History Of The Rugby World Cup Trophy
The Rugby World Cup is one of the most global sporting competitions in the world and has grown significantly from its humble beginnings in 1987 to the present day.

Therefore given its role on the world stage and its presence as the epitome of rugby union, the tournament needed an iconic trophy to celebrate the event and indicate the magnitude of winning the Rugby World Cup.
What trophy design was selected? What name was given to it? How has it changed over the history of the tournament? We will look to answer all of these questions below in this piece.
History Of The Rugby World Cup Trophy
On the eve of the 1987 Rugby World Cup Sir Nicholas Shehadie took a call in Australia from John Kendall-Carpenter in England. Shehadie, chairman of the World Cup committee, was one of the two driving forces behind the tournament, along with Dick Littlejohn of New Zealand.
“We have a problem,” said ex-England No.8 Kendall-Carpenter, who was an ally of Shehadie’s on the committee. Shehadie asked what it was.
“We haven’t got a trophy,” replied Kendall-Carpenter.
Amid all the frenetic preparation for the inaugural World Cup one small but hugely significant detail had been overlooked: what to give the winning team.
Kendall-Carpenter dashed over to Garrards, the crown jewelers in London’s Regent Street, on the off chance they might have a spare cup lying about. They did, a silver-gilt trophy with a £6,000 price tag. Kendall-Carpenter described it to Shehadie, who told him to buy it. The World Cup had its cup – and they named it after rugby’s founder, William Webb Ellis.
A Victorian design of a 1740 cup by Paul de Lamerie, the Cup was made in 1906, and then a replica was made in 1986 to use for the tournament.
As far as winners go, New Zealand has won the cup a record three times in 1987, 2011, and 2015 with Australia (91, 99) and South Africa (95, 07) both winning it twice each. England won the other edition in 2003.
The trophy has picked up the nickname ‘Bill’ by the Australian World Cup-winning side in 1991.
For the 2019 tournament, the Cup went on a world tour traveling to 18 countries including England, Hong Kong, India, Germany, and the United States.
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