PREMIER MEN'S TROPHIES 

GALLAHER SHIELD

The Gallaher Shield is awarded to the championship winner of the Premier competition.

It is also one of the oldest championship trophies in the country, having been first awarded in 1922, and apart from 2020, when Covid wrecked the season, it has found a home in every year since. It was contested for the 100th time in 2022 when, in a fitting final, one of the most frequent winners (Ponsonby) squared off against one of the infrequent victors (Manukau Rovers) in a match that was decided by the last kick of the season.

WHO WAS DAVID GALLAHER?


ALAN MCEVOY MEMORIAL SHIELD

The Alan McEvoy Memorial Shield is awarded to the top team at the end of the premier round robin.

The Alan McEvoy Trophy was first contested in 1954, a few months after McEvoy, a 26-year-old Grammar prop who was an Auckland regular and who had trialled for the 1953 All Blacks, had drowned near Dargaville in a swimming accident. Although his isn’t a well-known name now, he was regarded as one of the better young props around the country and may have moved up in the mid-50s had things played out differently. McEvoy played 29 matches for Auckland A and was a regular at the time of his death. He had also appeared in half a dozen first-class matches for the B team, played for North Island and a New Zealand XV in 1952 as well as playing trials in 1953.

The Trophy was presented by two fellow Auckland players, Peter Bevin and Hallard ‘Snow’ White. White was the other front-row bookend of the time and Bevin a Grammar clubmate and lock, so tightness among the tight five is very evident.

From its inception the Alan McEvoy Trophy has been the prize for the first-round winner. In one way it may be considered harder than the Gallaher Shield to win, as a full round of 13-15 matches has been the norm, so every team is met, but the Gallaher is played among the top handful at a time when everyone has run into form. For many years the double was a rare feat, only achieved outright by three teams until 1976, but since then Ponsonby has made it almost commonplace. It’s not that, and never will be; winning either is tough but winning both requires a particularly good team to have a very good season​​​​​​​

SIR FRED ALLEN CHALLEGE CUP

This is the challenge cup for the premier grade. This is played for at all home games of the team that holds the cup.

The Sir Fred Allen Challenge Cup is one of a number of similar trophies which have been presented in recent times and named in commemoration of some of Auckland’s finest players. Each grade now has such a prize, which is defended each time the holder plays a home match - similar to the Ranfurly Shield.

Allen was the first to have such a trophy named after him, and this commemorates one of Auckland’s most decorated rugby men.

WHO WAS FRED ALLEN?


JUBILEE TROPHY 

The Jubilee Trophy is currently awarded to the winner of the second section in Men’s Premier after the knockout stages, which means it goes to the club that finishes fifth overall on the season.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

THE HISTORY 


PORTOLA TROPHY 

The Portola Trophy (is currently awarded to the ninth-placed team in Senior A after the knockout process is finished - meaning the winner of the third section.

The name is interesting: the Portola Festival is a music festival in San Francisco which began in 1909, so exactly how the name got on a trophy for Auckland club rugby has been lost in the mists of time. The ARFU Annual Report does not mention anything about the new trophy (to give its full original name, the Portola Festival Trophy), and neither do the 85th and 100th Jubilee books. When it was introduced in 1955, it coincided with a revamp of the Senior championship, with a new prize needed to fill the space created by the Pagni Cup being relocated to Second Grade.

Gaspar de Portola, the man whose name is remembered in a number of ways in California, including the festival, was allegedly the first white man to see the San Francisco Bay, although he did not name it. Exactly what he had to do with rugby remains unclear.

From its donation, the trophy has always been a second-tier one (i.e. never at stake at the top end of the Senior Competition, or one of the old trophies awarded in lower grades which had been in place for years), but it fills a niche that is appreciated by teams outside the top echelon.

PRESIDENT'S CUP

The President’s Cup is awarded to the team which wins the fourth level post-Alan McEvoy Trophy section of Premier competition, or the team that finishes 13th overall.

Donated in 1992, the President's Cup filled a space which had not, until that time, existed. The various ways of determining the Senior rankings below the Gallaher Shield section, which was a lot larger than just four teams, did not previously run to a fourth section except very briefly just before North Harbour left the Auckland RFU umbrella in 1985. 

More grades had such a prize at some stage of their existence than didn't: as late as 1975, there were no fewer than five being contested in Senior grades that year. The President's Cup is a variation on the same theme. It was named for the office rather than for any particular holder - in 1992, the President was Eric Boggs, a former Auckland rep and All Black, a coach and selector for Ponsonby and Auckland, a newspaper columnist and a man who always had the game's best interests at heart. 

Given the calibre of Auckland's Presidents down the years, any team receiving this trophy will be getting it from one of the true stars of the local game.

WAKA NATHAN 

The Waka Nathan Cup is awarded to the winner of the pre-season knockout competition among the top eight teams from the previous year’s Premier grade.

The Waka Nathan Cup has different rules governing play when it is a stand-alone competition (interchange rather than outright replacement, number of reserves and a few others) so it is one of those rare competitions played under more than one set of bylaws. Because of the way it has to be conducted, the tournament does not have the impact of the Alan McEvoy Trophy, but it is normally a very good indicator of who might be expected to influence the upcoming season. ​​​​​​​

WHO WAS WAKA NATHAN? 


POLLARD CUP 

The Pollard Cup is awarded to the top team in the bottom eight of the pre-season tournament.

It is one of the oldest trophies contested in Auckland club rugby, and it will, in 2025, become the fourth current trophy to have been contested for 100 years.

WHO COMPETED FOR IT?