Five reasons why Super Rugby Pacific is enjoying it's best season in forever
After going through the pain of losing a team last season, Super Rugby Pacific has emerged stronger in 2025 with a renewed buzz around the competition.
It seems like the competition is heading in the right direction, with crowd numbers up, television viewership up, and cracking games of rugby each week.
Credit where credit is due, here are the reasons why Super Rugby Pacific has got itself off the canvas and is heading in the right direction.
A regular season that matters
We finally have high-stakes regular season fixtures with teams fighting for their seasons as the competition progresses.
After losing the Melbourne Rebels, the 11-team competition had to reduce playoff spots from eight to six.
The Mickey Mouse playoff system that made the entire regular season redundant is thankfully gone. We have real consequences now which provide a proper race, the way it should be. The old Super Rugby competitions of the past set the bar really high, with just four of 12 teams making the semi-finals.
That made for a great regular season with all the drama that comes with having teams being eliminated from contention along the way.
2025 has that with last year’s defending champion Blues fighting for their season by round six in ninth place. If this was 2024, they’d still be coasting knowing they just have to move up one spot to get a ticket into the playoffs.
High-stakes regular season games give fans another reason to tune in, and ultimately bring the best out of the players and teams.
Competition parity
The unpredictability of this season has been fuelled by increased parity among the sides. The amount of high-scoring games that have been decided by a score or less has been incredible.
The Chiefs’ 32-31 win over the Blues last weekend was decided by razor-thin margins and that’s just one of many games that have become thrillers.
Did losing the Rebels help the Australian sides? It’s hard to say that is definitively the case. The Reds and Brumbies picked up the least amount of Rebels players and are the top two Australian sides.
The absence of the Rebels also has nothing to do with the New Zealand sides and their levels of parity. There are random occurrences that have helped with this. The Hurricanes, who went 12-2 last season, just so happen to have been decimated with injuries, impacting their strength.
The Highlanders recruited well and have discovered some breakout stars in Finn Hurley, who helped them knock over the Blues with two tries.
Competition parity this year just seems to be part luck, but we’ll take it.
Pacific Power
Although the Fijian Drua and Moana Pasifika are sitting last and second to last respectively, it doesn’t feel like they deserve that.
The Drua’s first big defeat came last week against the Brumbies in Canberra but before that, they lost 36-32 to the Brumbies in Fiji, they also lost 38-34 to the Hurricanes in Napier, and 29-24 to the Waratahs. The Drua have been mixing it with anyone and could well be 4-1, not 1-4.
Their one win has come against the competition-leading Chiefs, which is the only loss the Hamilton-based franchise has suffered.
They are not punching bags at the bottom of the ladder getting flogged.
The same goes for Moana Pasifika, who lost 45-44 to the Western Force and 31-29 to the Highlanders. They could easily be at the other end of the table.
Moana Pasifika signing Ardie Savea has been hugely impactful. Never before have Moana attracted the crowds that they are getting this year.
Savea has helped create some momentum for Moana and they are no doubt competitive with any side in the competition. They get a chance to do something great this weekend when they host the table-topping Chiefs.
Empowering on-field refs
Super Rugby Pacific has done the right thing and got rid of most TMO interventions that have plagued the game over the last few years and impacted one World Cup final.
TMOs have to stay in their lane now which stops all the random interjections and stoppages that killed momentum and game flow. This has been a masterstroke move.
Unprompted TMO involvement is limited to just two situations, otherwise, it has to be referee-driven which is the way it should be, letting the official with the whistle drive the game.
We are seeing better games as a result, plain and simple. Send the asterisk to South Africa.
No South African teams, no problem
This year has proven that the South African exodus was not the main issue with Super Rugby Pacific.
After getting everything else fixed, the competition is currently better than when the four South African clubs were involved.
Yes, that’s right, it may not have the same audience size as before, but this season is far better than anything from 2012 onward.
We easily forget the convoluted conference system that propped up both South African and Australian sides who didn’t deserve home playoff rights.
The 2010s saw the South African teams pumped by New Zealand teams all the time. They were uncompetitive and the results showed that.
Could Super Rugby be better with the Saffa teams in it? They have found success in the URC and add a lot to that competition, but if they were to ever come back, there can’t be any charity.
If you want back in, put your hands up for some real competition, don’t ask for handouts. No conference systems.
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By and large SRP is much more entertaining and even now. Getting more rugby in games now allied with much less TMO interference is a real positive. A major concern however is that more rugby means more injuries to players and extensive casualty wards often long term. I fear that come internationals teams will be decimated. What is the solution ??? Scheduled breaks in games to allow some recovery time ? Shorter games ? Better sports medicine ? Allow increase in reserves ? Extending rest protocols for players ?
What is better:
Closer margins
Higher scorelines
Higher ball in play time
Higher level of competitiveness
Lesser predictability of results
Moana Pasifika finally establishing a home ground
Table standings constantly changing
Introduction of fantasy league tipping
Introduction of player of the year voting
Less interjection from TMOs
Greater undertaking from referees to reduce stoppages during the game
Greater transparency from teams regarding injury updates
More afternoon games
Hearing refereeing explanations and decisions on screen and at the ground
What will be better still:
Fijian Drua breaking their drought and winning on the road
All Aussie teams breaking their drought and winning games in NZ
Reward fans who have Sky Sport/Stan subscriptions and still attend games in person
Entice more fans who have Sky Sport/Stan subscriptions to attend games in person
Having shot clocks at all grounds
Is is too much to ask for better Sky sport commentary team?
Still needs work:
Theme based rounds needs deeper fan engagement from all teams than just putting on a label and wearing new kit
Create a Super rugby pacific app - make it easy for fans to access information on team lists, injury updates, kickoff times, player and game stats, live score updates
Ben Smith is cooking with gas!
The playoff system has never been redundant Ben, it was merely important to fewer teams, just those vying for top seed. After that it was simply about qualifying.
The format is arguably worse now. I can see the Canes slumping to a point were the return of key components, like their starting midfield, is now going to happen too late for them due to the reduced playoff spots. So we don’t get the perfect jeopardy like what we got with the Crusaders last year, were deservedly (despite showing they easily had a top 4 team when fit) they missed out because they were even more pathetic than that early team deserved. A couple more bonus points with some better leadership, on and off field, would have given the Crusaders a deserving. As reported last year have we not seen a more perfect finals run in.
Objectively easier finals qualification is better suited to shorter competitions, and we know SR is the “sprint” version amongst it’s rugby equivalents. The Top 14 is probably the worst competition in this respect, with it’s length with a double round robin should have a football styled champion. The Premiership, with it’s smaller base but also double round robin, was pretty much perfectly suited to it’s smaller 4 team playoff. Super Rugby, with it’s much shorter season (smaller amount of games, and most importantly over a much shorter period, would be able suited to a 6 team play off series if it had a comparative round robin. It doesn’t. Playing a bunch of random extra games, within your own division, requires you to expand the qualification reach. Super Rugby was another perfectly balanced competition.
If you want to look subjectively, sure, there are a lot of cool facets of tighter qualification, they just aren’t sensible applicable to SR so you have to be a realist.
I’m pretty sure you yourself have authored articles showing you need to be in the top four come finals time to win Super Rugby.
The closer parity is simply more about circumstance, I agree. The Lions tour has just as much to do with the consistency and early standards in Australian players performances, and random factors balancing the NZ sides. The predictable improvement of the “Pacific Powers” another key factor, but with the case of extra support like NZR help raise their profile, as in the “Ardie” factor, possibly able to happen a year sooner than it has.
Still, as I have highlighted on previous articles, I wouldn’t be surprised if these results were nearly as predictable as they were last year, and that it was just the fixture ‘creation’ by new management that has artificially created a bit more hype and unrealistic perception on the competitions ‘parity’, in these early stages.
I wouldn’t have minded if they just put their own spin on WR’s structure. While you don’t go on to describe what the two situations are that remain, one that I think could still have been of value keeping is for the ability for the TMO to rule live.
The fact that several of the WC’s TMO officials were overly zealous in their ability to over rule the onfield decision does not mean there wouldn’t have been value in a good southern hemisphere run contingent from simply adding value and support to the game ref. Take the case last weekend as the perfect example. While I don’t believe it would have been of any real benefit for the Highlanders to have had advantage at the death (the same sequence would have still played out), looking in isolation one can clearly tell that was a live situation where the ref said he was obstructed from making a call, and if the current rules would have allowed, the TMO, like us on TV, could easily have told him to play advantage for the infringement. In another situation that type of officiating could have made all the difference to the quality and accuracy of the outcome. Views of the comp would be a lot different if it was clearly as case that the Highlanders were robbed of a deserved victory.
All told, the game is obviously much better off for what changes have been made with officiating, though this is not really isolated to SR. SR is just the only comp to have start with these.
We are currently in a conference system Ben, I’m afraid you’re beating the wrong drum there and you own subjective (and flawed) opinions are coming through quite clearly. As spitballed on the article a few days ago, it’s hard to see a true league table where it is either a full round robin or double round robin happen, there is still going to be some amount of divisional derby matchs going on to fill out the season.
Conferences are also the only way forward, so get on board. I would love for SARU to be able to add a couple of regional sides in Super Rugby, using the countries burgeoning playerbase. It might be far easier, and more advantageous, for SA to add to SR than say try to enlarge the URC, or go it on their own with a professional scene. They could leave their clubs to themselves and take control of running a highveld team out of Cheetahs country, and a lowveld team wherever they would like a new attempt at a ‘Kings’ team. I can’t see the clubs ever rejoining SR.
Not surprised the article is well off the mark Ben.
One thing they could do to further improve the ‘jeopardy’ though is to have a separate world club table where each seasons finalists are awarding ranking points going towards selecting who takes part in the biennial (right?) world champs the Champions Cup is hosting in the future. I’d normally expect the government to simply send whoever the most recent finalists are but I reckon creating a way to have those instead be judged by contribution since the last edition (however frequent this idea might turn out) could be a winner this new management will work out and capitalize on. It would also help add to that jeopardy if say ranking points were only allocated to the top 6 of an 8 team finals format.