Mid West Cup

Mid West Cup
SportRugby league
Instituted1913
Inaugural season1913
Ceased2021
Re-formed2022
Country Australia
Most recent premier Blackheath Blackcats (2023)
Most titles Carcoar Crows (13 titles)
WebsiteGroup 10 Homepage

The Mid West Community Cup is a rugby league competition in the Central West area of New South Wales. The premiers are awarded the Blayney Citizens' Cup, the oldest continuously awarded trophy in Country Rugby League, with Neville the first recipients in 1913.[1] For all intents and purposes, it is a third division competition in the Group 10/11 area.

In its last season under its original model in 2021, the competition encompassed teams from Bathurst, Kandos, Lithgow, Oberon, Orange and Portland.[2] Some of the remaining clubs in the competition merged into the Woodbridge Cup in 2022 after two incomplete seasons due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. However, the competition reformed in late 2022 under a new community cup model similar to Group 17. The three clubs that emerged from the ailing original format of the competition to join the Woodbridge Cup did not rejoin the competition as they sought a higher standard of football, paving the way for the return of other older clubs.

Current clubs

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Three clubs are currently listed as part of the Mid West Community Cup competition. The inaugural edition of the competition ran as a four-team single round-robin with finals to follow, with a total four week season in 2022 and in 2023. The competition expanded to seven teams for 2024.

Club City/Town Home Ground No. of Titles Premierships
Blackheath Blackcats Blackheath Jubilee Park 10 1980, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 2002, 2005, 2015, 2018, 2023
Carcoar Crows Carcoar Carcoar Oval 13 1931, 1949, 1950, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1973, 1982, 1985, 1988, 1994, 2022
Kandos Waratahs Kandos Waratah Park 7 1972, 1974, 1978, 1979, 1981, 2009, 2013
Portland Colts Portland Kremer Park 3 1984, 1998, 2008
Rockley Bulls Rockley Rockley Sports Ground 1 1956
Wallerawang Warriors Wallerawang Wallerawang Oval 6 1976, 1977, 1991, 2000, 2001, 2017
Woodstock Panthers Woodstock Woodstock Showground 1 1983

Former clubs

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2021 Season teams

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Seven teams will compete in the 2024 season including former Group 10 side Oberon Tigers, with the women's grade having six teams (Kandos being the extra). The teams were:

Club City/Town Home Ground No. of Titles Premierships Notes
CSU Mungoes Bathurst Diggings Oval 5 1975, 2012, 2014, 2019, 2021 Joined Woodbridge Cup
Kandos Waratahs‡ Kandos Waratah Park 7 1972, 1974, 1978, 1979, 1981, 2009, 2013 Competed in League Tag only, joined new Community Cup
Lithgow Bears Lithgow Tony Luchetti Showground 2 2010, 2011 Disbanded
Oberon Tigers Oberon Oberon Sports Ground 2 2003, 2020 Joined Woodbridge Cup
Portland Colts‡ Portland Kremer Park 3 1984, 1998, 2008 Joined new Community Cup
Orange United Warriors Orange Wade Park 0 N/A Joined Woodbridge Cup

‡ indicates active participant in the Mid West Community Cup

Former Teams (1913–2022)

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More than 40 teams have reportedly featured in the Mid West Cup over the course of its history.[3] They include:

Club No. of Premierships Premiership Years Moved to
Barry 1 1932 Amalgamated with Neville
Barry-Neville 2 1952, 1953 Disbanded
Binnaway Bombshells 0 NA Castlereagh Cup
Burrangong Bears 0 None Disbanded
Blayney Bears 3 1922, 1970, 2006 Group 10 Rugby League
Blayney Blues 1 1923 Disbanded
Blayney Institute 1 1948 Disbanded
Blayney Militia 2 1924, 1925 Disbanded
Blayney Waratahs 2 1926 Disbanded
Browns Creek 2 1927, 1928 Disbanded
Canobolas 0 NA Disbanded
Coolah Kangaroos 0 NA Group 14 Rugby League
Cullen Bullen 0 NA Disbanded
Dunedoo Swans 0 NA Castlereagh Cup
Gulgong Terriers 5 1987, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2007 Castlereagh Cup
Mandurama 1 1918 NA
Manildra Rhinos 0 NA Woodbridge Cup
Merriwa Magpies 0 NA Group 14 Rugby League
Mitchell College 1 1975 Disbanded
Mudgee Tigers 1 1996 Disbanded
Millthorpe 1 1951 Disbanded
Neville 1 1913 Amalgamated with Barry
Newbridge 1 1914 Disbanded
Orange Barbarians 0 NA Disbanded
Orange Old Boys/Our Boys 0 NA Disbanded
Villages United 1 2015 Disbanded

History

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The Mid West Cup was originally organised as a rugby union competition but made the switch to rugby league after the First World War. The first winner of the competition was Neville and the club awarded the Blayney Citizens' Cup, the oldest trophy still in regular use in Country Rugby League.[4]

While the competition was traditionally based in around the Blayney region, in the 1950s it expanded into Rockley, Carcoar and Cullen Bullen before it was absorbed in the Group 10 Rugby League and renamed the Group 10 Second Division in 1970. It adopted its current name of the Mid West Cup in 1990. The competition only featured four teams in 2019, including CSU Mungoes, Lithgow Bears, Orange Barbarians and Portland Colts, but expanded to eight in 2020 with the inclusion of the reformed Blackheath Blackcats and Kandos Waratahs, Oberon Tigers (who have been relegated from Group 10) and the newly formed Orange United.

The competition's last season under its original model was in 2021, and encompassed teams from Bathurst, Kandos, Lithgow, Oberon, Orange and Portland. The three remaining clubs in the competition (CSU, Oberon and Orange United) merged into the Woodbridge Cup in 2022 after two incomplete seasons due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. However, the competition reformed in late 2022 under a new community cup model similar to Group 17. The three clubs that emerged from the ailing original format of the competition to join the Woodbridge Cup did not rejoin the competition as they sought a higher standard of football, paving the way for the return of other older clubs such as Carcoar, as well as the introduction of Burrangong for the first time. Burrangong returned to the George Tooke Shield for 2023, with Blackheath rejoining the competition in their place.

Premierships

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  • 1913: Neville
  • 1914: Newbridge
  • 1918: Mandurama
  • 1922: Blayney Bears
  • 1923: Blayney Blues
  • 1924: Blayney Milita
  • 1925: Blayney Milita
  • 1926: Blayney Waratahs
  • 1927: Browns Creek
  • 1928: Browns Creek
  • 1931: Carcoar
  • 1932: Barry
  • 1948: Blayney Institute
  • 1949: Carcoar
  • 1950: Carcoar
  • 1951: Milthorpe
  • 1952: Barry-Neville
  • 1953: Barry-Neville
  • 1956: Rockley
  • 1957: Carcoar
  • 1958: Carcoar
  • 1959: Carcoar
  • 1960: Carcoar
  • 1961: Cullen Bullen
  • 1962: Carcoar
  • 1966: Carcoar
  • 1967: Carcoar
  • 1968: Carcoar
  • 1969: Carcoar
  • 1970: Blayney Bears
  • 1971: Carcoar
  • 1972: Kandos
  • 1973: Carcoar
  • 1974: Kandos
  • 1975: Mitchell College
  • 1976: Wallerawang
  • 1977: Wallerawang
  • 1978: Rylstone-Kandos
  • 1979: Rylstone-Kandos
  • 1980: Blackheath
  • 1981: Rylstone-Kandos
  • 1982: Carcoar
  • 1983: Woodstock
  • 1984: Portland
  • 1985: Carcoar
  • 1986: Blackheath
  • 1987: Gulgong
  • 1988: Carcoar
  • 1989: Blackheath
  • 1990: Blackheath
  • 1991: Wallerawang
  • 1992: Blackheath
  • 1993: Blackheath
  • 1994: Carcoar
  • 1995: Lithgow Bears
  • 1996: Mudgee
  • 1997: Gulgong
  • 1998: Portland
  • 1999: Gulgong
  • 2000: Wallerawang
  • 2001: Wallerawang
  • 2002: Blackheath
  • 2003: Oberon
  • 2004: Gulgong
  • 2005: Blackheath
  • 2006: Blayney Bears
  • 2007: Gulgong
  • 2008: Portland
  • 2009: Kandos
  • 2010: Lithgow Bears
  • 2011: Lithgow Bears
  • 2012: CSU Blue
  • 2013: Kandos
  • 2014: CSU Yellow
  • 2015: Blackheath
  • 2016: Villages United
  • 2017: Wallerawang
  • 2018: Blackheath
  • 2019: CSU
  • 2020: Oberon
  • 2021: CSU
  • 2022: Carcoar

Grand final results (1970-2024)

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Season Premiers Score Runners-up Grand final host Minor premiers Teams
Group 10 Second Division era.
1970 Blayney Carcoar
1971 Carcoar Blayney
1972 Kandos 18–8 Molong Redmond Oval, Millthorpe Kandos 7
1973 Carcoar 10–9 Kandos Redmond Oval, Millthorpe Carcoar 7
1974 Kandos 17–10 Wallerawang Wallerawang Sportsground, Wallerawang Kandos 6
1975 Mitchell College Portland
1976 Wallerawang Rockley 2BOD, Bathurst Wallerawang
1977 Wallerawang 10–6 Canobolas Bathurst Sportsground, Bathurst Canobolas 12
1978 Rylstone 22–10 Canobolas 11
1979 Rylstone 34–18 (A.E.T.) Blackheath Lithgow Sportsground, Lithgow
1980 Blackheath 16–3 Rylstone Kremer Park, Portland Rylstone
1981 Rylstone 19–0 Carcoar Wallerawang Sportsground, Wallerawang
1982 Carcoar 22–14 Portland 11
1983 Woodstock 14–12 Blackheath Redmond Oval, Millthorpe
1984 Portland 23–12 Lithgow Bears 9
1985 Carcoar
1986 Blackheath 20–6 Lithgow Bears 9
1987 Gulgong Kandos Gulgong
1988 Carcoar Canobolas
1989 Blackheath 26–8 Orange Old Boys Blackheath 9
1990 Blackheath Orange Old Boys
1991 Wallerawang 16–12 Blackheath
1992 Blackheath Gulgong
1993 Blackheath 16–14 Portland
1994 Carcoar 20–16 Blackheath
1995 Lithgow Bears 8–2 Blackheath 16
1996 Mudgee Tigers
1997 Gulgong Lithgow Bears
1998 Portland 40–28 Binnaway
1999 Gulgong 19–18 Lithgow Bears
2000 Wallerawang
2001 Wallerawang
2002 Blackheath
2003 Oberon
2004 Gulgong
2005 Blackheath 18–17 Lithgow Bears 6
2006 Blayney 32–6 Lithgow Bears Tony Luchetti Sportsground, Lithgow Lithgow Bears 7
2007 Gulgong 36–18 Lithgow Bears Billy Dunn Oval, Gulgong Gulgong 6
2008 Portland 26–20 Oberon Oberon Sportsground, Oberon 7
2009 Kandos 50–0 Lithgow Bears Waratah Park, Kandos Kandos 7
2010
2011 Lithgow Bears Kandos Tony Luchetti Sportsground, Lithgow
2012
2013 Kandos 46–18 CSU Yellow Waratah Park, Kandos
2014 CSU Yellow 22–10 Blackheath Diggings Oval, Bathurst
2015 Wallerawang Sportsground, Wallerawang
2016
2017
2018
2019 CSU 30–0 [[File:|16px|]] Orange Barbarians
2020
2021
Competition reverts to Community Cup model.
2022
2023
2024
2025

See also

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References

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  1. ^ 100 years of Lithgow football
  2. ^ Mid West New Era Cup to feature eight and possibly nine clubs in 2020 in Western Advocate, 4 December 2019
  3. ^ 100 years of Lithgow football
  4. ^ Stanbridge, Gwende (2019). The Blayney Citizens' Cup 1913-2019.
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