds |
2022 | Fijiana Drua | 32–26 | NSW Waratahs |
2023 | Fijiana Drua | 38–30 | Queensland Reds |
2024 | NSW Waratahs | 50–14 | Fijiana Drua |
2025 | TBD |
# | Team | Champions | Years as champions | Runners-up | Years as runners-up |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | NSW Waratahs | 5 | 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2024 | 1 | 2022 |
2 | Fijiana Drua | 2 | 2022, 2023 | 1 | 2024 |
During the 2020 season all matches were televised live by affiliate partners Fox Sports. Following Rugby Australia's broadcast deal with Nine Network, all games will be broadcast on streaming service Stan Sport, with one game a round being simulcast on Nine's flagship free to air channel. [14] All matches are streamed live by Stan Sport.
The Queensland Reds is the rugby union team based in Brisbane for the Australian state of Queensland that competes in the Southern Hemisphere's Super Rugby competition. Prior to 1996, they were a representative team selected from the rugby union club competitions in Queensland. With the introduction of the professional Super 12 competition they moved to a model where players are contracted to the Reds through the Queensland Rugby Union rather than selected on the basis of club form.
The ACT Brumbies is an Australian professional rugby union team based in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory (ACT), The team competes in Super Rugby and named for the feral horses which inhabit the capital's hinterland. The team represents the ACT, as well as the Far South Coast and Southern Inland regions of New South Wales (NSW).
The New South Wales Waratahs, referred to as the Waratahs, are an Australian professional rugby union team representing the majority of New South Wales in the Super Rugby competition. The Riverina and other southern parts of the state, are represented by the Brumbies, who are based in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory (ACT).
Rugby union in Australia has a history of organised competition dating back to the late 1860s. Although traditionally most popular in Australia's rugby football strongholds of New South Wales, Queensland and the ACT, it is played throughout the nation.
The Sydney University Football Club, founded in 1863, is the oldest club now playing rugby union in Australia, although this date is disputed by historian Tom Hickie who argues that it was 1865.
The Australian Provincial Championship, or APC was a rugby union football competition played in Australia. It was one of several provincial competitions since the late 1960s, including the Wallaby Trophy and Ricoh National Championship, that have not continued.
The 2019 Super W season was the second year of the women's Super W rugby union competition held in Australia. A change to the finals format was made in 2019 with an additional playoff match added for the teams which finished second and third in regular season. Queensland, as winner of that match over the Brumbies, travelled to Sydney to play in the competition decider against the NSW Waratahs, who were hosts of the final due to finishing top of the ladder in the regular season. The 2019 Super W title was won by NSW Waratahs, defeating Queensland by 8–5 in the final.
The 2020 Super Rugby AU season was a professional club rugby union tournament organised by Rugby Australia. Sponsored by communications company Vodafone, the tournament replaced the Australian component of the incomplete 2020 Super Rugby season that was shut down in March of that year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It featured the four teams from the 2020 Australian conference, with the addition of former Super Rugby franchise the Western Force.
The 2021 Super Rugby AU season was a professional club rugby union tournament organised by Rugby Australia. Announced on 11 November 2020, the tournament was the second season of Super Rugby AU, featuring the same 5 teams from the inaugural 2020 season, and ran from 19 February to 8 May 2021. The tournament was won by the Reds, who defeated the Brumbies 19–16 in the final at Suncorp Stadium, winning their first Super Rugby AU title, and first Super Rugby competition since 2011.
Grace Hamilton is an Australian rugby union and rugby league footballer who captained Australia internationally, and the NSW Waratahs in the Super W. She competed at the 2017 and 2021 Rugby World Cup's.
Super Rugby Trans-Tasman was a professional men's rugby union club competition in Australia and New Zealand. It featured the five Super Rugby AU teams playing the five Super Rugby Aotearoa teams, followed by a final, and ran from 14 May to 19 June 2021.
The 2020 Super W season was the third edition of the women's Super W competition in Australia. The playoff and final were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the NSW Waratahs were dubbed champions after an undefeated season.
The 2021 Super W season had a different format to previous seasons. With the inclusion of the President's XV, teams were split into two pools of three. This format however was only for the 2021 season. The competition will revert to the usual home and away format in 2022. After the first round of the season the Western Force withdrew from the competition due to the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak in New South Wales. NSW Waratahs won their fourth consecutive Super W title after defeating Queensland 45 - 12 in the final. A Super W Select team played the Presidents XV in the finals, they replaced the Western Force. The Super W Select were only given 48 hours to prepare.
Michaela Lea Leonard is an Australian rugby union player. She plays at Lock for the Wallaroos and competed at the recent Rugby World Cup in New Zealand. She previously played for the Brumbies before joining the Western Force in the Super W competition. She has also played for Exeter Chiefs and Matatū.
The New South Wales Waratahs Women are an Australian rugby union team that represents New South Wales in the Super Rugby Women's competition. They are the most successful team so far, having won five titles.
The ACT Brumbies Women are an Australian rugby union team based in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory (ACT). The team competes in the annual Super W competition. They have competed in every edition since Rugby Australia announced that a national women's rugby competition would be launched in 2018.
The Melbourne Rebels Women were an Australian rugby union team that competed in the annual Super Rugby Women's competition. The team was formed after Rugby Australia announced that a 15-a-side women's rugby competition would be launched in 2018.
The 2023 Super W season is the sixth edition of the competition. The season kicked off on 24 March, with the final played on 6 May. In a historic first, defending champions, Fijiana Drua, got to play in front of their home crowd in Nadi against the Brumbies on 25 March.
The 2024 Super Rugby Women's season was the seventh edition of the Super Rugby Women's, the Australian domestic competition of the male counterpart. The season began on 15 March, with the Grand Final concluding the season on 28 April.
Notes
Citations
RA have also called off plans to hold the Super W finals this month. The Reds v Brumbies match will now be held in late May...
It means the NSW Waratahs have been crowned champions for the third consecutive season after finishing the regular rounds undefeated. The Brumbies finished third on the competition's ladder and were slated to meet the Queensland Reds in a semi-final clash at Ballymore.
The third year of the competition was cut short before a play-off to decide which of the Queensland Reds or ACT Brumbies would meet the Waratahs, who have never lost a Super W match, in this year's final.
Unbeaten in four straight seasons, the NSW Waratahs clinched another Super W title...
...the competition to be played across three rounds and a final with six teams to be split into two pools. [...] a sixth side, the President's XV, will join the competition and will feature players from NSW and Queensland.
... changed from the usual home-and-away season to a shortened centralised tournament played over a couple of weeks and based in Coffs Harbour. The President's XV was made up of players on the periphery of their state teams...
Meanwhile, the Western Force's women's team have pulled out of the Super W rugby competition after just one round due to Sydney's COVID-19 outbreak.
The Western Force's women's team have pulled out of the Super W rugby competition after just one round due to the worsening COVID-19 situation in NSW.