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Final rematch headlines 2025 Super Rugby Pacific season schedule

The Blues celebrate after winning the Super Rugby Pacific Grand Final match between Blues and Chiefs at Eden Park, on June 22, 2024, in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

The 2025 Super Rugby Pacific schedule is here and sees a revised, 11-team field compete over 16 rounds of action.

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The season kicks off in Christchurch where the reeling Crusaders host the powerhouse Hurricanes on Friday, February 14. Sydney, Suva, Auckland and Perth also play host to the opening round of fixtures, with the Reds the first team to have a bye week.

Round one will also see the 2024 final rematch between the Blues and Chiefs held at Eden Park, with the two sides squaring off again in round five. The fifth week of the competition will be kids round, two weeks following culture round in round three. Round 11 is ANZAC weekend round.

Round 16 will be played on the 30th and 31st of May before the playoffs begin in June.

“We are delighted to unveil the draw for 2025 so members and fans can begin circling dates in their diaries and making plans for the season ahead,” Super Rugby Pacific CEO Jack Mesley said.

“From Suva to Sydney, Canberra to Christchurch, and even a blockbuster in Tonga, our competition will again deliver its brand of fast, physical and thrilling rugby, starring some of our game’s greatest athletes.

“Traditional rivalries will be reignited and new challengers emerge as the reigning champion Blues launch their first title defence in more than two decades.”

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Of particular interest in 2025 will be the new-look Waratahs and Moana Pasifika sides, both clubs having recruited strongly over the offseason and benefitted from the Melbourne Rebels’ demise.

Moana Pasifika, after a season where their home fixtures bounced around the upper North Island of New Zealand as they struggled to find a home base, will be based at North Harbour Stadium in 2025, while also hosting their round six matchup with the Chiefs at Tonga’s Teufaiva Sport Stadium.

For the full season schedule, click here.

Watch the highly acclaimed five-part documentary Chasing the Sun 2, chronicling the journey of the Springboks as they strive to successfully defend the Rugby World Cup, free on RugbyPass TV (*unavailable in Africa)

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H
Hellhound 14 minutes ago
France put World Cup pain behind them with unbeaten run in November

France is starting to look like they are finally over their WC headache, although they were lucky that NZ had a very bad game. The Argies as usual is one game good, the next bad. If they can sort that out and be more consistent, they could become contenders for the WC.


NZ, Argentina (if they are more consistent), and now the Wallabies too is in an upward curve (can they be consistent?), as well as Fiji(as inconsistent as Argentina) looks like possible contenders. The Boks will be as usual a huge threat to defend their title. Things are looking up for the South, so the North should rightfully beware of the Southern Hemisphere threat.


With the French looking dangerous, the English with their close runs (mostly a mindset problem) and the Scottish seems to be the NH main contenders. The Irish is good, but not excellent anymore. They are more overbearing and with their glory days mostly gone with old players hanging on by a thread, by 2027 if they don't start adding in the younger players, they won't make it past yet another WC Quarter final. The problem is that their youngsters, while good is nothing special.


That is just 8 teams without the Irish that can become real WC contenders. Lots of hickups to be sorted still for these teams, excluding the Boks to become a threat. Make no mistake, the top Tier is much closer than people realise and the 2027 WC will be a really great WC, possibly the best contended WC ever.

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