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Rugby Africa Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Two-year men's rugby union tournament
For the football tournament, seeAfrica Cup of Nations.
Rugby Africa Cup
Current season or competition:
2024 Rugby Africa Cup
SportRugby union
Instituted2000
Governing bodyAfrica(Rugby Africa)
Holders Zimbabwe (2024)
Most titles Namibia(9 titles)
Websitehttps://tkt.ug/

TheRugby Africa Cup is a two-year men'srugby union tournament involving the top 16 African nations based on theirWorld Rugby rankings, it is organised byRugby Africa. The tournament was first held in 2000.[1] It was renamed the Rugby Africa Cup in November 2019, it was previously called theAfrica Cup since 2006, the CAR Top 9 and CAR Top 10.

Due toSouth Africa being far stronger than any other African nation, South African teams have only competed five times, and won the competition three times. The winning South African teams on these occasions were the under 23 or amateur players (in 2000, 2001 and 2006).

History

[edit]

The African Cup of Rugby Union took place for the first time in 2000, with five teams taking part in the event,Morocco,Tunisia,Namibia,Zimbabwe and the hostsSouth Africa, the winner of the competition.In 2004, a second division called CAR Development Trophy and now named nowAfrican Development Trophy was formed, reserved for U19 national teams.In 2006, the Africa Cup was coupled with theRugby World Cup qualification, the winner qualified for theRugby World Cup. In 2011, a Division 1A was created and in 2014, the division took place as a four-team championship.

The winner of the 2022 Africa Gold Cup qualified for the2023 Rugby World Cup and the runner-up qualified for its final qualification tournament in November 2022.

Structure

[edit]

The tournament was revamped in November 2019, this time the top 16 nations, based on theirWorld Rugby rankings prior to the competition, will compete over a two-year period.[2] According to their websiteRugby Africa explained the tournament as follows:

The first stage consists of a qualifying round: the teams ranked 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th will oppose the teams ranked 13th, 14th, 15th and 16th, respectively, in a single match at home. The winner of each of these four matches will progress to the group phase. In this second stage, the 12 teams are divided into 4 pools; inside each pool the 3 teams play against each other in a home or away game. The winner of each group will progress to the final tournament of the RAC. The top four teams from Africa will meet in one venue for the final stage of the RAC, which will include two semi-finals, a play-off for third place and, ultimately, the final to decide who will be the African champions.[3]

The2019–20 Rugby Africa Cup was the first tournament after the restructuring,[4] but was cancelled in 2020 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. The 2021–22 Rugby Africa Cup will double as a2023 Rugby World Cup qualifier for Africa.

In addition to the main fifteens tournaments, an Under-20 competition featuring eight teams was held in April and arugby sevens tournament involving twelve teams was held in November. A women's rugby sevens tournament is also to be scheduled.

Summary

[edit]

Below is a list of previous tournaments and final results:

YearHostFinalThird place match
WinnerScoreRunner-upThirdScoreFourth
Africa Cup
2000Morocco
Casablanca,Morocco

South Africa Amateurs
44–14
Morocco
No third place
2001Morocco
Casablanca,Morocco

South Africa Amateurs
36–20
Morocco
No third place
2002Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia

Namibia
1
26–19
Tunisia
No third place
Tunisia
Tunis,Tunisia
17–24
2003Morocco
Casablanca,Morocco

Morocco
27–7
Namibia
 Madagascar and Uganda
2004Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia

Namibia
39–22
Morocco
No third place
2005France
Paris,France

Morocco
43–6
Madagascar
 Namibia and South Africa Amateurs
2006Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia

South Africa Amateurs
29–27
Namibia
 Madagascar and Morocco
2007Madagascar
Antananarivo,Madagascar

Uganda
42–11
Madagascar

Kenya
20–17
Ivory Coast
2008–09Tunisia
Tunis,Tunisia

Namibia
2
18–13
Tunisia
 Ivory Coast and Uganda
Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia
22–10
2010Not assigned3
2011Kenya
Nairobi,Kenya

Kenya
16–7
Tunisia
No third place
2012Tunisia
Jemmal,Tunisia

Zimbabwe
22–18
Uganda

Kenya
31–24
Tunisia
2013Madagascar
Antananarivo,Madagascar

Kenya
29–17
Zimbabwe

Madagascar
48–32
Uganda
2014Madagascar
Antananarivo,Madagascar

Namibia
n/a
Zimbabwe

Kenya
n/a
Madagascar
2015Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia

Namibia
n/a
Zimbabwe

Kenya
n/a
Tunisia
2016Namibia
Windhoek,Namibia

Namibia
n/a
Kenya

Uganda
n/a
Zimbabwe
Gold Cup
2017Kenya
Nairobi,Kenya

Namibia
n/a
Kenya

Uganda
n/a
Tunisia
2018
Namibia
n/a
Kenya

Uganda
n/a
Tunisia
2019Cancelled4
Rugby Africa Cup
2019–20Cancelled after the qualification stage due to theCOVID-19 pandemic in Africa.[5]
2021–22France
Aix-en-Provence,France

Namibia
36–0
Kenya

Algeria
20–12
Zimbabwe
2024Uganda
Kampala,Uganda

Zimbabwe
29–3
Algeria

Namibia
38–27
Kenya
^n/a A round-robin tournament determined the final standings.
^1 The aggregate results was drawn 33-33. Namibia won on tries scored.
^2 Namibia won the series with aggregate results of 40-23.
^3 In the2010 Africa Cup no outright winner was declared. Morocco beat Tunisia 29–6 in the final of the north section, whilst Kenya won the2010 Victoria Cup in the south.
^4 The Gold, Silver, and Bronze Cups of the2019 season were cancelled due to a lack of funding, brought on by the loss of broadcast sponsorKwese Sports.[6] TheVictoria Cup was revived to replace it, which was won byZimbabwe.

Overall

[edit]

The overall record of the teams are as follows:

TeamChampionsRunners-upThirdFourthLosing semi-finals
 Namibia9 (2002**,2004*,2009**,2014,2015*,2016*,2017,2018,2022)2 (2003,2006*)1 (2024)1 (2005)
 South Africa Amateurs3 (2000,2001,2006)1 (2005)
 Kenya2 (2011*,2013)4 (2016,2017*,2018,2022)4 (2007,2012,2014,2015)1 (2024)
 Zimbabwe2 (2012,2024)3 (2013,2014,2015)2 (2016,2022)
 Morocco2 (2003*,2005)3 (2000*,2001*,2004)1 (2006)
 Uganda1 (2007)1 (2012)3 (2016,2017,2018)1 (2013)2 (2003,2009)
 Tunisia3 (2002**,2009**,2011)4 (2012*,2015,2017,2018)
 Madagascar2 (2005,2007*)1 (2013*)1 (2014*)2 (2003,2006)
 Algeria1 (2024)1 (2022)
 Ivory Coast1 (2007)1 (2009)
*hosts
**home/away

Rugby Africa Gold Cup perpetual trophy

[edit]
The Rugby Africa Gold Cup is the perpetual trophy awarded to the winner of the Africa Gold Cup, a qualifier for the Rugby World Cup organised by World Rugby's African association, Rugby Africa, since 2000.

TheRugby Africa Gold Cup is the perpetualtrophy awarded to the winner of the Africa Cup (Africa Gold Cup), an annualrugby union tournament involvingAfrica's top six national 15-man teams (excluding South Africa), organised byWorld Rugby's African association,Rugby Africa, since 2000.

The Rugby Africa Gold Cup perpetual trophy – aRugby World Cup qualifier – has been officially unveiled during the International Sports Press Association (AIPS) Congress in Brussels on May 8, 2018, in the presence ofAbdelaziz Bougja, President of Rugby Africa,Nicolas Pompigne-Mognard, Founder of APO Group and main official partner of Rugby Africa,[7]Gianni Merlo, President of theInternational Sports Press Association, AIPS [it],[8] and Mitchell Obi, President of AIPS Africa.

It has been presented to the winner of the Rugby Africa Gold Cup for the first time in August 2018.

Prior to this date, each winner of the Rugby Africa Gold Cup received a trophy.

The back of the trophy is engraved with the text "Presented byNicolas Pompigne-Mognard, Founder of APO Group;Abdelaziz Bougja, President of Rugby Africa".

Handmade by Swatkins, Great Britain's leading Trophy, Award and Silverware manufacturer since 1898, the Rugby Africa Gold Cup is a Gold Plated Perpetual Trophy Cup. Standing at a height of 47 centimetres (18.5 in) and weighing 3.3 kilograms (7.3 lb), it features a smooth Georgian-bodied design, complete with patterned handles, a stepped lid that is supplied complete with a circular solid Africanmahogany base. The Trophy has been engraved with the text 'Rugby Africa Gold Cup' and has the shape ofAfrica in pride of place on the main body. To complete, on the gold plated plinth band this holds the names of the winners. It's estimated there is enough space for at least 70 winning teams' names to be engraved on the base of the perpetual trophy, which would allow it to be used until at least the year 2080.

Lower level championships

[edit]

Second level

[edit]
YearHostFinalThird place match
WinnerScoreRunner-upThirdScoreFourth
Africa Cup 1B
2011Kampala,Uganda Zimbabwen/a Uganda Madagascar
2012Antananarivo,Madagascar Madagascarn/a Namibia Senegaln/a Morocco
2013Dakar,Senegal Namibia45–13 Tunisia Senegal41–5 Botswana
2014Nabeul,Tunisia Tunisia26–6 Ivory Coast Senegal32–31 Uganda
2015Kampala,Uganda Ugandan/a Madagascar Senegaln/a Ivory Coast
2016Monastir,Tunisia Senegal15–14 TunisiaNo third place
Rugby Africa Silver Cup
2017Casablanca,Morocco Morocco8–3 Ivory Coast Madagascar47–19 Botswana
2018Mufulira,Zambia Algeria31–0 ZambiaNo third place
^n/a A round-robin tournament determined the final standings.

Third level

[edit]
YearHostFinalThird place match
WinnerScoreRunner-upThirdScoreFourth
Africa Cup 1C
2011Yaoundé,Cameroon Senegal15–6 Cameroon Zambia17–12 Botswana
2012Gaborone,Botswana Botswanan/a Ivory Coast Mauritiusn/a Zambia
2013Yamoussoukro,Ivory Coast Ivory Coastn/a Morocco Nigerian/a Zambia
2014Gaborone,BotswanaSouth AfricaImpala RCn/a Mauritius Botswanan/a Nigeria
2015Lusaka,Zambia Zambian/a Nigeria Zimbabwe B
2016Casablanca,Morocco Moroccon/a Nigeria Mauritius
Rugby Africa Bronze Cup
2017Mufulira,Zambia Algeria30–25 ZambiaNo third place
2018Elmina,Ghana Ghana23–17 Mauritius Rwanda32–22 Lesotho
^n/a A round-robin tournament determined the final standings.

Fourth level

[edit]
YearHostFinalThird place match
WinnerScoreRunner-upThirdScoreFourth
Africa Cup 1D
2011Johannesburg,South Africa Mauritius41–12 NigeriaNo third place

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"SA U23 away to Morocco for final".news24.com. June 26, 2001.
  2. ^"Rugby Africa Cup".Rugby Afrique. Retrieved2021-11-15.
  3. ^"Rugby Africa Cup".Rugby Afrique. Retrieved2021-11-15.
  4. ^Newsroom, APO Group-Africa; Africa, Rugby."Rugby Africa Cup 2020 Shines in New Light for Players, Teams and Spectators".rugbyafrica.africa-newsroom.com. Retrieved2021-11-15.{{cite web}}:|last= has generic name (help)
  5. ^"2020".Rugby Afrique. Retrieved21 June 2021.
  6. ^Njiru, Eric."Africa Gold Cup cancelled".ragahouse.com. Retrieved21 June 2021.
  7. ^"APO partners with Rugby Africa".Bizcommunity (South Africa). Retrieved21 November 2017.
  8. ^"AIPS Media - Executive Committee". Archived fromthe original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved15 September 2012.

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