Date | R | Hazai vs Vendég | - |
---|---|---|---|
10/07 16:00 | 1 | Orlando Pirates vs Mamelodi Sundowns | 3-1 |
09/24 13:00 | 2 | Orlando Pirates vs Stellenbosch FC | 0-1 |
09/23 13:00 | 2 | Mamelodi Sundowns vs Kaizer Chiefs | 2-1 |
09/03 13:00 | 2 | Stellenbosch FC vs Orlando Pirates | 1-2 |
09/02 13:00 | 2 | Kaizer Chiefs vs Mamelodi Sundowns | 1-1 |
08/13 16:00 | 3 | Supersport United vs Stellenbosch FC | 0-1 |
08/13 13:00 | 3 | Cape Town City vs Kaizer Chiefs | 1-2 |
08/12 16:00 | 3 | Orlando Pirates vs Sekhukhune United | 5-0 |
08/12 13:00 | 3 | Mamelodi Sundowns vs Moroka Swallows | 1-0 |
11/05 16:00 | 1 | Amazulu vs Orlando Pirates | 0-1 |
10/23 13:30 | 2 | Amazulu vs Kaizer Chiefs | 0-0 |
10/22 13:30 | 2 | Mamelodi Sundowns vs Orlando Pirates | 0-3 |
MTN 8 is the current branding for a South African soccer cup competition launched in 1972 for teams who finished in the top 8 positions of the league table of the country's preceding top-flight league (currently the DStv Premiership) season.
The winners receive R 8 million and the competition's trophy, which is one of the three domestic trophies attainable by its competitors each soccer season, with the other two being the top-flight league title and the country's premier knock-out competition, the Nedbank Cup.
Like the EFL Cup in England, the competition name bears its title title sponsor; from its launch until 2002, it was known as the BP Top 8 and as the SAA Supa 8 until 2008.