Centenary Quaich

Centenary Quaich
SportRugby union
Instituted1989
Number of teams2
Country Ireland
 Scotland
Holders Ireland (2024)
Most titles Ireland (21 titles)
Preview warning: unknown parameter "current"
Preview warning: unknown parameter "next host"

The Centenary Quaich (/ˈkwx/; Scottish Gaelic: Cuach nan Ceud Bliadhna; Irish: Corn na Céad Bliain) is an international rugby union award contested annually by Ireland and Scotland as part of the Six Nations Championship.

A "Quaich" is a Gaelic drinking vessel[1] and has been presented to the winners of the fixture since 1989.[2] It was introduced to mark the centenary of the founding of the International Rugby Football Board (founded 1887, which later became World Rugby).[3] Since the introduction of the cup, Ireland have won it twenty-one times while Scotland have won it fourteen times, with one drawn fixture.

The Quaich is one of a number of similar cups contested for between individual teams as part of their international fixture list. Other examples within the Six Nations Championship include the Calcutta Cup (Scotland vs. England), the Millennium Trophy (England vs. Ireland), the Giuseppe Garibaldi Trophy (France vs. Italy) and the Auld Alliance Trophy between France and Scotland.

The contest for the Quaich has been notable for periods of dominance by one or other team; Scotland held the trophy for eleven years when first contested, while Ireland have dominated from 2000 onwards.

The current holders are Ireland who won a seventh successive contest after beating Scotland at Aviva Stadium on 16 March 2024.[4]

  1. ^ "Scottish word of the week: Quaich". The Scotsman. Johnston Publishing. 8 May 2014. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  2. ^ "sportinglife.com". Archived from the original on 5 June 2011.
  3. ^ "The Scrum.com trophy guide - Part One". ESPN scrum.
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference 2024 6n was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Tubidy