
The Wellington Lions and Manawatu Turbos meet on Sunday at Porirua Park in the third round of the 2024 NPC season.
Wellington have won their first two matches, while Manawatu have lost both of theirs.
The two teams meet for the Coronation Cup. This was presented by the Arnott family to the Manawatu Rugby Union in the Queen’s coronation year of 1953. For many seasons the two unions played an annual Queen’s Birthday fixture for the Coronation Cup.
Wellington’s record in all NPC matches against Manawatu is played 29, won 21 lost eight and drawn none.
Wellington have won their last five fixtures against Manawatu, with Manawatu’s last win being in 2016.
In all NPC Cup matches, Wellington has scored 798 points against Manawatu, including 110 tries, and Manawatu has scored 500 points against Wellington, including 60 tries.
The two unions first met in 1887 when Wellington enjoyed what was then a reasonably comfortable 11-0 victory:

Prior to the start of the NPC era in 1976, Wellington and Manawatu had met 67 times, of which Wellington won 45, Manawatu 15 and there were seven draws including three in a row 1948-50.
Wellington’s biggest score (69) and biggest winning margin (66 points) against Manawatu came in their 69-3 victory in 1990.
Wing Mike Clamp scored four tries in Wellington’s 24-9 win in 1984, a Lions record against all sides that was equalled in 2009 by Hosea Gear against Counties Manukau. Fullback John Gallagher scored a Wellington record 24 NPC competition points against Manawatu in a 56-24 win in 1987.
From the NPC archives: Wellington v Manawatu 1981
The following story was published on this website almost 10 years ago to the day, in August 2014. So a good time to republish it here below.

Gone are the days when the All Blacks backed up for their provinces after playing in a Test match the previous day. But on 13 September 1981, that is exactly what a group of them did in this memorable Wellington – Manawatu match at Athletic Park, won 28-10 by Wellington.
This was not just the day after any regular Test match, but one of the most noted of all time – the third and deciding Test against the Springboks in their controversial 1981 series. Less than 24 hours earlier, the All Blacks, featuring several Wellington and Manawatu players, had just beaten off a flour bomb attack from the air and defeated the Springboks 25-22 on the park to clinch their volatile series.
No fewer than nine players – Allan Hewson, Stu Wilson, Bernie Fraser and Murray Mexted for Wellington and Lachie Cameron, Doug Rollerson, Mark Donaldson, Geoff Old and Gary Knight for Manawatu – had played against the Springboks. Manawatu tighthead prop Gary Knight had both scored a try and been nailed on the head in a direct hit by a flour bomb dropped from a low circling Cessna plane, while Wellington wing Wilson had also scored a try and fullback Hewson had kicked the match and series winning penalty.
These players could have been excused for not playing for their respective provinces when they kicked off at Athletic Park on the Sunday afternoon after the Test. But there was everything riding on this match.
Both Wellington and Manawatu were the two leading provinces of the time and in the days before the playoff system was introduced (1992) this was a virtual NPC Final in view of the results each had achieved earlier in the season.
Manawatu, who were the defending NPC champions and recent Ranfurly Shield holders, had won their first eight matches of 1981, including an 18-3 win over the Queensland Reds and Championship wins over Counties, Auckland and Waikato. Close losses included 19-31 to the touring South Africans after scores had been locked up a 19-19 at one point. Manawatu were coming into this match having just thrashed Southland (51-9) and Otago (55-19).
The Lions, who had finished second to Manawatu in 1980 after winning the NPC for the first time in 1978, had beaten the touring Scotland side 19-15, lost to the same Queensland side 17-18 (in Brisbane), and were coming off four straight NPC wins to open their season. In August they had beaten Hawke’s Bay 31-14 and Bay of Plenty 39-13 and in the past fortnight had accounted for Southland (34-9) and Otago (26-6) at home. In these latter two matches, Test wings Wilson and Fraser had scored six of 10 tries.
The stage was set when the crowd of about 25,000, the largest crowd at an inter -provincial match at Athletic Park for over 25 years (and the first of several Athletic Park bumpers over the next few years) assembled to see their teams do battle in the likely Championship decider.
The ground was buzzing, as were the heads of the game’s All Blacks who had celebrated long into the previous evening following victory over the Springboks.
The run of play was tight until well into the second half as the Wellington forwards got stuck into the vaunted Manawatu pack, that also included Frank Oliver who had played in the second Test against the Springboks at this ground. Wellington had led 10-7 at halftime, courtesy of a pushover try to No. 8 Mexted. But a Rollerson penalty for Manawatu locked it all up at 10-10 early in the second half.
The Lions broke the game open 15 minutes into the second spell when prop Brian McGratten surged up field from a lineout and passed to wing Fraser. Fraser carried play on and scored in “Bernie’s Corner”, this try also being his 19th try of the season which broke Ron Jarden’s previous season record for Wellington set in 1953.
Hewson’s conversion made it 16-10, and this was followed soon after by a try to Wilson under the bar, followed by a fourth and match sealing try to second five-eighth Dan Fouhy five minutes from time.
After the match Manawatu and All Black halfback Donaldson praised Wellington’s pack: “All New Zealand underestimates your forwards, they tend to think only of your three-quarters…you have an uncompromising pack. We took a hell of a hiding today,” Donaldson told the Dominion.
For Wellington, their second NPC title wasn’t in the bag just yet. That came three matches later when they beat Canterbury 31-6 in Christchurch. A fantastic season got even better four days after that when they travelled to Hamilton and beat Waikato 22-4 to bring the Ranfurly Shield back to its rightful home.
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