Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

URC break attendance record for second time in three weeks

(Photo by Harry Murphy/Sportsfile via Getty Images)

Over 146,000 fans have helped the United Rugby Championship to break its all-time single-round attendance record for the second time in three weeks.

ADVERTISEMENT

The crowd of 26,632 at Loftus Versfeld in South Africa helped push the total attendance for Round Nine to 146,046 setting a new record for a single-round attendance in the league.

Earlier this month a figure of 135,747 was reached for the Round Eight fixtures in the URC which saw bumper crowds and sold-out venues across Christmas and early New Year. Now, just a number of weeks later the final game of Round Nine between the Bulls and the Lions has helped to shatter the previous record by at least 10,000.

This comes off the back of a record 1.6million total attendance for the 2022/23 URC season which also saw the highest-ever crowd for the league’s Grand Final (56,334) while an all-time high of 37.4million watched across the campaign.

Seven of the Round Nine games took place across the New Year period with Edinburgh breaking a record of their own as a total of 37,904. At the same time, the Stormers continued their trend of attracting big numbers for their home derbies as 37,246 packed into their Cape Town home to see them take on the Sharks.

Elsewhere in Round Nine, Connacht, Ospreys and Benetton all put up the sold-out signs while Dragons had a season-high crowd against Scarlets in what ultimately proved to be the highest attended single round in the league’s history.

Commenting on yet another attendance milestone, Martin Anayi, United Rugby Championship CEO, said: “To be acknowledging another attendance record so soon after setting the previous achievement is hard to believe. Once again, we take our hats off to our clubs who are taking great strides in promoting their games and providing fans with match-day experiences that keep drawing them back.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Alongside the strong attendances, we know the broadcast audiences were also in high numbers and it’s clear that the URC is going from strength to strength thanks to the support of everyone involved and the ever-increasing competitive nature of the league.”

Round Nine – Attendance by fixture

Benetton v Zebre Parma: 5,000
Edinburgh v Glasgow Warriors: 37,904
Stormers v Sharks: 37,246
Ospreys v Cardiff: 8,159
Connacht v Munster: 7,240
Dragons RFC v Scarlets: 7,617
Bulls v Lions: 26,632

Total attendance: 146,046

Previous best single round attendances:

135,747 – Round Eight of the 2023/24 season
123,307 – Round 11 of the 2022/23 season
121,117 – Round 21 of the 2017/18 season
117,448 – Round 10 of the 2022/23 season

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

3 Comments
J
Jon 294 days ago

Great stuff from the Scot’s, good to see them enjoying a couple of good teams.

Will be interesting to see how long it takes for some of those grounds to increase (might not want to be by more than thousands), and how high they can crack it.

W
Wayneo 294 days ago

Derby matches proving to be the big crowd pullers and justifies the URC placing such a big emphasis on them forming part of the competition.

Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tom 1 hour ago
England player ratings vs South Africa | 2024 Autumn Nations Series

That 2019 performance was literally the peak in attacking rugby under Eddie. If you thought that was underwhelming, the rest of it was garbage.


I totally get what you're saying and England don't need or have any God given right to the best coaches in the world... But I actually think the coaches we do have are quite poor and for the richest union in the world, that's not good enough. 


England are competitive for sure but with the talent pool up here and the funds available, we should be in the top 3. At the very least we should be winning six nations titles on a semi-regular basis. If Ireland can, England definitely should.


England's attack coach (Richard Wigglesworth) is Borthwick's mate from his playing days at Saracens, who he brought to Leicester with him when he became coach. Wigglesworth was a 9 who had no running or passing game, but was the best box kicker in the business. He has no credentials to be an attack coach and I've seen nothing to prove otherwise. Aside from Marcus Smith’s individual brilliance, our collective attack has looked very uninspiring.

 

England's defence coach (Joe El-Abd) is Borthwick's housemate from uni, who has never been employed as a defence coach before. He's doing the job part time while he's still the head coach of a team in the second division of French rugby who have an awful defensive record. England's defence has gone from being brutally efficient under Felix Jones to as leaky as a colander almost overnight.


If Borthwick brings in a new attack and defence coach then I'll absolutely get behind him but his current coaches seem to be the product of nepotism. He's brought in people he's comfortable with because he lacks confidence as an international head coach and they aren't good enough for international rugby.


England are competitive because they do some things really well, mostly they front up physically, make a lot of big hits, have a solid kicking game, a good lineout, good maul, Marcus Smith and some solid forwards. A lot of what we do well I would ascribe to Borthwick personally. I don't think he's a bad coach, I think he lacks imagination and is overly risk averse. He needs coaches who will bring a point of difference.


I guess my point is, yes England are competitive, but we’re not aiming for competitive and I honestly don't believe this coaching setup has what it takes to make us any better than competitive.


On the plus side it looks like we have an amazing crop of young players coming through. Some of them who won the u20 world cup played for England A against Australia A on the weekend and looked incredible... Check out the highlights on youtube.

12 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Jack Crowley answers doubters, before Sam Prendergast stakes his claim Jack Crowley answers doubters, before Sam Prendergast stakes his claim
Search