• All Blacks equals awesome in the Rugby Championship

    All Blacks
    David Rogers/Getty Images

    We in South Africa love to boast, statistically, that the Springboks are the greatest World Cup team. Equally, there is no debate, only awe, that the All Blacks, in the Rugby Championship, are more extraordinary than mere great, writes Mark Keohane.

    The Springboks with 4 World Cup golds, followed by the All Blacks with three, Wallabies with two and England with one, are the most decorated World Cup team.

    But that happens every four years, when we in South Africa beat out chests, feel untouchable and just love everything that is Springboks.

    In between, since the game turned professional in 1996, all that the World Cup four golds has done is mask just how awful we have been in our premier annual Test international competition, and how awesome the return has been for the All Blacks in the Rugby Championship, formerly the Tri Nations, that brings together the best Southern Hemisphere teams.

    For those who follow, understand and/or appreciate the English Premier League, history will detail there are those who win the FA Cup, but there are those who win the league.

    Simply put, the Springboks have edged the All Blacks in the FA Cup, but in the league it has been a very lonely place for the All Black atop the summit of Southern Hemisphere international rugby.

    The Rugby Championship starts this weekend and for all the pub talk, office talk, breakfast talk and maybe even bedroom talk, here are the facts to support any opinions.

    The Tri Nations. launched in 1996, involved the All Blacks, the Springboks and the Wallabies. The Rugby Championship, evolved to four teams in 2012, added Argentina. In 2020, because of Covid, the Springboks did not play in the competition and it has been recorded as a Tri-Nations result.

    Our starting point is the combined tournament, between 1996 and 2023. We will then break it down to Tri Nations (1996 to 2011) and Rugby Championship (2012 to 2023).

    The title winners

    The All Blacks have won 20 titles

    The Springboks have won 4 titles

    The Wallabies have won 4 titles

    The wooden spoon for finishing last 

    11 – Springboks

    9 – Pumas

    6 – Wallabies

    2 – All Blacks

    Winning percentage

    75% – All Blacks

    43% – Springboks

    41% – Wallabies

    16% – Pumas

    Test wins

    100 – All Blacks

    56 – Springboks

    55 – Wallabies

    9 – Pumas

    Average score

    30-19 – All Blacks

    23-24 – Springboks

    22-25 – Wallabies

    18-32 – Pumas

    In 28 title campaigns, the league table reads

    476 points – All Blacks

    286 points – Wallabies

    284 points – Springboks

    54 points – Pumas (who only started competing in 2012)

    League bonus points

    71- All Blacks

    51 – Springboks

    47 – Wallabies

    12 – Pumas

    Bledisloe Cup titles: All Black v Wallabies

    All Blacks 23-5

    Freedom Cup titles: All Blacks v Springboks 

    All Blacks 16-2

    Nelson Mandela Challenge Plate: Springboks v Wallabies

    Wallabies 13-7

    Puma trophy

    Pumas v Wallabies

    Wallabies 13-1

    *The All Blacks are the only team to score plus 4000 points and win 100 Tests.

     

    Photo: David Rogers/Getty Images

     

    Article written by

    Keo has written about South African and international rugby professionally for the last 25 years

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