NRL | 09/06 10:00 | 27 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Sydney Roosters | L | 28-36 | |
NRL | 08/30 10:00 | 26 | Penrith Panthers v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 34-12 | |
NRL | 08/24 09:35 | 25 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Newcastle Knights | L | 16-36 | |
NRL | 08/17 09:35 | 24 | Wests Tigers v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 18-16 | |
NRL | 08/08 09:50 | 23 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Melbourne Storm | L | 16-28 | |
NRL | 08/03 09:35 | 22 | Cronulla Sharks v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 20-6 | |
NRL | 07/28 08:15 | 21 | Canberra Raiders v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 32-12 | |
NRL | 07/20 05:00 | 20 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Wests Tigers | W | 42-28 | |
NRL | 07/11 09:50 | 19 | Dolphins v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 36-28 | |
NRL | 07/04 09:50 | 18 | Parramatta Eels v South Sydney Rabbitohs | W | 16-32 | |
NRL | 06/22 09:35 | 16 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Manly Sea Eagles | W | 14-0 | |
NRL | 06/14 10:00 | 15 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Brisbane Broncos | W | 22-12 | |
NRL | 06/08 05:00 | 14 | Gold Coast Titans v South Sydney Rabbitohs | W | 12-46 | |
NRL | 05/25 09:35 | 12 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Parramatta Eels | W | 42-26 | |
NRL | 05/18 09:45 | 11 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v North Queensland Cowboys | L | 22-28 | |
NRL | 05/11 07:30 | 10 | St George/Illawarra Dragons v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 28-14 | |
NRL | 05/02 09:50 | 9 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Penrith Panthers | L | 12-42 | |
NRL | 04/25 09:50 | 8 | Melbourne Storm v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 54-20 | |
NRL | 04/13 09:35 | 6 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Cronulla Sharks | L | 22-34 | |
NRL | 04/06 04:00 | 5 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v New Zealand Warriors | L | 4-34 | |
NRL | 03/29 05:05 | 4 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Canterbury Bulldogs | W | 20-16 | |
NRL | 03/22 09:00 | 3 | Sydney Roosters v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 48-6 | |
NRL | 03/14 09:00 | 2 | Brisbane Broncos v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 28-18 | |
NRL | 03/03 02:30 | 1 | Manly Sea Eagles v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 36-24 | |
NRL Pre-Season Challenge | 02/23 07:00 | - | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Sydney Roosters | L | 10-46 | |
NRL Pre-Season Challenge | 02/17 09:05 | - | South Sydney Rabbitohs v St George/Illawarra Dragons | W | 28-6 | |
NRL | 09/01 10:00 | 27 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Sydney Roosters | L | 12-26 | |
NRL | 08/20 04:05 | 25 | Newcastle Knights v South Sydney Rabbitohs | L | 29-10 | |
NRL | 08/12 05:00 | 24 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v St George/Illawarra Dragons | W | 26-14 | |
NRL | 08/05 09:35 | 23 | South Sydney Rabbitohs v Cronulla Sharks | L | 16-26 |
The South Sydney Rabbitohs are an Australian professional rugby league football club based in the Sydney suburb of Redfern that competes in the National Rugby League (NRL). They are often referred to as Souths or the Bunnies.
The club was formed in 1908, as one of the founding members of the New South Wales Rugby Football League, making it one of Australia's oldest rugby league teams. It is one of only two NSW foundation clubs still present in the NRL, the other being the Sydney Roosters.
The Rabbitohs' traditional heartland covers the once typically working-class suburbs of inner-south Sydney. The club is based in Redfern, where its administration and training facilities are located, however it has long held a wide supporter base spread all over New South Wales. The team's home ground is currently Stadium Australia in Sydney Olympic Park. South Sydney is the most successful professional team in the history of Australian rugby league with twenty-one first grade premierships.
The South Sydney District Rugby League Football Club was formed at a meeting on 17 January 1908 at Redfern Town Hall when administrator J. J. Giltinan, cricketer Victor Trumper and politician Henry Hoyle gathered together in front of a large crowd of supporters. The club played in the first round of the newly formed New South Wales Rugby League, defeating North Sydney 11–7 at Birchgrove Oval on 20 April 1908. The team went on to win the inaugural premiership then successfully defended its title in the 1909 season, winning the Grand Final by default. During these early years Arthur Hennessy was considered the "founding father" of the South Sydney rugby league club. A hooker and prop forward, Hennessy was Souths' first captain and coach. He was also New South Wales' first captain and Australia's first test captain in 1908. S. G. "George" Ball became Club Secretary in 1911 after Arthur Hennessy stood down from the position, and he remained in that capacity for over 50 years, only retiring a few years before his death in 1969.
After further premiership success in 1914 and 1918, South Sydney won seven of the eight premierships from 1925 to 1932, missing out only in 1930. The 1925 side went through the season undefeated for 12 games. and is only one of six Australian premiership sides in history to have achieved this feat. Such was Souths' dominance in the early years of the rugby league competition that the Rabbitohs were labelled "The Pride of the League".
South Sydney struggled between 1940–1948. South Sydney's longest losing streak of 22 games was during the period 1945–1947. In the 1945 season the club only managed to win one game while in 1946 it was unable to win a single game.
1949 would mark the beginning of almost a decade of great success for South Sydney, winning five of the six premierships from 1950 to 1955, and losing the 1949 Grand Final against St. George, and also the 1952 Grand Final against Western Suburbs in controversial circumstances. The 1951 side's point scoring feat in its 42–14 victory over Manly-Warringah remains the highest score by a team in a Grand Final and "the miracle of '55" involved South Sydney winning 11 straight sudden death matches to win the premiership. Players that were involved in these years included Denis Donoghue, Jack Rayner, Les "Chicka" Cowie, Johnny Graves, Ian Moir, Greg Hawick, Ernie Hammerton, Bernie Purcell and Clive Churchill. Churchill, nicknamed "the Little Master" for his brilliant attacking fullback play, is universally regarded as one of the greatest ever Australian rugby league players.
In the late 1950s Souths began a run of poor form, failing to make the finals from 1958 to 1964, during this time receiving the 1962 wooden spoon.
In 1965 a talented young side made the Grand Final against St. George who were aiming to secure its tenth straight premiership. The young Rabbitohs were not overawed by the Dragons' formidable experience and in front of a record crowd of 78,056 at the Sydney Cricket Ground, it went down narrowly 12–8. The nucleus of this side went on to feature in Australian representative teams for the next six years and ensured another golden period for South Sydney making five successive grand finals from 1967 to 1971, winning four. Bob McCarthy, John O'Neill, Eric Simms, Ron Coote, Mike Cleary and John Sattler from 1965 were later joined by Elwyn Walters, Ray Branighan, Paul Sait, Gary Stevens and coach Clive Churchill to form a fearsome combination before internal strife and poaching by other clubs from 1972 onwards unravelled the star studded pack. From this period comes part of South's and Australian Rugby League folklore when in the 1970 premiership decider against Manly, captain John Sattler inspired the side to victory playing out 70 minutes of the match with his jaw broken in three places after being king hit by Manly prop John Bucknall.
Financial problems started to hit Souths in the early 1970s, forcing some players to go to other clubs. The licensed Leagues Club, traditionally such an important revenue provider to all first grade league sides, was closed in 1973 but a "Save Our Souths" campaign ensured the club survived. "Super Coach" Jack Gibson's arrival turned the club's form, winning the pre-season competition in 1978. The club captured victories in the mid-week Tooth Cup competition in 1981 and in the pre-season "Sevens" competition in 1988. The Rabbitohs made the finals on five occasions in the 1980s, including a dominant season to finish as minor premiers in 1989. The 1989 season proved to be the club's most successful in years, but was also the last time the club reached the finals until 2007. The following season the Rabbitohs finished as wooden spooners.
The club stayed afloat in the 1990s despite major financial problems. Souths' only success came in 1994 when it won the pre-season competition, defeating the Brisbane Broncos 27–26 in the final. The Super League War and the eventual formation of the National Rugby League affected the club greatly when it was determined in 1998 that the newly formed competition would be contracted to 14 teams for the 2000 season. Following a series of mergers by other teams, and a planned merger with Cronulla-Sutherland was met with staunch opposition from both clubs, South Sydney failed to meet the National Rugby League's selection criteria to compete in the competition and were subsequently excluded from the premiership at the end of the 1999 season.
In 2000 and 2001, South Sydney fought its way back into the competition following a string of high-profile legal battles against the National Rugby League and News Limited. A number of well attended public rallies took place during this time, as supporters from many different clubs got behind South Sydney's case. Upon appeal to the Federal Court in 2001, South Sydney won readmission into the premiership for the 2002 season.
After being readmitted, South Sydney were initially unsuccessful in the premiership, finishing amongst the bottom three teams for five seasons straight including three wooden spoons. Following this, the club was taken over by actor Russell Crowe and businessman Peter Holmes à Court in 2006. In the 2007 season South Sydney played in its first finals campaign since 1989.
May 2008 saw the sudden resignation of the then current executive chairman and CEO, Peter Holmes à Court. He had been appointed to the role of CEO at the start of 2008. Reports suggested that Holmes à Court had been forced to stand down after his relationship with Russell Crowe had deteriorated beyond repair.
The South Sydney Rabbitohs celebrated its centenary year during the 2008 National Rugby League season. That year the club were named the National Trust's inaugural 'Community Icon', in recognition of the club's significant longstanding contribution to sport and sporting culture at both state and national levels.
The arrival of Sam Burgess and Greg Inglis to the club in the early 2010s saw South Sydney qualify for the finals. In April 2011, Souths announced Michael Maguire would replace retiring coach John Lang for the 2012 season, signing as head coach on a three-year deal. Following consecutive preliminary final exits in 2012 and 2013, it defeated the Sydney Roosters in the 2014 preliminary final to advance to its first grand final since the successful 1971 campaign.
Following a slim 6–0 lead in the first half of the 2014 grand final, Souths scored four second half tries to defeat Canterbury 30–6. This was South Sydney's first premiership win in 43 years. Sam Burgess received the Clive Churchill medal despite playing the entire match with a fractured cheekbone, suffered from a head clash during the first tackle of the match.
Following the premiership victory, South Sydney were presented with the Keys to the City of Randwick by Mayor Ted Seng at a presentation ceremony at Souths Juniors in Kingsford and later the same day awarded the Keys to the City of Sydney by Lord Mayor Clover Moore at a reception at Sydney Town Hall.
On 23 October 2014, Holmes à Court sold his 50% share of Blackcourt League Investments, and consequently his 37.5% stake in South Sydney, to James Packer's Consolidated Press Holdings.
After elimination early in the 2015 finals series, a nine-game winning streak in 2018 saw South Sydney return to premiership contention. This season marked the start of five consecutive preliminary finals appearances in the late 2010s and early 2020s. After losses in consecutive years to the Sydney Roosters, Canberra Raiders, and Penrith Panthers, South Sydney defeated Manly in 2021 to advance to the grand final against Penrith.
With the game poised at 8–8 in the second half, Cody Walker threw a pass that was intercepted by Panthers winger Stephen Crichton who scored untouched. Souths scored in the final five minutes of the match, but halfback Adam Reynolds missed the conversion from the sideline and a subsequent field-goal attempt, either of which would have seen the game tied. Penrith won the game 14–12. Penrith defeated South Sydney in the 2022 preliminary final, ending Souths' season for the third year in a row.
Prior to the 2022 season, Atlassian founder Mike Cannon-Brookes became a partial owner of the Rabbitohs by buying one third of the management firm alongside Crowe and Packer. Together, these three own 75% of the Rabbitohs; the remaining 25% of the club is owned by fans. South Sydney started the 2023 NRL season strongly with the club sitting second at the midway point of the year which included impressive victories over Brisbane, Melbourne and Penrith. However, the club would suffer a slump in the second half the season only winning four of the remaining 13 fixtures which saw them finish 9th on the table after losing against the Sydney Roosters and miss the finals for the first time since 2017.
South Sydney started the 2024 NRL season poorly winning only one game from their opening seven matches. On 30 April 2024, head coach Jason Demetriou was sacked by the club with Ben Hornby replacing him as head coach. South Sydney would finish the 2024 NRL season second-last in 16th place on the table managing only seven wins all year.