Pacific_Rim_Championship

Pacific Rim Championship

Pacific Rim Championship

Add article description


The 2004 Pacific Rim Championship and the 2004 Pacific Cup was the 9th Pacific Cup, a rugby league tournament held between Pacific teams. The tournament was hosted in Auckland and for the first time split into two competitions; The Pacific Rim Championship between national teams and the Pacific Cup between Auckland-based selections. In the final of the Pacific Rim competition the Cook Islands defeated New Zealand Māori 46-6 while Samoa XIII defeated Tonga XIII 52–18 to win the Pacific Cup.

Quick Facts 2004 (2004) (), Number of teams ...

Background

The tournament, organised by both the New Zealand Rugby League and Pacific Island Rugby League Association (PIRLA), was a revival of the Pacific Cup which had not been held since 1997 due to the Super League war. The aim of the Pacific Rim Championship was to promote awareness of the game in the region with a view to re-establishing international fixtures and full contact with the main nations Australia, Great Britain and New Zealand in the near future.

The teams that participated in the 2004 Pacific Rim competition were: Tonga, Fiji, New Zealand Māori, Niue, Samoa and the Cook Islands. The Pacific Cup included Auckland Māori, New Caledonia, Samoa XIII, Tonga XIII and two other teams.

The official opening was held as part of the pre-match programme for the Tri-Nations test match between Australia and the New Zealand Kiwis on 16 October. A colourful parade of flags representing the participating countries was led into the stadium in front of about 20,000 spectators before kick-off.[1]

Matches were played at Waitemata Stadium, Ericsson Stadium and North Harbour Stadium.[1]

Squads

The Pacific Rim competition featured international and New Zealand based players while the Pacific Cup squads were limited to Auckland-based players with the exception of New Caledonia who sent a development squad.[2]

Pacific Rim squads

New Zealand Māori

New Zealand Māori were coached by Tawera Nikau who was assisted by Terry Hermansson.[3]

More information Player, Club ...

Fiji

The Fijian squad was composed mainly of locally based players.[4]

More information Player, Club ...

Pacific Rim Competition

Pool A

More information Māori, 54 – 4 ...
17 October 2004
More information Samoa, 36 – 18 ...
19 October 2004
More information Māori, 70 – 10 ...
21 October 2004

Pool B

More information Fiji, 6 – 56 ...
17 October 2004
More information Cook Islands, 18 – 10 ...
19 October 2004
More information Cook Islands, 20 – 12 ...
21 October 2004

Bowl Final

More information Fiji, 34 – 24 ...
23 October 2004

Grand Final

More information Cook Islands, 46 – 4 ...
23 October 2004

Pacific Cup

Pool A

More information Samoa XIII, 44 – 10 ...
17 October 2004
More information Auckland Māori, 70 – 0 ...
18 October 2004
More information Samoa XIII, 76 – 0 ...
20 October 2004

Pool B

More information Tonga XIII, 22 – 17 ...
17 October 2004
More information Tonga XIII, 22 – 18 ...
18 October 2004
More information Cook Islands XIII, 28 – 12 ...
20 October 2004

Final

More information Samoa XIII, 52 – 18 ...
23 October 2004

References

  1. John Coffey, Bernie Wood (2008). 100 years: Māori rugby league, 1908-2008. Huia Publishers. pp. 329–330. ISBN 9781869693312.
  2. "Taranaki pair picked for NZ Maori cup team". Taranaki Daily News. New Plymouth, New Zealand. 7 October 2004. p. 12 via NewsBank.
  3. "Bati targets defensive patterns". Fiji Times. Suva. 5 October 2004. p. 36 via NewsBank.
  4. "NZ Maori Thrash Samoa". Rugby League in New Zealand. Archived from the original on 30 October 2004. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  5. "Cook Islands survive Tongan onslaught". Rugby League in New Zealand. 20 October 2004. Archived from the original on 30 October 2004. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  6. "Cooks into Pacific Rim Grand Final". Rugby League in New Zealand. 22 October 2004. Archived from the original on 30 October 2004. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  7. "Pacific Rim Grand Final Cook Islands v NZ Maori". Rugby League in New Zealand. Archived from the original on 30 October 2004. Retrieved 1 August 2022.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Pacific_Rim_Championship, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.