
Click here
for hi-res image.

Detail with Telecom logo and SANZAR countries - click
here for hi-res image.

Detail showing Rugby Ball Mouse - click
here for hi-res image
Trophy for virtual rugby
winner
April 22nd, 2006
By Daniel Nielsen, Copyright The
Nelson Mail,

MAIL PHOTO / Copyright PATRICK HAMILTON 130680
REAL PRIZE: Jeweller Halfdan Hansen with the trophy created in
his Nelson shop for the Telecom Virtual Super 14 rugby competition.
Virtual
rugby has become so popular in New Zealand that the best player will get a
$10,000 trophy made in Nelson.
More than 143,000 people are playing Telecom's online Virtual Super 14 game,
in which rugby fans compete by picking winners and point margins of Super 14
rugby games.
Telecom asked Nelson's Jens Hansen Gold and Silversmith to make a smaller
version of the real Super 14 trophy, which has been crafted by the local
business.
Telecom sponsorship manager Peter Parussini said the trophy was made because
of the popularity and prestige associated with the virtual competition.
"We
heard that last year's competition winner was being asked for his autograph
wherever he went. Given
that there's a trophy for the team which wins the
Super 14, we thought it only appropriate that New Zealand's cleverest rugby fan
be awarded a trophy for their efforts."
In its first year, 2002, 37,000 played Virtual Super 12 (now Super 14). The
next year, 75,000 people participated and in 2004, 105,000 played. Last year
137,000 people took part.
Thirty percent of virtual rugby players are Hurricanes fans and after 10
rounds, two Hurricanes fans - "Forsyth" and "Hutt Demons" - are tied for the
competition lead with 392 points each.
Crusaders fans make up 21 percent, Blues fans 19 percent, Chiefs fans 12
percent and Highlanders fans 11 percent.
More than 35,000 players (26 percent) are based outside New Zealand's major
cities and towns, while 10 percent of players live overseas.
As well as winning the trophy, the winner receives a car.
Jens Hansen business manager Halfdan Hansen was amazed by the popularity of
virtual rugby. It had been a "special thrill" to design the actual Super 14
trophy, but being asked to make a trophy competed for by more than 140,000
people was "something else", he said.
The $10,000 trophy is silver-plated, cast in sculptor's bronze and has a
rugby ball shaped like a computer mouse in the logo. It stands 33cm tall and
weighs 2.1kg. The actual Super 14 trophy is 49cm tall and weighs
2.7kg.
dnielsen@nelsonmail.co.nz
MEDIA RELEASE 
Wednesday, February 8, 2006
Jens Hansen Handcrafts
Sterling Silver
Super 14 Trophy
Nelson’s celebrated jeweller and silversmith, Jens Hansen Contemporary Gold
and Silversmith, has proudly designed and handcrafted the new Rebel Sport Super
14 Trophy, unveiled in Wellington today.
Since 1968, Jens Hansen has impressed its New Zealand and international
customers with its leading edge Scandinavian designs. The bespoke jewellers are
also famed for creating the Ring for Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings film
trilogy.
Chief Jeweller Thorkild Hansen worked continuously over two months to
handcraft the stunning half metre tall solid sterling silver Super 14 trophy out
of 2.5 kg of sterling silver.
“We were thrilled that a New Zealand design team was able to be involved in
the creation of the new trophy,” says Hansen. “We aimed to create a trophy of
simple beauty that represented the high standard of the Super 14
competition.
Hansen notes that it was a challenging but rewarding project, with many
technical obstacles to be overcome.
“The dynamic twist in the base of the trophy gives the work a sense of motion
without compromising its appearance of strength,” says Hansen. “Achieving the
smooth lines and perfect meeting joints in the base was especially challenging,
but we are very pleased with the end result.”
The globe was created from two flat circles of silver, individually and
gradually hammered by hand until each was raised into an exact hemisphere. The
two pieces were then joined and polished until they formed a perfectly round
globe. It features raised map pieces representing New Zealand, Australia and
South Africa. The work is detailed down to the miniature rugby ball’s laces,
which appears with the Super 14 emblazoned comet flare encircling the globe.
The Super 14 lettering was pierced and cut by hand from the comet flare and
black resin used to create the lettering with maximum impact.
For Media Enquiries:
Halfden Hansen
03 548 0640
021 299 3380
MEDIA RELEASE
7 February 2006
New trophy unveiled for Rebel Sport Super
14
The players and coaches competing in the first Rebel Sport Super 14 will have
their eyes on a new prize – with the unveiling of a stunning, new trophy for the
competition.
The new Super 14 trophy, unveiled in Wellington, New Zealand, today, is made
of sterling silver and features a globe incorporating the new Super 14 logo
sitting atop a four-sided twisting spire.
The trophy was handmade by one of New Zealand’s leading gold and silversmith
workshops, Jens Hansen Gold and Silversmith from Nelson, New Zealand, who
achieved fame when they designed and made the famous gold ring for Peter
Jackson’s Lord of the Rings film trilogy.
New Zealand Rugby Union Sponsorship and Marketing Manager Fraser Holland, who
oversaw the production of the trophy, said the three SANZAR countries were keen
to have a bold new trophy to launch the revamped Super 14 competition.
“We also wanted to move away from the traditional cup-style trophy and have a
dynamic trophy to reflect the spirit of the Super 14. I think the designers have
certainly achieved that – it’s a superbly crafted, iconic trophy with a definite
international look about it,” Mr Holland said.
The winner of the Rebel Sport Super 14 competition will be engraved on the
new trophy each year.
The trophy will go on public display for the first time this Friday night at
the opening match of the Rebel Sport Super 14 competition between the Blues and
the Hurricanes at Eden Park.
New Super 14 trophy – key facts
The Super 14
trophy is made of sterling silver (92.5 percent pure silver) and was made by
Jens Hansen Gold and Silversmith from Nelson, New Zealand.
Three silversmiths were involved in the construction of the trophy which
involved soldering together and working a number of sheets of silver, sanding,
buffing and polishing. The trophy took 200 hours to complete over a two-month
period. It stands 49 centimetres high and weighs 2.7 kilograms.
For further information contact:
Joe Locke
Media Manager
P: +64 (0)
4 494 0778
M: +64 (0) 27 441 8461
E: joe.locke@nzrugby.co.nz
Nelson Mail
A Nelson jeweller keeps making things that powerful forces will do anything
to get their hands on.
First Thorkild Hansen of Jens Hansen Gold and Silversmith's helped his late
father Jens craft the rings for the blockbuster movie trilogy The Lord of the
Rings. Now Mr Hansen has just finished making a trophy for the inaugural Super
14 rugby competition starting on Friday.
And like the evil wizard Saron and Gollum in Lord of the Rings, the players
in the Super 14 desperately want to get their hands on Mr Hansen's creation. The
sterling silver trophy symbolises rugby supremacy in the southern hemisphere and
will be contested by five teams from New Zealand and South Africa and four from
Australia.
Mr Hansen said they had been commissioned to make the trophy by the New
Zealand Rugby Union last November. After about 200 hours of hammering, cutting,
soldering and polishing later, the 49cm high, 2.5kg trophy was last week sent to
rugby headquarters in Wellington. ``It was a cool thing to be able to do,'' Mr
Hansen said. ``We are such a small place and we've shown that Nelson has the
goods - we are proud of that.''
Although Mr Hansen would not reveal how much the trophy cost to make, he said
there was "more labour in it than metal.'' It was a real team effort with his
brother Halfdan and staff Ben Clark and Heath Neilson all helping out, he said.