Current season, competition or edition: 2016 SARU Gold Cup |
|
Sport | Rugby union |
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Founded | 2013 |
Inaugural season | 2013 |
No. of teams | 20 |
Country | South Africa |
Most recent champion(s) |
Durbanville-Bellville |
TV partner(s) | Supersport |
Sponsor(s) | Cell C |
The SARU Gold Cup is the premier rugby union club competition in South Africa for non-university teams.
The competition was launched as the SARU Community Cup in 2013 to replace the existing SARU National Club Championships and renamed to the SARU Gold Cup for 2016, when teams from Namibia and Zimbabwe were also included in the competition.
On 20 September 2012, the South African Rugby Union announced the launch of the SARU Community Cup to replace the National Club Championships. The inaugural edition started in February 2013. Several rugby union clubs in South Africa are affiliated to universities, which can play in the annual Varsity Rugby tournaments. The Community Cup was created for the non-university clubs to run in parallel with Varsity Rugby.
After three seasons during which the matches were played over the Easter Weekend, it was rebranded as the SARU Gold Cup, moved to a timeslot later in the year and also included teams from Namibia and Zimbabwe.
Each season, twenty teams qualify for the Gold Cup from the club leagues of the fourteen provincial unions in South Africa. In addition, the Blue Bulls Limpopo sub-union also entered a team every year and from 2016 onwards, the champions of the Namibian and Zimbabwean club competitions would also enter. The defending champions of the Gold Cup would automatically qualify to the next edition. Each of the provincial unions would nominate a team which would automatically qualify for the competition – it is dependent on the rules of the individual league whether this will be the team that finishes top of the log during the round-robin stage of the competition or the title play-off winner. All university teams are ineligible and would be excluded from participation.
In addition to the automatic qualifiers, the remainder of the participating teams would consist of wildcard entries. For 2013 and 2014, teams were nominated to enter a wildcard draw, but from 2015 onwards a play-off competition was introduced, where the second-best eligible teams from the provincial unions could play off for the remaining spots.
The format of the Gold Cup is the same as the Rugby World Cup. The teams are divided into four pools, each containing five teams. They then play four pool games, playing every other teams in their respective pools once. Each team plays two home games and two away games.