Scottish Cup (rugby union)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Organiser(s) | Scottish Rugby Union |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1995 |
| Region | Scotland |
| Teams | 19 (2025–26) |
| Related competitions |
|
| Current champions | Ayr (5th title) |
| Most championships | (5 titles) |
| Website | scottishrugby.org |
The Scottish Cup is the annual knock-out cup competition for domestic rugby union clubs in Scotland. The cup has been competed for since the 1995–96 season. Despite many structural changes the competition has always culminated with the final at Murrayfield Stadium.
Clubs in the 10-team Premiership and National League Division 1 compete in an unseeded knockout tournament, with four matches in the first round prior to the last 16.
As part of Silver Saturday[1] at Murrayfield in April, the finals of the associated National League Cup, Shield, and Bowl competitions are also held. These take place on the main Murrayfield Stadium pitch and at the adjacent Edinburgh Rugby Stadium along with the equivalent Women's tournaments (Sarah Beaney Cup, Shield, and Plate).
The National League Cup is contested by the 30 clubs in National League Divisions 2, 3 and 4. The National Shield is played on a regional basis with two Caledonia, three East and three West region clubs progressing into national quarter-finals. The National Bowl is for all remaining regional league clubs, with four local competitions each producing a winner for the national semi-finals.[2]
History
Since the 2017–18 season when the National League Cup was introduced, entry to the Scottish Cup has been restricted to the top two divisions of Scottish rugby.
Prior to this clubs in the three National Leagues competed in the first round, with six Premiership sides added in the second round, and the final four Premiership teams added in the third round of the competition.
The Cup has also been played on a regional or group basis prior to the knock-out rounds in the past, while the Shield was initially introduced as an additional competition for clubs eliminated in the early rounds of the Cup.
The competition was in abeyance between 2019 and 2022, initially due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and made its return in the 2022–23 season.[3]
Cup Finals
A total of 14 clubs have appeared in the final, of whom 9 have won the competition.[4]
| Ed. | Season | Winners | Score | Runners-up |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1995–96 | Hawick | 17–15 | Watsonians |
2 | 1996–97 | Melrose* | 31–23 | Boroughmuir |
3 | 1997–98 | Glasgow Hawks | 36–14 | Kelso |
4 | 1998–99 | Gala | 8–3 | Kelso |
5 | 1999–2000 | Boroughmuir | 35–10 | Glasgow Hawks |
6 | 2000–01 | Boroughmuir (2) | 39–15 | Melrose |
7 | 2001–02 | Hawick (2)* | 20–17 (a.e.t.) | Glasgow Hawks |
8 | 2002–03 | Heriot's | 25–13 | Watsonians |
9 | 2003–04 | Glasgow Hawks (2)* | 29–17 | Dundee HSFP |
10 | 2004–05 | Boroughmuir (3) | 39–25 | Dundee HSFP |
11 | 2005–06 | Watsonians | 31–15 | Currie |
12 | 2006–07 | Glasgow Hawks (3) | 24–13 | Edinburgh Academicals |
13 | 2007–08 | Melrose (2) | 31–24 | Heriot's |
14 | 2008–09 | Heriot's (2) | 21–19 | Melrose |
15 | 2009–10 | Ayr | 26–23 | Melrose |
16 | 2010–11 | Ayr (2) | 25–21 | Melrose |
17 | 2011–12 | Gala (2) | 24–10 | Ayr |
18 | 2012–13 | Ayr (3)* | 28–25 (a.e.t.) | Melrose |
19 | 2013–14 | Heriot's (3) | 31–10 | Glasgow Hawks |
20 | 2014–15 | Boroughmuir (4) | 55–17 | Hawick |
21 | 2015–16 | Heriot's (4)* | 21–13 | Melrose |
22 | 2016–17 | Melrose (3) | 23–18 | Ayr |
23 | 2017–18 | Melrose (4)* | 45–12 | Stirling County |
24 | 2018–19 | Ayr (4)* | 27–25 | Heriot's FP |
– | 2019–22 | (no competition held) | ||
25 | 2022–23[5] | Hawick (3)* | 31–13 | Marr |
26 | 2023–24 | Hawick (4) | 32–29 | Edinburgh Academicals |
27 | 2024–25 | GHA | 52–30 | Glasgow Academicals |
28 | 2025–26 | Ayr (5) | 31–26 | Currie |
- Notes
- a.e.t. – after extra time
- * – winning team were also Scottish Premiership champions