Jardines Galleries · Two World Cups · Reconciliation & the first on African soil
South Africa's World Cup Commemoratives.
Two of the most charged sporting moments in South African history — the 1995 Rugby World Cup hosted and won at home in the first major sporting event of the post-apartheid era, and the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the first World Cup ever held on African soil. Both received commemorative coin programmes; both carry the political weight of their moments. The 1995 gold proof was a presentation piece struck in 406 examples for the winning Springboks and Nelson Mandela. The 2010 silver was a world-first — the only commemorative coin ever struck with movable steel balls that allow the owner to "score goals" against the design. Together: numismatic memorials to reconciliation and to African sporting agency.
Reconciliation in gold
Third Rugby World Cup · Hosted & won by South Africa 15 — 12South Africa beat New Zealand 15 – 12 at Ellis Park, in the third Rugby World Cup — the country's first major sporting event after apartheid, and the first World Cup in which South Africa was permitted to compete. President Nelson Mandela presented the trophy to captain Francois Pienaar in a Springbok jersey — once a symbol of apartheid-era exclusion, now reframed as a symbol of national unity.
The SA Mint commemorated the moment with a 1 oz gold proof Pond, mintage just 406: presented to the winning Springboks team and Nelson Mandela himself.
Africa's World Cup
First FIFA World Cup hosted on the African continent 2010The first FIFA World Cup ever held in Africa. The SA Mint produced an innovative coin programme released progressively from 2006 to 2010, culminating in a world-first interactive coin with four movable steel balls the owner could rotate to "score goals" against the design. The first coins ever to depict soccer stadiums; the mascot Zakumi appears in different poses across multiple issues.
An international 4-mint collaboration (Argentina, France, South Africa, Spain) produced 8 coin types — one gold + one silver per country.
1995 · The Rugby World Cup
Post-apartheid debut · Mandela's Springbok moment · 406 gold proofsThe third Rugby World Cup, hosted and won by South Africa with a 15 – 12 victory over New Zealand. It was the first major sporting event in South Africa following apartheid, and the country's first World Cup of any code in which it was permitted to compete. Nelson Mandela's trophy presentation in a Springbok jersey — captured by photographers at Ellis Park — became one of the most reproduced images of South African reconciliation. The commemorative coinage tracks three tiers: a presentation gold, a standard silver proof, and a circulating token.
The presentation piece
406Mintage · presented to winners- Metal
- .9999 fine gold
- Weight
- 31.107 g (1 oz)
- Reverse
- RWC symbol left, player in motion repeated and faded to a third player
- Packaging
- Original case + certificate of authenticity
- Recipient
- Springboks team + Nelson Mandela
The collector issue
3,981Proof · plus ~215 jewellery variant- Metal
- .925 sterling silver
- Weight
- 33.63 g · 38.7 mm
- Obverse
- Coat of arms · designer Arthur Sutherland (AS)
- Reverse
- Three rugby players · designer Linda Lotriet (LL)
- Grading
- NGC PF69 Ultra Cameo examples certified
The commemorative token
—Not official currency- Metal
- Cu-Ni-Al alloy
- Weight
- 24 g · 39 mm
- Status
- Collectible token, not legal tender
- Condition
- EF (Extremely Fine)
2010 · The FIFA World Cup
First WC on African soil · World-first interactive design · Four-country collaborationThe first FIFA World Cup ever hosted on the African continent. The SA Mint produced an ambitious commemorative programme stretching from 2006 to 2010, accumulating across the five-year run-up with one silver coin per year, and culminating in a world-first interactive design with movable steel balls. The host year was also marked by an international 4-mint collaboration with Argentina, France, and Spain — each producing their own gold and silver issues to a coordinated programme.
The coin you can play
Four movable steel balls · Rotate to "score goals" · "Such a coin has never been minted before"The 2010 FIFA programme's signature piece is not just a coin but an object. Four small steel balls are enclosed in recesses on the reverse — the owner can rotate the coin to move the balls into goal positions, recreating the act of scoring against the design. The SA Mint's announcement framed it bluntly: "such a coin has never been minted before."
The 2010 programme also produced the first coins in the world to depict soccer stadiums — a parallel design innovation. Zakumi, the official 2010 mascot, appears on the 2009 issues in different poses. The interactive coin combines all three innovations (mechanical movement, stadium depiction, mascot integration) into a single signature piece.
steel
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Four countries minting in concert
The 2010 host-year programme was deliberately international — four nations each producing one gold and one silver coin, totalling 8 coin types. South Africa as host produced the central pair; Argentina, France, and Spain joined as established football nations. Distribution was global; 3,000 silver coins were allocated to Korea at W132,000 each, a single example of the programme's reach beyond the host market.
One coin per year · 2006 — 2010
Beyond the host-year flurry, South Africa issued one silver coin per year from 2006 through 2010 — building anticipation across the four years before the tournament. A complete 5-coin set was offered globally, limited to 1,000 sets.
2010 · Technical specifications
SA-issued tier · Gold & silver denominations| Type | Face value | Weight | Metal | Mintage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gold 1/10 oz | 5 Rand | 3.11 g | .9999 fine | 10,000 |
| Gold 1/4 oz | 10 Rand | 7.78 g | .9999 fine | 15,000 |
| Silver 1 oz | R2 | 33.62 g | .925 sterling | 25,000 |
| Interactive Silver | R2 | ~33.6 g + 4 steel balls | .925 sterling | World-first design |
Collecting strategies & values
1995 tiers · 2010 sets · International collaboration premiumSix distinct collecting targets across the two World Cups. The 1995 gold tops the value tier as the rarest single piece (presentation provenance increases that further); the 2010 international 8-coin set tops the multi-coin tier as the rarest cross-mint assembly.
- MyCollect — "Gold Proof 1oz World Cup Rugby — Edition 406."
- MA-Shops / Wasserthal RareCoin.Store — "Südafrika Rand Rugby — 1995 — 1oz Gold Proof."
- Collectors Society — "KEVYNWEBER PROOF SILVER R2 SET 1995 WORLD CUP RUGBY."
- Wasserthal RareCoin.Store — "South Africa — 1995 — Rugby — World Cup — Commemorative Series — 1oz Proof Gold."
- The Witness — "Zakumi coin launched in Durban," June 2009.
- Chosun Ilbo — "World Cup Commemorative Coins Unveiled," June 2010.
- Dazhou Daily — "South Africa World Cup Gold & Silver Coin Series Debuts in Guangzhou," June 2010.
- Sina Finance — "World Cup Fever: South African Gold & Silver Coins in High Demand," June 2010.
- CoinArchives — The Coin Cabinet Ltd., Auction 108, May 2024.
- Cross-references: Mandela Life of a Legend (parallel SA Mint Mandela commemorative · the 1995 Springbok-jersey moment is part of the same biographical chapter celebrated on the 2019 Presidency & Legacy issues), Natura Series (same SA Mint pure-gold programme inaugurated 1994 — one year before this Rugby gold), South African Mint Today, Commemoratives Hub.