The contest between Australia (Wallabies) and South Africa (Springboks) is one of the major rivalries in international rugby union. Since 1996, the two teams have competed in the annual Rugby Championship (formerly known as the Tri Nations Series), and since the 2000s, they have contested for the Mandela Challenge Plate. The teams' first meeting was on 8 July 1933 at Newlands Stadium in Cape Town in the first of five tests on the 1933 Australia tour of South Africa and Rhodesia. The test was won 17âÂÂ3 by South Africa who also won the series 3âÂÂ2.
Before the era of sporting boycotts, South Africa dominated the early encounters up to 1971.
Both sides have exhibited a considerable home advantage, with the Springboks winning more than 75% of matches played in South Africa, and the Wallabies winning more than 60% of matches played in Australia.
In the amateur era, the Springboks made five tours to Australia, and were undefeated in three of them. South Africa won three of the five test series they played in Australia; 2âÂÂ0 in 1937, 2âÂÂ0 in 1956 and 3âÂÂ0 in 1971. By contrast, the Wallabies made six tours to South Africa, only once making it through undefeated, albeit on a tour comprising only four matches and one test in 1992. Prior to that, Australia's best away tour was the 2-all drawn test series of 1963.
Prior to 1972, South African teams were racially selected, organised by the whites-only South African Rugby Board (SARB). Australia then supported the international boycott of sporting contacts with South Africa over the issue of apartheid. The teams did not meet again until 1992, when apartheid was being dismantled and the South African Rugby Board had merged with the non-racial South African Rugby Union (SARU). Since that time Australia has won just over 50% of their games and has won the Mandela Challenge Plate nine times in the twelve years since its inception. (As a footnote, player-selection today is still based on race in an effort to comply with race-quotas set by SA Rugby.)
In the professional era, extended tours of each country have been replaced by participation in an annual series involving the top teams of the Southern Hemisphere. From 1996 through 2011, Australia and South Africa competed alongside New Zealand in the Tri Nations Series. Starting in 2012, the three nations competed alongside Argentina in The Rugby Championship. In the Tri Nations Series era, the Wallabies and Springboks played two or three encounters each year on a home-and-away basis; the Rugby Championship features two annual encounters, also on a home-and-away basis.
Australia and South Africa have met three times in the Rugby World Cup. In 1995 they were drawn in the same pool and host nation South Africa won 27âÂÂ18, going on to win the cup. In 1999 Australia knocked South Africa out of the competition in a semi-final at Twickenham, winning 27âÂÂ21, after extra-time. In 2011, Australia again knocked South Africa out of the competition, in a quarter-final at Westpac Stadium in Wellington, winning 11âÂÂ9.
<small>Note: Date shown in brackets indicates when the record was or last set.</small>
Below is a list of matches that Australia has retrospectively awarded matches test match status by virtue of awarding caps, but South Africa did not award caps.