User:Jnestorius/South African rugby family tree
Appearance
Category:Rugby union and apartheid Category:Rugby union governing bodies in South Africa
Year | White | Nonracial | Coloured | Black | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | South African Rugby Union (SARU) | renamed from South African Rugby Football Union | |||
1992 | South African Rugby Football Union (SARFU) | merger of SARB and SARU | |||
1978 | South African Rugby Board (SARB) | South African Rugby Union (SARU) | South African Rugby Football Federation (SARFF) | South African Rugby Association (SARA) | SARFF and SARA become racial subsidiaries of SARB[1] |
1973 | SARU founder member of nonracial South African Council on Sport (SACOS) | ||||
1972 | SAARB renamed SARA[2] | ||||
1971 | South African African Rugby Board (SAARB) | KwaZakhele Rugby Union splits from Port Elizabeth ARB and joins SARU; other SAARB clubs follow later.[3] | |||
1966 | SACRFB splits into racial SARFF and nonracial SARU | ||||
1959 | South African Coloured Rugby Football Board (SACRFB) | SABRB renamed SAARB | |||
1935 | South African Bantu Rugby Board (SABRB) | SABRB split from SACRFB | |||
1897[4] | South African Coloured Rugby Football Board | SACRFB founded | |||
1889 | SARB founded |
References
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Black, David Ross; Nauright, John (1998). Rugby and the South African Nation: Sport, Cultures, Politics, and Power in the Old and New South Africas. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719049323.
Citations
[edit]- ^ Potgieter, Sebastian Johann Shore (March 2017). "Barbed-Wire Boks": The Long Shadow of the 1981 Springbok Tour of New Zealand and the United States of America (PDF) (M.A.). Stellenbosch University. p. 40.
- ^ Fillies, Avril (3 May 2018). "Never-say-die Mbiko". News24. Retrieved 25 June 2018.
- ^ Springbok: The Official Opus (ebook ed.). BookBaby. 2015. ISBN 9780993387838. Retrieved 25 June 2018.; Odendaal, André (2003). The Story of an African Game. New Africa Books. p. 209. ISBN 9780864866387.
- ^ Black and Nauright 1998 p.49