Latest news with #TuppyDiackShield


Otago Daily Times
18-06-2025
- Sport
- Otago Daily Times
Stalwart of southern rugby memorialised by competition, shield
Pip Jones, of South Otago, holds up the new shield which bears the name of her father, Otago rugby great Tuppy Diack, who died recently. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH A former Gore man, who died last month, will be memorialised through a new rugby competition and shield. The Tuppy Diack Shield will make its debut this season. Diack, who died in Dunedin, aged 94, played for both Otago and Southland. He also played one test for the All Blacks, in 1959. Born in Invercargill, he was once the head boy at Gore High School. The former winger was revered and in a fitting tribute, Southland Country, Southland Metro, Otago Country and two Dunedin metropolitan teams will contest a new competition for the Tuppy Diack Shield. It will be a straight round-robin, attached to the end of the club rugby season. The opening round will be on August 2. Otago Rugby Football Union game development manager Michael Smith said it was a great shame Diack had died before he got to see the competition in action. However, Diack had been aware of the idea and was very pleased to put his name to it. The wood the shield is made from is from a fallen totara tree in the Catlins area and was carved by Patrick Bowden and members of the South Otago Turners Club. The tree was understood to have been about 1000 years old. "It's a great bit of wood," Mr Smith said. The new competition was a way to bridge the gap between club and provincial rugby, as well as offering players who missed out on representative opportunities something else to aim for, Mr Smith said. After the competition an Otago B and Southland B team will be selected for a triangular tournament that will include a Canterbury team. — APL


Otago Daily Times
06-06-2025
- Sport
- Otago Daily Times
Commemorative shield to make debut
Pip Jones, 56, holds up the new shield which bears the name of her father, Otago rugby great Tuppy Diack, who died recently. The shield is made from the wood of a fallen totara estimated to be about 1000 years old. Photos: Peter McIntosh What better way to recognise a fallen totara than by putting his name on a fallen totara. The Tuppy Diack Shield will make its debut this season. It is a new competition that bears the name of Otago rugby great Tuppy Diack, who died in Dunedin last month. It will be played for by Southland Country, Southland Metro, Otago Country and two Dunedin metro teams — a north team made up of Alhambra-Union, University, Harbour, Kaikoria and Taieri and a south team made up of Zingari-Richmond, Southern, Dunedin and Green Island. It is a straight round-robin that will be attached to the end of the club rugby season. The opening round is on August 2. Otago Rugby Football Union game development manager Michael Smith said it was a great shame Mr Diack had died before he got to see the competition in action. However, Mr Diack had been aware of the concept and was very pleased to put his name to it. The wood the shield is made from is from a fallen totara tree in the Catlins area and was carved by Patrick Bowden and members of the South Otago Turners Club. The reverse of the shield. The tree is understood to have been about 1000 years old. "It's a great bit of wood," Mr Smith said. "We've put Tuppy's photo on the front of it, and a story about him on the back as well. "It looks great. It was unfortunate that Tuppy passed away [before he got to see it]." Mr Smith said the new competition was a way to bridge the gap between club and provincial rugby, as well as offer the players who miss out on representative opportunities something else to aim for. It was also a good way for players from the country to get noticed. At the end of the tournament, an Otago B and Southland B team will be selected to play in a triangular tournament that will include a Canterbury team. Mr Diack was born in Invercargill and went to school in Gore. He played seven games for Southland and 101 games for Otago. He was the pin-up boy of Otago rugby in the 1950s and early 1960s and played one test for the All Blacks against the British Lions at Athletic Park in 1959. Mr Diack was a life member of both the Otago University Rugby Club and the Otago Rugby Football Union.