Oceania Cup



The Oceania Cup is FORU's showpiece rugby event for our Development and Targeted Unions and is held biennially. FORU Member Unions eligible to participate in the Tournament are American Samoa, Cook Islands, Niue, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tahiti, Tuvalu, Vanuatu and Wallis and Futuna. 

The 2013 Oceania Cup will hosted by the Papua New Guinea Rugby Football Union in July 2013.  Four teams will be competing in the 2013 Oceania Cup - Cook Islands, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Tahiti.  The Tournament will be a qualifier for 2015 Rugby World Cup, with the winner of the 2013 Oceania Cup playing Fiji in 2014 for the Oceania 1 spot at Rugby World Cup.

Papua New Guinea are defending champions after winning the 2011 Oceania Cup by defeating Niue 36-7 in their Round 3 match at Lloyd Robson Oval in Port Moresby on 3 December 2011.

2008 Champions: Niue
2009 Champions: Papua New Guinea
2011 Champions: Papua New Guinea

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Oceania under 19s- PNG shine

Fairi Fairi on the charge. photo Zoomfiji

Fairi Fairi on the charge. photo Zoomfiji

Straight and relentless were PNG. photo Zoomfiji

Straight and relentless were PNG. photo Zoomfiji

Try time for Joshua Posu. photo Zoomfiji

Try time for Joshua Posu. photo Zoomfiji

September 05, 2009 - 4:45pm

PNG and Fiji have won the finals titles on the line today, in super hot conditions both sides showed their stuff to notch comfortable wins.

In a day in which rugby was a festival, PNG and Fiji leave Apia Park with the valuable silverware today.

In the first matchup it was the speed of Vanuatu up against the aggression and straight running of PNG. In the end it was the extra size and go forward ability of PNG that saw them get home 41-3. Both these sides were in the same game last year and Vanuatu is for sure closing the gap on their rivals.

In an expansive and talented display of positive rugby both sides were itching to have a go, every attack was greeted with respect and copybook defence. PNG were like a sharp instrument as they went about their task of slicing up the middle of the Vanuatu forwards and inside backs. What they received in return was a bunch of men that were equal to the task and worked hard on D.

Big number 8 Joshua Posu caused havoc running at PNG, at first he was stopped, but he worked tirelessly for the full match and gained yards more and more as the match went on. Gallant D did continue for the Vanuatu side and it was even the little inside backs that were doing a massive amount of tackling, in particular Lawrence Kalo in the number 10 jersey was busy and effective in the tackle.

Vanuatu were remarkable at snaffling the loose ball, they were into the tackles and got turnovers galore for their hard work. Every time they returned the ball and the spirit and play dished out by both sides was a treat for the crowd.

In the end bigger won the day, PNG played to their natural strengths and were relentless in the strategy to go up the middle. They rattled off 6 tries in the end, but each was earned.

Vanuatu came second on the score sheet, however they have narrowed the gap significantly on last year and the outing will have them eager to be more and more competitive next season.