Whanganui Midweek

Whanganui miles ahead in Heartland champs history

- John B. Phillips

Although again losing to unbeaten South Canterbury in the recent Meads Cup final, Steelform Whanganui remain the most successful union in the history of the annual Heartland National Rugby championsh­ip.

Based on overall placings since the competitio­n started in 2006, the Butcher Boys have an aggregate of 38 points, well clear of South Canterbury 73, North Otago 74 and Mid Canterbury 85.

The points are based on 1 for winning the Meads Cup, 2 for runnersup, 3 for third, 4 for fourth, 5 for winning the Lochore Cup, 6 for runners-up, down to 12 for the last of the dozen unions in the series.

Whanganui have an outstandin­g record of having qualified for the post-section playoffs in each of the 17 years the championsh­ip has run since. In 2020 there was no competitio­n because of Covid restrictio­ns.

The Butchers have contested 13 Meads Cup finals, winning six times and claiming Lochore Cup titles in two finals.

They were beaten in the home semifinals at Cooks Gardens in 2018 (7-17 Meads Cup by Thames Valley) and 2013 (30-40 Lochore Cup by Buller).

In terms of titles, closest to Whanganui’s eight championsh­ips are South Canterbury and North Otago with five each — three Meads and two Lochore wins for both South Island unions.

Mid Canterbury have three Heartland titles including two Meads Cup finals, with single Meads Cup honours to Wairarapa Bush, East Coast and Thames Valley.

Poverty Bay have won the Lochore Cup four times, including in the first three years. Whanganui, South Canterbury and North Otago have won twice each, and Mid Canterbury,

Wairarapa Bush, Buller, King Country, Horowhenua-Kapiti, East Coast and West Coast once each.

West Coast recently celebrated becoming the last of the 12 Heartland unions to win a championsh­ip, with a 23-20 home Lochore victory over Poverty Bay.

Finalists rewarded

Whanganui and South Canterbury, finalists in the recent Bunnings Warehouse Meads Cup, provide half the 2023 New Zealand Heartland squad for matches in the South Island next week.

Twelve of the 23-strong squad come from the two unions that have dominated the national championsh­ip over the past two seasons.

South Canterbury, now three-peat Meads Cup winners, supply seven players and Wanganui five for fixtures against Canterbury Developmen­t XV at Methven on Wednesday, November 1, and NZ Barbarians in

Oamaru on Saturday, November 4.

It is the first time the national Heartland and Barbarians teams have met since the Baabaas won 36-24 at Taupō in 2021.

Last year NZ Heartland massacred NZ Police 84-14 in a complete mismatch at Taupō‘s Owen Delaney Park.

Whanganui halfback Lindsay Horrocks, who has been selected for a sixth time for the national team, will be playing in his ninth NZ Heartland match, as will be South Canterbury halfback William Wright, when he takes the field.

Lindsay Horrocks, who recently passed a century of rep games for the Whanganui union, will be joined by his cousin Douglas, one of 11 Heartland debutants.

Douglas Horrocks, a hard-working loose forward, rejoined Kaierau on his return from Ireland.

Another new national cap is Taihape lock Peter Travis Hay-Horton, a brother of 2021 NZ Heartland rep prop Hadlee Hay-Horton.

Whanganui also supply a third newcomer to the NZ squad in attacking Kaierau fullback Peceli Malanicagi.

The fifth local selected is Butcher Boys skipper and goal-kicking firstfive Dane Whale, named for a third successive year.

Lindsay Horrocks now becomes the second most selected local NZ Heartland rep with six – 2015-16-19-21-22-23 – behind Northern Wanganui’s national captain Peter Rowe on nine (2006-07-09-10-12-13-14-15-16).

Hooker Cole Baldwin won five selections (2009-10-11-14-15).

The Methven fixture starts at 4pm next Wednesday and the Oamaru game at 2pm on Saturday week. i

This is the final weekly Talking Rugby column for 2023.

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