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Super Rugby AUS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Men's rugby union competition
Not to be confused with Super Rugby AU.
Super Rugby AUS
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2025 Super Rugby AUS
SportRugby union
Founded2025; 1 year ago (2025)
First season2025
Organising bodyRugby Australia
No. of teams4
Country Australia
HeadquartersSydney, New South Wales
Most recent
champion
Waratahs (2025)
Most titlesWaratahs (1 title)
BroadcasterStan Sport
Related
competitions
Official websiterugby.com.au

The Super Rugby AUS is a men's rugby union round-robin competition organised by Rugby Australia (RA). Established in 2025, it is the second-highest level of professional rugby in the country, behind Super Rugby.

Background and history

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Australia, unlike its "Tri-Nations" partners New Zealand and South Africa, has never had a consistent national professional rugby union competition below Super Rugby.

In 2012, Reds player Luke Morahan called for a national club competition as a means of bridging the gap between the semi-professional competitions in Sydney, Brisbane and the Australian Capital Territory, and Super Rugby.[1] In 2014, a national professional club competition known as the National Rugby Championship (NRC) was formally established. Nine newly-created clubs played in a round-robin format across eight rounds, finishing with a four-team knockout stage to decide the season winners.[2] The NRC was praised for improving Australia's player depth.[2] However, in 2020, following the COVID-19 pandemic, the competition was disbanded.[3]

In 2023, Force CEO Tony Lewis told The Sydney Morning Herald that an Australian third-tier competition was a necessity, stating: "All the Super coaches [in Australia] who participated in that third-tier comp [the NRC] that was running before COVID... all waxed lyrical about how good a competition it was and the number of coaches that come through it, and the number of S+C coaches [strength and conditioning], the number of analysts, the number of players. So it's just not about players, it's about coaches, about analysts, about physios. If you're not preparing them for the next level, the jump is horrendous. The first time you do economics, they do needs and wants."[4]

It was speculated in October 2024 by Australian sports news-website The Roar that a new national club competition was in the works and would not be like its predecessors with newly-created teams across the country, but instead involve the four Australian Super Rugby teams (the Brumbies, the Force, the Reds and the Waratahs),[5] and could possibly involve Japanese teams.[5] [6] It was revealed months later that a new "third-tier" competition was indeed in the making by Rugby Australia (RA).[7] Announcing a competition could begin as early as 2025, RA CEO Phil Waugh stated to Rugby.com.au , "The biggest gap we've had over the last period of time has been (the) connection between the community game and professional game and how to bridge that gap. I think we're working on that. It's going to take time. There's no doubt that Super Rugby is too short in its current format so how do we fill that gap for those players that aren't in Test Rugby?"[8]

In June 2025, it was confirmed that a national "third-tier" professional competition was launched by Rugby Australia.[9] [7] Known as Super Rugby AUS, the competition consists of the four Australian Super Rugby teams: the Brumbies, the Force, the Reds and the Waratahs,[7] [10] and its inaugural season took place between September and October 2025 across four weeks.[7] The final two teams after three rounds (Force, Waratahs) met each other in a grand final, with the first-placed Force earning hosting rights. The Waratahs won 33–26.[11] [12]

In December 2025, it was reported by The Roar that three new teams from the Pacific nations of Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga could join the competition if a A$150 million partnership was signed between the Australian government's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) and the governments of Fiji, Samoa, and Tonga.[13] The Roar report stated that the deal was pending approval from the Prime Minister of Samoa Laʻauli Leuatea Schmidt,[13] and had been in the works for six months.[13]

Teams

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Team Union Established Location Region
Brumbies ACT and Southern NSW Rugby Union 1995; 31 years ago (1995) Canberra, Australian Capital Territory Australian Capital Territory and Southern New South Wales
Force Western Australia Rugby Union 2005; 21 years ago (2005) Perth, Western Australia Western Australia
Reds Queensland Rugby Union 1882; 144 years ago (1882) Brisbane, Queensland Queensland
Waratahs New South Wales Rugby Union 1882; 144 years ago (1882) Sydney, New South Wales Central and Northern New South Wales

Champions

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Grand Finals

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List of Super Rugby AUS Grand Finals
Season Winners Score Runners-up Venue Attendance
2025 Waratahs 33–26 Force Kingsway Regional Sporting Complex, Wanneroo N/a

Broadcasting and sponsorship

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For its inaugural season, Super Rugby AUS was broadcast live on Stan Sport,[7] Rugby Australia's broadcast partner since 2020.[14] [15] The competition was also streamed live from the online video platform YouTube.

Awards

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Team of the Season

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At the conclusion of its inaugural edition, the Super Rugby AUS announced its Team of the Season. It included six Waratahs players, five Force players, three Reds players, and one Brumbies players.[16]

Player of the Tournament

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Announced in the Team of the Season award at the conclusion of the inaugural edition of the Super Rugby AUS was the Force's fly-half Max Burey.[16] Alongside this accolade, Burey was also named as the inaugural Player of the Tournament. Burey throughout the four match competition made five linebreaks, scoring three tries, beating fifteen defenders and finished with the highest scoring tally with 30 points.[16]

List of Player of the Year winners
Season Player Team Ref.
2025 Max Burey Force [16]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Pentony, Luke (22 September 2012). "Players call for national club comp". ABC News . Archived from the original on 22 September 2012.
  2. ^ a b Pentony, Luke (29 July 2015). "NRC credited for improving standard of Australian club rugby competitions". ABC News.
  3. ^ "Sport: NRC cancellation a blow for Fijian Drua rugby team". Radio New Zealand . 4 June 2020.
  4. ^ Cully, Paul (13 August 2023). "Why new national comp is a 'need, not a want' for Australian rugby". The Sydney Morning Herald . Nine Entertainment.
  5. ^ a b Doran, Christy (28 October 2024). "Exclusive: Rugby Australia plot new third-tier competition involving Super teams". The Roar .
  6. ^ Wasiliev, Nick (31 October 2024). "Does Australian rugby FINALLY have its answer to the third-tier question?". The Roar .
  7. ^ a b c d e Wasiliev, Nick (17 June 2025). "Rugby Australia confirms new domestic Super Rugby AUS competition to kick off in September". Rugby.com.au . Archived from the original on 10 July 2025. Retrieved 3 August 2025.
  8. ^ Williamson, Nathan (11 December 2024). "Waugh reveals third-tier competition in pipeline for 2025". Rugby.com.au . Archived from the original on 3 January 2025.
  9. ^ Pentony, Luke (19 June 2025). "Rugby Australia's new domestic competition must avoid familiar hurdles". ABC News.
  10. ^ "Rugby Australia revives 'third tier' competition with Super Rugby AUS". ESPN . 17 June 2025.
  11. ^ "Super Rugby AUS: Western Force fall 33–26 to Waratahs in grand final after last-minute try". The West Australian . Seven West Media. 5 October 2025. Retrieved 6 October 2025.
  12. ^ "'Bloody tight': Tahs beat Force to first Super Rugby AUS title with two late tries". The Roar . 5 October 2025. Archived from the original on 5 October 2025. Retrieved 6 October 2025.
  13. ^ a b c Doran, Christy (3 December 2025). "Revealed: Landmark 150ドルm deal could see Pacific nations boost Super Rugby AUS". The Roar .
  14. ^ Hytner, Mike (9 November 2020). "Rugby Australia signs 100ドルm deal with Nine as broadcaster unveils Stan Sport". Guardian Australia .
  15. ^ Phillips, Sam (9 November 2020). "Nine, Rugby Australia confirm groundbreaking 100ドルm broadcast deal". The Sydney Morning Herald. Nine Entertainment.
  16. ^ a b c d Wasiliev, Nick (7 October 2025). "Super Rugby AUS 2025 Team of the Season". Rugby.com.au.
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