List of women's rugby sevens competitions
Rugby sevens – a short form of the sport of rugby union – was first played in 1883, with the first (men's) internationals taking place in 1973. As women's rugby union developed in the 1960s and 1970s the format became very popular as it allowed games, and entire leagues, to be developed in countries even when player numbers were small, and it remains the main form the women's game is played in most parts of the world.
However, although the first Women's international rugby union 15-a-side test match took place in 1982, it was not until 1997 before the first 7-a-side internationals were played, when the Hong Kong Sevens included a women's tournament for the first time.
Over the next decade the number of tournaments grew, with almost every region developing regular championship. This reached its zenith with the first Women's Sevens World Cup in 2009, shortly followed by the announcement that women's rugby sevens will be included in the Olympics from 2016. In 2011/12 the IRB organised three official women's challenges tournaments in Dubai, Hong Kong and London. After the success of these events an annual IRB Women's Sevens World Series was launched from the start of the 2012/13 season.
The following is a list of all women's international tournaments that have been traced since 1997, listed chronologically with the earliest first, with links to result details, where known. If two tournaments are run concurrently the apparently more senior will be listed first.
Some tournaments include both club and national teams, and these are only included where the majority of teams are International. Occasionally what are effectively national teams play unofficially under an assumed name – these games are also noted where this is known.
The summary section looks at each region in turn and attempts to draw some conclusions about the relative strengths of the participants. This is a little flawed due to the absence of some results and information as well as the inclusion of non-international teams to make up the numbers but should give the best guess available.
1997
- 15–16 March 1997
- Winners: New Zealand Wild Ducks
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, Canada, England, Fiji, Hong Kong, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand Wild Ducks, Scotland, Singapore, United States
1998
Carib International Sevens (Exhibition game)
- December 1998
- Trinidad & Tobago 12–29 St. Vincent & the Grenadines[1]
YC&AC Invitational Womens Sevens Tournament
March 28nd 1998
Winners New Zealand
Competitors: Japan1 Japan 2, New Zealand, World Invitational team,
1999
- 22–24 March 1999
- Winners: New Zealand Wild Ducks
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, China, England, Hong Kong, Japan, New Zealand Wild Ducks, Russia, Samoa, Singapore, United States
- YC&AC International Womens Sevens Tournament March 28th 1999 Winners New Zealand Competitors: Japan 1, Japan 2, New Zealand, World Invitational team, USA, Samoa
2000
Asian Championship
- 22–24 March 2000. Played as part of the Hong Kong Sevens
- Winners: Kazakhstan
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Thailand
- 22–24 March 2000
- Winners: New Zealand
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Samoa, Singapore, Thailand, United States, Wales
YC&AC International Womens Sevens Tournament
April 1th 2000
Winners New Zealand
Competitors: Japan, New Zealand, World Invitational team, USA
Jamaica vs Cayman Islands
- Date unknown
- Winners: Cayman Islands, two matches to nil. Scores unknown.[2]
2001
Asian Championship
- 28–30 March 2001. Played as part of the Hong Kong Sevens
- Winners: Kazakhstan
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Japan, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Thailand
- 28–30 March 2001
- Winners: New Zealand
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, England, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Samoa, Singapore, Sweden, Thailand, United States
YC&AC International Womens Sevens Tournament
April 7th 2001
Winners New Zealand
Competitors: Japan, New Zealand, World Invitational team, USA
2002
Whangarei tournament
- Venue/Date: Whangarei, New Zealand, 17 February 2002 (Source NZ Rugby, USA Rugby[3])
- New Zealand A 12–12 United States
- New Zealand B 31–5 Invitation[4]
- New Zealand B 12–5 United States
- New Zealand A 35–0 Invitation
- United States 19–0 Invitation
- New Zealand A ?-? New Zealand B
- United States 14–12 United Kawakawa
- NZ Maori 41–7 United States
- NZ Maori 'B' 10–5 United States
- United States 0–0 North Harbour
- United States[5] 5–0 NZ Maori 'B' (3rd place match)
Asian Championship
- 21–22 March 2002. Played as part of the Hong Kong Sevens
- Winners: Kazakhstan
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Thailand
- 21–22 March 2002
- Winner: Aotearoa Maori
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Aotearoa Maori, Thailand, United States
2003
Lomai tournament
- Fiji[7] 7–0 United States
- Fiji 0–21 United States
Whangarei tournament
- United States are known to have gone on to this tournament before Hong Kong.
- At Hong Kong, 27 March 2003
- Winners: Kazakhstan
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Barbarians, Kyrgyzstan, Sri Lanka; Uzbekistan
- 27–28 March 2003
- Winners: Aotearoa Maori
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, England, Fiji, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Aotearoa Maori, Thailand, United States
- At Lunel, France, 24 May 2003
- Winners: Spain
- Competitors: Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland
South Pacific Games
- Plans were afoot for a women's sevens tournament but it required six teams. It is not thought that this was achieved.[8]
2004
- At Hong Kong, March 2004
- Competitors: Australia, China, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Aotearoa Maori, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, United States
- Winner: Aotearoa Maori
- At: Barquisimeto, Venezuela, 20–21 April 2004
- Competitors: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
- Winner: Brazil
Rwanda v Burundi
- At:Unknown. May 2004[9]
- Rwanda 5–0 Burundi
- At Almaty, Kazakhstan, 15–16 May 2004
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan 2, Kyrgyzstan, Singapore, Thailand, Uzbekistan
- Winner: Kazakhstan
- At Limoges, France, 21–22 May 2004
- Winners: England
- Competitors: Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, England, France, Italy, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland
Training Tournament (Central Europe)
- At Székesfehérvár, Hungary, 26 June 2004
- Competitors: Austria, Croatia, Hungary
- Hungary 36–5 Austria
- Other scores not recorded
2005
- At Tunisia
- Winners: Unknown
- Competitors: Unknown
- At Hong Kong, March 2005
- Competitors: Australia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Aotearoa Maori, Singapore, Thailand, United States
- Winner: Aotearoa Maori
- At Singapore, 15–16 April 2005
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Uzbekistan
- Winner: Kazakhstan
- At: Prague, 14–15 May 2005
- Winner: Russia
- Participants: Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Israel, Lithuania, Malta, Norway, Poland, Russia
- At: Lunel, France, 25–26 June 2005
- Winner: England
- Participants: Belgium, Croatia, England, France, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland
CAR African Sevens
- Venue/Date: Kampala, 5–6 November 2005
Cancelled for financial reasons
Training Tournament (Central Europe)
- Venue/Date: Hungary, 6 November 2005[10]
- Hungary 24–10 Austria
- Austria 10–12 Croatia
- Hungary played Croatia
- At: Barbados, 19–20 November 2005
- Winner: United States
- Participants: Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, United States
- At: São Paulo, Brazil, 19–20 November 2005
- Competitors: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
- Winner: Brazil
- At: Montevideo, Uruguay, date unknown
- Winner: Brazil A
- Participants: Argentina A, Argentina B, Brazil A, Brazil B, Chile, Uruguay A, Uruguay B
2006
- Venue: Los Angeles
- Winner: United States
- Participants: Canada, United States
- Venue/Date: Taskent, Uzbekistan, 15–16 May
- Winner: China
- Participants: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Singapore, Thailand, Uzbekistan
- At Tunisia
- Winners: Unknown
- Competitors: Unknown
- At Uganda
- Winners: Unknown
- Competitors: Unknown
- At Hong Kong, March 2006
- Competitors: Australia, China, Guam, Hong Kong, Japan, Netherlands, Aotearoa Maori, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, United States
- Winner: Aotearoa Maori
Emerging European Nations
- Venue: Hungary
- No results published
- Venue/Date: Limoges, France, 25–27 May 2006
- Winner: Wales
- Participants: Belgium, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Wales
- Venue: Limoges, France, 25–27 May 2006
- Winner: Romania
- Participants: Andorra, Australia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Hungary, Israel, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Romania
- Venue: Kyadondo Rugby Club, Kampala, Uganda
- Winner: Emerging South Africa
- Competitors: Burundi, Kenya, Emerging South Africa, Rwanda, Uganda, Uganda Select, Zambia, Zimbabwe
Friendly Games
- Date/Venue: 24–25 July 2006, Grossmugl, Austria. (Source Austria Union)
- The only information is that teams from Austria, Hungary, Croatia, Bavaria, and Mugl took part in a men's and women's tournament.
- Date/Venue: 11–12 November 2006, Garrison Savannah, Barbados. (Source NAWIRA)
- Winners: Jamaica
- Participants: Barbados, Jamaica, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
2007
- At: Vina Del Mar, Chile, 12–13 January 2007
- Competitors: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Chile Invitation, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
- Winner: Brazil
- At: San Diego, 9–10 February 2007
- Winner: Canada B
- Participants: Canada A, Canada B, China, USA A, USA B
- At Tunia
- Winners: Tunisia
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Ivory Coast, Tunisia, Tunisian Universities, Uganda
- At Uganda
- Winners: Unknown
- Competitors: Unknown
- Venue: Székesfehérvár, Hungary, 18 March 2007
- Winner: Croatia
- Participants: Austria, Croatia, Hungary
- At Hong Kong, March 2007
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Aotearoa Maori, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Thailand, United States
- Winner: Aotearoa Maori
- At Doha, 27–28 April 2007
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Uzbekistan
- Winner: Kazakhstan
- Venue: Katowice, Poland
- Winner: Finland
- Participants: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, Poland, Austria/Czech II
- Venue: Zenica, Bosnia, 19–20 May 2007
- Winner: Finland
- Participants: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Israel, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Serbia
- Venue: Zagreb, Croatia, 26–27 May 2007
- Winner: France U20
- Participants: Andorra, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, France U20; Germany, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Romania, Switzerland
- Venue: Lunel, France, 2–3 June 2007
- Winner: France
- Participants: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Wales
- Venue: Kyadondo Rugby Club, Kampala, Uganda
- Winner: Emerging South Africa
- Competitors: Burundi, Kenya, Emerging South Africa, Rwanda, Tunisia, Uganda, Uganda Select, Zambia, Zimbabwe
- Venue: Singapore, 6 October 2007.
- Winner: Thailand
- Participants: Singapore, Thailand, South Korea, Laos, Cambodia
Borneo Sevens[12]
- Venue: Borneo, 2 and 3 November 2007.
- Results unknown
- Participants: China, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Guam, Laos, Cambodia.
- At: Winton Rugby Centre, Nassau, Bahamas, 17–18 November 2007
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Canada, Guyana, Jamaica, USA Development Eagles
- At: Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
- Winner: Fiji
- Participants: Fiji, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa
- At: Dubai, 1–2 December 2007
- Participants: Canada, United States, plus club teams
- Results not published.
South East Asia Games[13]
- Thailand 52–0 Cambodia
- Laos 0–36 Singapore
- Thailand 14–12 Singapore
- Cambodia 0–20 Laos
- Cambodia 0–29 Singapore
- Thailand 52–0 Laos
Classification Stages
Semi Finals
- Thailand 43–0 Cambodia
- Singapore 27–0 Laos
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thailand | 3 | 0 | 0 | 118 | 12 |
Singapore | 2 | 0 | 1 | 77 | 14 |
Laos | 1 | 0 | 2 | 20 | 88 |
Cambodia | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 101 |
3rd/4th Match (bronze medal)
- Cambodia 0–15 Laos
Final (gold and silver medal)
- Thailand 19–5 Singapore
2008
- At: Punta del Este, Uruguay, 18–19 January 2008
- Competitors: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
- Winner: Brazil
- At: San Diego, 9–10 February 2008
- Winner: United States
- Participants: Canada, Canada A, Canada Collegiate, South Africa, United States, USA A
- Venue: Austria, 21–24 March 2008
- Winner: Finland
- Participants: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Finland, Hungary, Luxembourg, Poland, Serbia
- At: Hong Kong, 27–28 March 2008
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Canada, China, Fiji, France, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Singapore, Thailand, United States
- Winner: United States
- Venue: Bosnia
- Winner: Romania. Also qualified: Finland, Israel
- Participants: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Finland, Georgia, Israel, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia
- At: Amsterdam, 17–18 May 2008.
- Competitors: Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, United States
- Winner: Samurai St George's
London IRB (Men's) Sevens 2008 (Exhibition game)
- At: Twickenham 25 May 2008, (during men's IRB sevens).
- England 14–10 New Zealand Aotearoa Maori
- Venue: Belgium, 30 – May 2008
- Winner: Germany. Also qualified: Andorra, Moldova. Czech Republic added as best fourth place (over Bulgaria), following withdrawal of Scotland.
- Participants: Andorra, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova, Norway, Poland, Switzerland
Home Nations Cup 2008
At: Edinburgh[15] 1 June 2008.
- Winner: England
- Only the results of games involving England were published.
- Scotland ??-?? Wales
- England 42–5 Wales
- Scotland 12–19 England
- England 31–10 Wales
- Scotland ??-?? Wales
- Scotland 0–24 England
One Off Match – Zambia 2008
Madrid Sevens – 2008
- Venue: Limoges, France 14–15 June 2008
- Winner: England
- Participants: Andorra, Czech Republic, England, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Moldova, Netherlands, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Wales. Scotland withdrew a week before the tournament was played.
International Tournament – Reunion 2008
- At: Réunion 23 to 30 June
- Mauritius were planned to take part but appear to have dropped out.
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
South Africa | 4 | 0 | 0 | 182 | 5 |
France | 3 | 0 | 1 | 164 | 5 |
Madagascar | 1 | 1 | 2 | 47 | 74 |
Reunion | 1 | 1 | 2 | 36 | 116 |
Mayotte | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 219 |
- Réunion 31–0 Mayotte
- France 43–0 Madagascar
- South Africa 75–0 Mayotte
- France 45–0 Réunion
- Madagascar 37–0 Mayotte
- Réunion 0–66 South Africa
- Mayotte 0–76 France
- Madagascar 5–5 Réunion
- Madagascar 5–26 South Africa
- South Africa 15–0 France
- At: Samoa, 25–26 July 2008
- Winner: Australia. New Zealand also qualified.
- Participants: Australia, Fiji, New Zealand, Niue, Samoa
- At: Rauris, Austria, 19 September 2008
- Winner: Hungary
- Participants: Austria, Czech Republic, Hungary
- Venue: Kyadondo Rugby Club, Kampala, Uganda
- Winner: South Africa
- Competitors: Burundi, Kenya, South Africa, Rwanda, Uganda, Uganda A, Zambia, Zimbabwe
- At: Hong Kong, 4–5 October 2008
- Winner: Japan
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand
- At: Nassau, Bahamas, 25–26 October 2008
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Barbados, Bermuda, Canada, Cayman Islands, Guyana, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, United States
Friendly Sevens at Brno 2008
- At Brno, Czech Republic. 2 November 2008
- Austria are thought to have participated.
Japan Demonstration Game 2008
- 22 November 2008, Japan. Not strictly an International, this was a game played amongst Japan squad members prior to the men's Japan USA XV aside match.
- Reds 12–12 Whites
- Laos, 26 to 29 November 2008
- No scores published
- At Dubai, 27–29 November 2008. A tournament "for women’s teams who play rugby regularly at an international/county/provincial standard". The official status of some teams is unclear. England played as "Sporting Chance Foundation".
- Winner: Sporting Chance Foundation
- Participants: 12 teams, including four national selections, though two played under assumed names – Canada, Sporting Chance Foundation, WOP Netherlands, United States
Nelson Mandela Bay Tournament 2008
- Venue: Port Elizabeth, South Africa, 13–14 December 2008
- Final South Africa 36–0 Uganda
FIRA Warm Up Tournament 2008[18]
- Venue:Montpellier, France 20–21 December 2008
- Group Game: France 12–0 Spain
- Final: France 19–7 Spain
2009
Rwanda Burundi Festival 2009
- At: Mar del Plata, Argentina, 24–25 January 2009
- Competitors: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela
- Winner: Brazil
Málaga Sevens 2009
- At: Málaga 14–15 February 2009
- Some international sides used this tournament as a warm up for Dubai and the following are results.
- France 36–0 Andalucia
- Netherlands 33–0 Spain
- France 26–7 Netherlands
- Spain 24–0 Andalucia
- Netherlands 22–0 Andalucia
- France 24–14 Spain
- Semi Final: France 41–0 Andalucia
- Semi Final: Netherlands 14–17 Spain
- 3rd Place: Netherlands 49–0 Andalucia
- Final: France 12–19 Spain
Minor Nations Training 2009
- At London, 19–22 February 2009.
- Finland (two teams) and Austria trained at London Wasps and this was followed by a tournament involving Finland, Finland 2, Austria, Wasps, Wasps 2 and Metropolitan Police.
- Finland won all their games in a limited round robin (all teams played four games).
- Participants: Finland, Finland 2, Austria
- Group Games: Austria 0–36 Finland
- Group Games: Finland 2 5–17 Austria
- Plate Final: Finland 2 17–5 Austria
- Cup Final: Finland 38–0 Wasps 2
- At: Dubai, 5–7 March 2009
- Winner: Australia
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, France, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Netherlands, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Thailand, Uganda, United States
- Venue: Ljublana, Serbia, 7 March 2009
- Winner: Croatia. Results from games involving Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia were not included in the tournament, and not published.
- Participants: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia, Slovenia
- At: Hong Kong, 27 March 2009
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, Australia, China, Guam, Hong Kong, Japan, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Thailand, Tunisia
- Winner: Australia
- At: Zanka, Hungary, 12 April 2009
- Winner: Hungary
- Participants: Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, European Mix, Finland, Hungary, Poland
- At: Bangkok, Thailand, 30 May 2009
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Guam, Hong Kong, Iran, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Uzbekistan
- Winner: China
- Venue: Accra, Ghana
- Winner: Tunisia
- Competitors: Burkina Faso, Egypt, Ghana, Rwanda, Morocco, Niger, Togo, Tunisia
- At: Zenica, Bosnia
- Winner: Switzerland
- Participants: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Denmark, Georgia, Hungary, Luxembourg, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Switzerland, Ukraine
- Venue: Rome, Italy, 5 & 6 June 2009
- Winner: Samurai Ladies International (UK)
- Participants: Wooden Spoon, Italy, Israel, The Bassets Ladies, Murrayfields Wanderers RFC
Reunion Tournament 2009
At: Réunion 20 June 2009 Participants: Winners France, runners up Pretoria University, third Réunion, unknown Mayotte, Madagascar
France results:
- Réunion 0–36 France
- France 26–0 Madagascar
- France 61–0 Mayotte
- France 19–7 Pretoria University
- At: Bruges. Belgium
- Winner: Finland
- Participants: Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Belgium B, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Finland, Israel, Latvia, Malta, Romania
- At: Hanover, Germany
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Italy, Moldova, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden
Banc ABC Tournament, Zimbabwe[20]
- At Harare, Zimbabwe 12 September 2009
- Zimbabwe 12–24 Zambia
- Final placings are believed to have been 1st, Zambia, 2nd, Zimbabwe, 3rd, Zambia B, 4th, Zimbabwe B
Shanghai Sevens 2009[21]
- Cancelled
Borneo Sevens 2009
- At: Borneo. 31 October
- Guam were mooted as a participant.
- Thailand 39–0 India
- Thailand 52–0 Malaysia
- India 21–10 Malaysia
Bangkok Sevens 2009
- At:Mexico City
- Winner: Guyana
- Participants: Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Guyana, Mexico, Saint Lucia
- At: Dubai, 4 December 2009. A tournament "for women’s teams who play rugby regularly at an international/county/provincial standard". The official status of some teams is unclear.
- Participants: 12 teams, including five official national selections – Arabian Gulf, France, Georgia, Kenya, United States
East Asian Games 2009
- At: Hong Kong 5 December 2009,
Group Games
- China 24–0 Japan
- Guam 12–10 Hong Kong
- Japan 50–0 Guam
- China 44–0 Hong Kong
- China 46–0 Guam
- Japan 7–5 Hong Kong
Classification Stages
Semi Final
- China 20–5 Hong Kong
- Japan 19–5 Guam
Plate Final
- Hong Kong 15–0 Guam
Final
- China 34–12 Japan
2010
- Venue: Mar del Plata, Argentina. 5 – 6–7 January 2010
- Winner: Brazil
- Participants: Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Paraguay
- Venue: Las Vegas. 12 February 2010
- Winner: China
- Participants: Canada National University, China, France, Germany, USA Blue, USA White
- At: Hong Kong, 26–27 March 2010
- Competitors: Arabian Gulf, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, plus Aussie Amazons, Aotearoa Maori, South African Tuks
- Winner: Aussie Amazons
- At: Zanka, Hungary, 4 April 2010
- Competitors: Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Luxembourg, Poland, Slovenia
- Winner: Hungary
- At: Székesfehervár, Hungary, 26 April 2010
- Competitors: Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia
- Winner: Hungary
St Lucia v Guadeloupe
- Venue: Castries Comprehensive Secondary School (CCSS) Ground. 8 May 2010[22]
- Matches were of thirty minutes duration with a five minutes half time break.
- Saint Lucia 69–5 Guadeloupe
- Saint Lucia 47–5 Guadeloupe
- Venue: Bucharest, Romania. 22–23 May 2010
- Winner: Moldova
- Participants: Belgium, Austria, Andorra, Croatia, Bulgaria, Moldova, Switzerland, Romania, Czech Republic, Latvia, Malta, Israel
- Venue: Odense, Denmark. 22–23 May 2010
- Winner: Ukraine
- Participants: Denmark, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Hungary, Nordic Barbarians, Slovenia, Serbia, Poland, Norway, Lithuania, Luxembourg
- Venue: Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 28 & 29 May 2010.
- Winner: Tunisia
- Participants: Burkina Faso, Morocco, Ghana, Togo, Ivory Coast, Tunisia
- Venue: Rome, Italy, 3 & 4 June 2010
- Winner: New Zealand Aoteaora Maori
- Participants: France, Colombia, Italy, Spain, New Zealand Aoteaora Maori, HJMKJ Moscow
Carcassonne Sevens
- Venue: Carcassonne, Italy. 19–20 June 2010.
- There was only 3 national sides (Portugal, Georgia and Bulgaria) – but Portugal were on a much higher level. The teams agreed to form the Barbarians Filles between Bulgaria and Georgia to be able to play Portugal.
- Portugal 63–0 Bulgaria
- Portugal 46–7 Georgia
- Final: Portugal 66–0 Barbarians Fillies
- Venue: Moscow, Russia. 10–11 July 2010
- Winner: Spain
- Participants: England, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden
- Venue: Guangzhou, China. 24–25 July 2010
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Taiwan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, Uzbekistan
- Venue: Georgetown, Guyana. 26–27 July 2010
- Winner: Guyana
- Participants: Cayman Islands, Guyana, Jamaica, Mexico, Saint Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago
Cortina Sevens
- Venue: Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. 31 July – 1 August 2010
- Matches included:
- Italy 10–0 Iran
- Italy 33–0 Iran
- Valsugana (ITA) 3–10 Iran
Castle Sevens
- Venue: Lusaka, Zambia. 28–29 August 2010
- Winner: Zambia
- Participants: Botswana, South African Tukkies, Zambia, Zimbabwe
- Pool: Botswana 17–10 Zambia
- Pool: Botswana 5–20 Zambia
- Final: Zambia 14–12 Zimbabwe
- [Other results not published]
Friendly Cup (Coupe de l'Amitié)
- Venue: Lviv, Ukraine, 2 October 2010
- Winner: Ukraine 1
- Participants: 1st Ukraine I; 2nd Moldova; 3rd Romania; 4 Hungary; 5th Poland; 6th Lithuania; 7th Ukraine II; 8th Lviv Region
- Some details have now emerged:[23]
Pool 1 positions
- Ukraine I
- Romania
- Lithiania
- Lviv regional team
Pool 2 positions
- Moldova
- Hungary
- Poland
- Ukraine II
Hungarian results:
- Hungary 46–0 Poland
- Moldova 29–0 Hungary
- Ukraine II 0–41 Hungary
- Romania 17–5 Hungary
- Venue: Kota Kinabalu, Borneo, 29–31 October 2010
- Winner: Kazakhstan
- Participants: Cook Islands, India, Kazakhstan, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Singapore, Tonga
BancABC Sevens
- Venue: Harare Sports Club, Zimbabwe
- Winner: Pangolins
- Participants: Botswana, Zambia, Pangolins;[24] Zimbabwe B; Tukkies
- Final: Pangolins 24–19 Zambia[25]
- Other results unpublished
Singapore Sevens
- Venue: Singapore Cricket Club, 5–6 November 2010
- Winner: Japan
- Participants: Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore
Group A
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Japan | 2 | 0 | 0 | 41 | 7 |
Hong Kong | 1 | 0 | 1 | ? | ? |
India | 0 | 0 | 2 | ? | ? |
Play-offs
Group B
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singapore | 2 | 0 | 0 | 87 | 0 |
Malaysia | 1 | 0 | 1 | ? | ? |
Indonesia | 0 | 0 | 2 | ? | ? |
Semi finals
Plate Final
Final
- Venue: Guangzhou, China, 21–23 November 2010
- Winner: Kazakhstan
- Participants: China, Hong Kong, India, Japan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand
Malta v Tunisia[27]
- At: Various, September – November 2010
- Competitors: Austria, Croatia, Hungary, Serbia
- Winner: Hungary
- At: Dubai, 2–3 December 2010. A tournament "for women’s teams who play rugby regularly at an international/county/provincial standard". The official status of some teams is unclear.
- Participants: 16 teams, including three official national selections and one team that was, in effect, the national side but not an "official" team: Brazil, France, Almaty-Kazakhstan, Kenya
2011
- Venue: Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. 5–6–7 February 2011
- Winner: Brazil
- Participants: Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Paraguay
- Venue: Las Vegas. 11–13 February 2011
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Canada, France, Kenya, Maple Leafs, Netherlands, Spain, Tyrolian Select, United States
- Venue: Hong Kong. 25 March 2011
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Canada, China, Chinese Taipei, France, Hong Kong, Japan, Netherlands, Philippines, Russia, United States
- Venue: Senegal, 23–24 April 2011.
- Winner: Tunisia
- Participants: Senegal, Tunisia, Morocco, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, Egypt, Niger, Nigeria
- At: Zanka, Hungary, 23–24 April 2011
- Competitors: Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, Luxembourg, Poland, Slovakia, Crovenia (Slovenia & Croatia), Nada Split
- Winner: Czech Republic
St Lucia v Guadeloupe
- At Corinth Playing Field, St Lucia[29]
- St.Lucia 28–10 Guadeloupe
- St.Lucia 40–0 Guadeloupe
- Venue: Amsterdam, 21–22 May 2011.
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Various club and invitational sides, plus Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Georgia, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Poland Portugal
Portugal v Brazil
- Venue: National Stadium, Lisbon, 25 May 2011
- Portugal 24–5 Brazil
- Venue: Rome, 3–4 June 2011.
- Winner: "Red&Blu" Aoteaora Maori
- Participants: Brazil, France, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Germany, "Red&Blu" Aoteaora Maori, Kusa
- Venue: Richmond, London. 4 June 2011
- Winner: Wooden Spoon
- Participants: England, Sweden, and club and invitational teams
Pool A
- England 33–5 Pink Baa-Baas
- England 35–0 Saracens
- England 0–22 Wooden Spoons
Pool B
- Sweden 19–10 Worcester
- Richmond 5–10 Sweden
- Akuma Dragons 5–19 Sweden
Semi-final
- England 27–0 Sweden
Final
- England 7–14 Wooden Spoons
- Venue: 4–5 June 2011, Zanka, Hungary
- Winner: Poland
- Participants: Denmark, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Hungary, Slovenia, Serbia, Poland, Lithuania, Luxembourg
La Réunion Sevens[30]
- Venue La Réunion, 25–26 June 2011
- Winner: Tukkies
- International participants: France, Réunion, New Caledonia, Mayotte, Madagascar, Uganda
Pool A
- France 45–0 Réunion
- Tukkies 41–0 New Caledonia
- France 24–7 New Caledonia
- Tukkies 36–0 Réunion
- New Caledonia 26–17 Réunion
- France 7–24 Tukkies
Pool B
- Uganda 67–0 Mayotte
- Marine 5–0 Madagascar
- Uganda 17–7 Madagascar
- Marine 34–0 Mayotte
- Madagascar 55–0 Mayotte
- Uganda 38–0 Marine
Plate semi-finals
- New Caledonia 47–0 Mayotte
- Madagascar 30–0 Réunion
Plate final
- Madagascar 62–7 New Caledonia
Semi-finals
- Tukkies 14–0 Marine
- France 17–14 Uganda
Final
- Tukkies 12–10 France
- Venue: 2–3 July 2011, Riga, Latvia
- Winner: Ukraine
- Participants: Belgium, Austria, Andorra, Croatia, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Latvia, Malta, Israel, Ukraine, Norway,
- Venue: 16–17 July 2011, Bucharest, Romania
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Moldova, Netherlands, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Spain, Sweden
- Venue: Prague, 13–14 August 2011
- Winner: Eccose Feminin (Int)
- Participants: Eccose Feminin (Int), RK Petrovice (CZ), Czech Republic, Austria, Lazybugs (CZ)
Only international fixture: Czech Republic 7–31 Austria
Shanghai Sevens
- Venue: Shanghai, 27–28 August 2011.
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Hong Kong, Kazakhstan, Thailand
Pool
- China 24–0 Hong Kong
- Kazakhstan 31–10 Thailand
- China 26–7 Thailand
- Kazakhstan 17–5 Hong Kong
- China 31–10 Kazakhstan
- Thailand 24–5 Hong Kong
Semi-finals
- China 34–0 Hong Kong
- Kazakhstan 7–0 Thailand
Third place
- Thailand 14–10 Hong Kong
Final
- China 19–10 Kazakhstan
Castle Sevens
Pool
- Zambia A 14 – 12 Botswana
- Zambia B 0 – 50 Zimbabwe
- Zambia A 14 – 19 Zimbabwe
- Botswana 29 – 0 Zambia B
- Zambia A 50 – 0 Zambia B
- Botswana lost to Zimbabwe
Final
- Zambia A 12–7 Zimbabwe
- Venue: New Caledonia, 30–31 August 2011.
- Winner: Fiji
- Participants: Tahiti, Samoa, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna, Guam, Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Cook Islands, New Caledonia, Vanuatu
Piotrowice Nyskie International Rugby Festival
- Venue: Piotrowice Nyskie, 3–4 September 2011
- Final rankings:1st: Romania, 2nd: Gdańsk, 3rd: Poland B, Czech Republic, Poland A, Silesia.
- Known results:
- Czech Rep. 19–5 Poland A
- Czech Rep. 7–17 Poland B
- Czech Rep. 5–24 Romania
- Czech Rep. 5–17 Gdańsk
- Friendly matches (outside tournament): Czech Rep. 21–5 Romania. Czech also beat Poland A and Poland B (scores unknown)
- Venue: Kota Kinabalu, Borneo, 23–25 September 2011
- Winner: Papua New Guinea
- Participants: China Cook Islands, Hong Kong, Malaysia Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Singapore, Tonga
- Venue: Pune, India. 1–2 October 2011
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Taiwan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore
Friendly Cup (Coupe de l'Amitié)
- Venue: Lviv, Ukraine, 1 October 2010
- Winner: Ukraine
- Participants: 1st Ukraine; 2nd Ukrainian Club Selection; 3rd Hungary, 4th Moldova, 5th Poland, 6th Lithuania. Also participated: Gallícia
Only limited details available:[31]
- Ukraine beat Moldova
- Ukraine beat Poland
- Ukraine Clubs 19–0 Hungary
- Gallícia 5–10 Hungary
- Ukraine 61–0 Hungary
- Moldova 5–12 Hungary
- Venue: Botswana, 29–30 October 2011.
- Winner: South Africa
- Participants: Botswana, South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Madagascar
Torneo Internacional de Elche[32]
- Venue: Elche, Spain 1 November 2011.
- Winner: Spain
- Participants: Spain, France, Netherlands, Portugal
Pool
- Spain 12–12 France
- Netherlands 35–7 Portugal
- Spain 12–10 Netherlands
- France 21–7 Portugal
- Netherlands 17–0 France
- Spain 21–10 Portugal
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spain | 2 | 1 | 0 | 45 | 32 |
Netherlands | 2 | 0 | 1 | 62 | 19 |
France | 1 | 1 | 1 | 33 | 36 |
Portugal | 0 | 0 | 3 | 34 | 77 |
3rd/4th
- France 14–0 Portugal
Final
- Spain 26–10 Netherlands
Singapore Cricket Club International Rugby 7s Tournament[33]
- Venue: Singapore 4–5 November 2011.
- Winner: Singapore
- Participants: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Singapore Barbarians
Pool matches
- Singapore 21–0 Malaysia
- Singapore 21–0 Singapore Barbarians
- Singapore 41–0 Indonesia
- Singapore Barbarians 22–0 Malaysia
- Singapore Barbarians 17–0 Indonesia
- Indonesia 0–0 Malaysia
Semi-Finals
- Singapore 55–0 Indonesia
- Singapore Barbarians 10–5 Malaysia (or 12–5?)
3rd Place (Plate)
- Malaysia 7–5 Indonesia
Final
- Singapore 33–0 Singapore Barbarians
Safaricom Sevens[34]
- Venue: Nyayo National Stadium, Kenya 5–6 November 2011.
- Winner: Kenya
- Participants: Kenya, Kenya B, Uganda, Uganda B
- Kenya 24–0 Uganda B
- Uganda 29–0 Kenya B
- Kenya 41–5 Kenya B
- Uganda 45–0 Uganda B
- Uganda B 27–5 Kenya B
- Kenya 10–10 Uganda
Final
- Kenya 7–5 Uganda
- Venue: Bridgetown, Barbados. 12–13 November 2011
- Winner: Canadian Maple Leafs
- Participants: Barbados, Canadian Maple Leafs, Cayman Islands, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Jamaica, Mexico, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, USA South
- Venue: Dubai, UAE. 2–3 December 2011[35]
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, South Africa, Spain, United States
- Venue: Dubai, UAE. 2–3 December 2011
- Winner: Netherlands
- Participants: France, Kenya, Netherlands, Maple Leafs, Moscow Region, Iron Ladies, Tuks, Team Globaleye
2012
Spain v Netherlands
- Venue: Madrid, 17–18 January 2012
- Six matches over two days, all won by Spain.
- Known results: Spain 21–17 Netherlands; Spain 33–5 Netherlands; Spain 20–5 Netherlands
Martinique Sevens[36]
- Venue: Martinique, 4 February 2012
- Two separate tournaments:
Tournoi Guyane-Antilles
- Full results not published. In the final Guadeloupe beat French Guiana in sudden death overtime after a 5–5 draw. Martinique also took part.
International women's tournament:
- Result: 1. France B; 2. France A; 3. Trinidad & Tobago; 4. Saint Lucia
- France A 43–0 Saint Lucia
- France B 36–0 Trinidad & Tobago
- France A 31–0 Trinidad & Tobago
- France B 31–0 Saint Lucia
- Trinidad & Tobago w/o Saint Lucia (Saint Lucia forfeit)
- France B 24–19 France A
- Venue: Las Vegas. 11–12 February 2012
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Brazil, Canada, France, Japan, Maple Leafs (Canada A), Netherlands, Stars & Stripes (USA A), United States
Portugal v Spain
- Venue: Lisbon, 29 February 2012
- Portugal 0 Spain 38; Portugal 0 Spain 31; Portugal 0 Spain 19; Portugal 0 Spain 22; Portugal 5 Spain 25
Netherlands in Botswana & South Africa
- Venue: Port Elizabeth, 5–19 March 2012
- Known results: South Africa 7, Netherlands 28
Swiss International tournament
- Venue: Allmend, Lucerne, 10–11 March 2012
- Results:
Day one
- France II 36–0 Germany
- Switzerland 0–36 France
- Germany 0–52 France
- France II 33–0 Switzerland
- Switzerland 7–36 Germany
- France 14–12 France II
Day two
- France 12–14 France II
- Switzerland 0–43 France
- France II 10–7 Germany
- France 50–7 Germany
- France II 33–5 Switzerland
- Switzerland 7–24 Germany
- Venue: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 10–11 March 2012
- Winner: Brazil
- Participants: Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Paraguay
- Venue: Hong Kong. 23–24 March 2012
- Winner: England
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, Hong Kong, Japan, Netherlands, Russia, Spain, Tunisia, United States
- Venue: Zanka, Hungary. 8–9 April 2012
- Winner: Romania
- Participants: Austria, Barbarians, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Poland II, Romania, Slovakia
St Lucia triangular
- Venue: Gros Islet Playing Field, St Lucia 28 April 2012
- St Lucia 55 – 0 Curaçao
- St Lucia 38 – 0 Curaçao
- Barbados 15 – 5 Curaçao
- Barbados 10 – 5 Curaçao
- Venue: Twickenham, London 12–13 May 2012
- Winner: England
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, France, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, South Africa, United States
- Venue: Rome, 18–19 May 2012.
- Winner: "Red&Blu" Aoteaora Maori
- Participants: Georgia, Italy, Kazakhstan, "Red&Blu" Aoteaora Maori, Russia, Tukkies, Ukraine
- Venue: Amsterdam, 19–20 May 2012.
Silver Pier
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, United States, Wales
Women's shield
- Winner: Netherlands Development
- Participants: Austria, Finland, Poland, Switzerland plus various club teams
Benidorm Sevens
- Venue: Benidorm, Spain. 25–26 May 2012
- Winner: Spain
- Participants: Kazakhstan, Russia, Spain
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- Venue: Sofia, Bulgaria. 9–10 June 2012
- Winner:
- Participants: Andorra, Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Wales
- Venue: Gent, Belgium. 9–10 June 2012
- Winner:
- Participants: Belgium, Czech Republic, Finland, Georgia, Ireland, Israel, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Poland, Scotland, Serbia
- Venue: Ameland, Netherlands. 16–17 June 2012
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Italy, Moldova, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine
- Venue: Moscow. 30 – June 2012
- Winner: England
- Participants: Croatia; England, France, Germany, Ireland; Italy, Moldova, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Scotland; Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine; Wales
Harare Sevens
- At: Harare, Zimbabwe, 28 July 2012
- Zimbabwe A 0–47 Zambia
- Zimbabwe 15–12 Zambia
- At: Fiji, 3–4 August 2012
- Winner: New Zealand.
- Participants: Australia, Cook Islands, Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Samoa, Tonga
- Venue: Prague, 11–12 August 2012
Only international: Austria 19–12 Czech Republic
Piotrowice Nyskie International Rugby Festival
- Venue: Piotrowice Nyskie, 25–26 August 2012 (Source: FIRA)
- Winner: Czech Republic
- Participants Austria, Czech Republic plus club teams.
No international fixtures. Austria finished third.
- At: Ottawa, 25–26 August 2012
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Canada, Cayman Islands, Mexico, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago
- Venue: Kota Kinabalu, Borneo, 31 – August 2012
- Winner: Australia
- Participants: Australia, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Kazakhstan, South Korea Papua New Guinea, Singapore, Taiwan Thailand
Shanghai Sevens
- Venue: Shanghai, China, 22–23 September 2012
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Hong Kong, Shanghai Select, Singapore
International results:
- China 31–0 Hong Kong
- China 38–0 Singapore
- Hong Kong 29–0 Singapore
- (Final): China 31–0 Hong Kong
Safari Sevens 2012
- Venue: Middelburg, South Africa
- Winner: Zimbabwe
- Participants: Botswana, Free State, Zimbabwe
International results:
- Botswana 5–15 Zimbabwe
- Venue: Rabat, Morocco, 29–30 September 2012
- Winner: Tunisia
- Participants: Kenya, Morocco, Tunisia, Uganda, Zambia Zimbabwe
- Venue: Pune, India, 6–7 October 2012
- Winner: Fiji
- Participants: China, Fiji, Hong Kong, India, Iran, Japan, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Malaysia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Singapore, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan
Tournoi International rugby 7 féminin
- Venue: Marcoussis, Paris, 12–13 October 2012
- Germany 0–40 France A
- England 22–5 Spain
- France 5–17 Netherlands
- England 19–5 France A
- Germany 7–26 Netherlands
- Spain 0–14 France
- England 24–5 Netherlands
- Spain 14–7 France A
- Germany 0–31 France
- Netherlands 12–14 Spain
- England 42–0 Germany
- France A 0–20 France
- Germany 0–24 Spain
- France A 5–12 Netherlands
- England 21–5 France
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
England | 5 | 0 | 0 | 128 | 20 |
France | 3 | 0 | 2 | 75 | 38 |
Netherlands | 3 | 0 | 2 | 72 | 55 |
Spain | 3 | 0 | 2 | 47 | 55 |
France A | 1 | 0 | 3 | 52 | 53 |
Germany | 0 | 0 | 5 | 7 | 163 |
Bowl
- France A 26–5 Germany
Plate
- Netherlands 14–12 Spain
Cup
- England 19–14 France
Guangzhou Sevens
- Venue: Guangzhou, China 27–28 October 2012
- Winner: United States
Group A
- China 53–0 Philippines
- Singapore 0 – 59 USA
- China 53 – 0 Singapore
- Philippines 0 – 52 USA
- China 5 – 36 USA
- Philippines 24 – 5 Singapore
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
USA | 3 | 0 | 0 | 147 | 5 |
China | 2 | 0 | 1 | 111 | 36 |
Philippines | 1 | 0 | 2 | 24 | 116 |
Singapore | 0 | 0 | 5 | 24 | 129 |
Quarter-finals
- USA 45–0 Thailand
- Kazakhstan beat Philippines
- South Africa beat Singapore
- China 7–10 China II
Plate Semi-finals
- Philippines 24–0 Thailand
- China 60–0 Singapore
Semi finals
- USA 33–7 Kazakhstan
- South Africa 29–7 China II
Group B
- Kazakhstan 48 – 0 Thailand
- China II 7–33 South Africa
- Kazakh-stan 17 – 0 China II
- Thailand 0 – 53 South Africa
- Kazakhstan 10 – 28 South Africa
- Thailand 0 – 54 China II
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
South Africa | 3 | 0 | 0 | 114 | 12 |
Kazakhstan | 2 | 0 | 1 | 75 | 28 |
China II | 1 | 0 | 2 | 61 | 50 |
Thailand | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 155 |
7th–8th place
- Thailand 26–5 Singapore
Plate final (5th–6th)
- China 62–0 Philippines
3rd–4th place
- Kazakhstan 12–0 China II
Final
- USA 24–0 South Africa
Valencia Sevens
- Venue: Dubai, UAE. 30 – November 2012
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, France, Netherlands, New Zealand, South Africa, Spain, United States
- Venue: Dubai, UAE. 29 – November 2012
- Winner: Maple Leafs
- Participants: Maple Leafs; Kenya Lionesses; Swedish Vikings; United Arab Emirates
Seven de la Republica
- Venue: Paranà, Argentina. 29 – November 2012
- Final classification: 1 Argentina, 2 Uruguay, 3 Chile, 4 Paraguay
- Argentina 17–5 Chile
- Uruguay 31–0 Paraguay
- Argentina 41–0 Paraguay
- Uruguay 25–0 Chile
- Chile 12–10 Paraguay
- Argentina 19–5 Uruguay
Havana Sevens
- Venue: Havana, Cuba. 29 – November 2012
- Winner: Dog Howlers
- Participants: Dog Howlers, Atlantis, Venezuela, Cayman Islands Selects, Cuba
No results known. Cuba beaten in the final.
Guatemala exhibition
- Venue: Guatemala. 1 December 2012
- Guatemala 5–10 Costa Rica B
- Costa Rica A 29–0 El Salvador
- Costa Rica A 33–0 Guatemala
- Costa Rica B 27–0 El Salvador
- Guatemala 10–5 El Salvador
2013
- Venue: BBVA Compass Stadium, Houston. 1–2 February 2013
- Winner: England
- Participants: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, United States
Spain v France
- Venue: Gijón 2–3 February 2013
A joint training camp, with two internationals being played:
- Spain 19–22 France
- Spain 26–22 France
- Venue: Las Vegas. 8–9 February 2013
- Winner: Maple Leafs 1
- Participants: Argentina, Japan, Maple Leafs 1 and 2, USA Stars and USA Stripes, and various club selections.
- Venue: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. 23–24 February 2013
- Winner:
- Participants: Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Paraguay
Alicante Sevens
Group A
- France 12–0 Germany
- Germany 7–17 Russia A
- France 12–5 Russia A.
Semi-finals
- France 24–10 Russia B
- Spain 0–29 Russia A
5th/6th place
- Germany 31–0 Tunisia
Group B
- Spain 26–5 Tunisia
- Russia B 32–5 Tunisia
- Russia B 17–0 Spain
3rd/4th place
- Russia B 0–43 Spain
Final
- France 7–38 Russia A
- Venue: Hong Kong. 22 March 2013
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Australia, Canada, China, France, Hong Kong, International Select, Ireland, Japan, Kazakhstan, Netherlands, South Africa, Singapore, United States
- Venue: Guangzhou University City Stadium, Guangzhou, China 30–31 March 2013
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Canada, China, Fiji, Brazil, England, Ireland, Japan, Ireland, Netherlands, Japan, Tunisia, United States
- Venue: Tunis. 20–21 April 2013
- Winner: South Africa
- Participants: Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia, Uganda, Zimbabwe
- Venue: Twickenham 11–12 May 2013
- Winner: England
- Participants: Australia, Canada, England, France, Ireland, Russia, Spain, United States
IRB Women's Sevens World Series
- Venue: NRCA Stadium, Amsterdam, 17–18 May 2013.
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, France, New Zealand, Russia, Netherlands, Spain, South Africa, United States
Women's Shield
- Venue: NRCA Stadium, Amsterdam, 18–19 May 2013.
- Winner: Ukraine
- Participants: Belgium, Czech Republic, Georgia, Germany, Switzerland, Ukraine, and various club teams
- Venue: Bratislava. 25–26 May 2013
- Winner: Finland
- Participants: Bulgaria, Israel, Latvia, Slovakia, Luxembourg, Andorra, Finland, Malta, Norway, Turkey, Lithuania, Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Venue: Brive. 1–2 June 2013
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Scotland, Spain, Ukraine, Wales
- Venue: Prague. 8–9 June 2013
- Winner: Belgium
- Participants: Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Georgia, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland
- Venue: Marbella. 15–16 June 2013
- Winner: Russia
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Scotland, Spain, Ukraine, Wales
- At: Moscow, 28–29 June 2013
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, Fiji, France, Ireland, Japan, New Zealand, Netherlands, Russia, South Africa, Spain, Tunisia, United States
- At: Baeng Sen, Thailand, 20–21 September 2013
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Chinese Taipei, Guam, Philippines, Laos, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Thailand
Middelburg Sevens
- At Middelburg, South Africa
- Winner: Zimbabwe
Mainly club teams. Only internationals:
- Botswana 0–29 Zimbabwe
- Botswana 5–17 Zimbabwe
Belgium v Netherlands
- 5 October 2013
Three training games, all won by Netherlands
- At: Noose, Australia 5–6 October 2013
- Winner: Australia.
- Participants: Australia, Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa
Germany v Netherlands
- 12 October 2013
Four training games:
- Netherlands 50–0 Germany
- Netherlands 12–5 Germany
- Netherlands 27–0 Germany
- Netherlands 12–0 Germany
- At: Pune, India, 9–10 November 2013
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Iran, India, Philippines, Laos, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Japan, United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong, Thailand
- Venue: Montevideo, Uruguay. 9–10 November 2013
- Winner: Brazil
- Participants: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay
- At: Ottawa, 25–26 August 2012
- Winner: Maple Leafs
- Participants: Bermuda, Maple Leafs, Cayman Islands, Curaçao, Jamaica, Mexico, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago; Turks and Caicos Islands
Souston Sevens
- At Souston, France, 10 November 2013
POOL 1
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
England | 3 | 0 | 0 | 76 | 0 |
French Universities | 2 | 0 | 1 | 78 | 21 |
Germany | 1 | 0 | 2 | 45 | 50 |
Netherlands A | 0 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 62 |
- England 21–0 French Universities
- Netherlands A 5–12 Germany
- England 38–0 Germany
- Netherlands A 0–33 French Universities
- England 17–0 Netherlands A
- Germany 0–45 French Universities
7th Place
- Netherlands A 40–0 Tunisia
5th Place
- Germany 0–33 Ireland
POOL 2
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
France | 3 | 0 | 0 | 70 | 14 |
Netherlands 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 78 | 31 |
Ireland | 1 | 0 | 2 | 38 | 46 |
Tunisia | 0 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 100 |
- France 22–0 Tunisia
- Ireland 0–24 Netherlands 1
- France 26–7 Netherlands 1
- Ireland 31–0 Tunisia
- France 22–7 Ireland
- Netherlands 1 47–5 Tunisia
3rd Place
- French Universities 0–12 Netherlands 1
Final
- France 29–17 England
- Venue: Chiclayo, Peru. 15–17 November 2013
- Winner: Colombia
- Participants: Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela
- Venue: Dubai, UAE. 28–29 November 2013
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, Ireland, France, New Zealand, Tunisia, Fiji, Spain, United States
2014
- Venue: Mar del Plata, Argentina, 11–12 January 2014
- Uruguay 14–5 Paraguay
- Argentina 22–5 Chile
- Uruguay 38–0 Chile
- Argentina 17–5 Paraguay
- Chile 15–12 Paraguay
- Argentina 32–0 Uruguay
- Argentina 22–0 Paraguay (Semi-Final)
- Uruguay 22–0 Chile (Semi-Final)
- Paraguay 10–5 Chile (3rd Place Match)
- Argentina 38–0 Uruguay (Final)
Copa Mesoamericana
Venue: Guatemala, 25 January 2014[37]
- Guatemala 'B' 0–33 Jalisco (Mexico)
- Guatemala 12–5 El Salvador
- Guatemala 20–7 Jalisco (Mexico)
- Guatemala 'B' 0–36 El Salvador
- Guatemala 41–0 Guatemala 'B'
- El Salvador 10–0 Jalisco (Mexico)
Rainforest Sevens
- Venue: Cartago, Costa Rica
- Venezuela 46 – El Salvador 7
- Peru 43 – Panamá 0
- Nicarágua 0 – Costa Rica 50
- Venezuela 17 – Peru 22
- Colômbia 52 – El Salvador 7
- Panamá 0 – Costa Rica 54
- Venezuela 54 – Panamá 0
- Peru 45 – Nicarágua 0
- Colômbia 24 – Costa Rica 0
- Nicarágua 20 – Panamá 0
- Costa Rica 26 – El Salvador 5
- Colômbia 27 – Peru 5
- Nicarágua 0 – Venezuela 72
- Colômbia 50 – Panamá 0
- El Salvador 0 – Peru 41
- Costa Rica 0 – Venezuela 27
- Colômbia 82 – Nicaragua 0
- Panamá 0 – El Salvador 20
- Costa Rica 5 – Peru 34
- Colômbia 17 – Venezuela 0
- El Salvador 19 – Nicarágua 5
Final Standing 1 – Colômbia – qualified for Central American and Caribbean Games – Veracruz 2014 2 – Peru (invited) 3 – Venezuela – qualified for Central American and Caribbean Games – Veracruz 2014 4 – Costa Rica 5 – El Salvador 6 – Nicarágua 7 – Panamá
- Venue: Fifth Third Bank Stadium, Kennesaw, Georgia. 15–16 February 2014
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Spain, United States
- Venue: São Paulo. 21–22 February 2014
- Winner: Australia
- Participants: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Russia, Spain, United States
Athens Sevens
- Venue: Athens, 23–24 March 2014
- Winner: Russia
- Israel 24–5 Malta
- Greece 0–41 Russia
- Bulgaria 5–26 Romania
- Israel 26–0 Greece
- Malta 22–10 Bulgaria
- Russia 22–0 Romania
- Greece 5–36 Bulgaria
- Malta 0–17 Romania
- Israel 0–35 Russia
- Greece 0–48 Romania
- Malta 0–35 Russia
- Israel 24–7 Bulgaria
- Malta 43–0 Greece
- Israel 5–17 Romania
- Bulgaria 0–45 Russia
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Russia | 5 | 0 | 0 | 178 | 0 |
Romania | 4 | 0 | 1 | 108 | 32 |
Israel | 3 | 0 | 2 | 79 | 64 |
Malta | 2 | 0 | 3 | 70 | 86 |
Bulgaria | 1 | 0 | 4 | 58 | 122 |
Greece | 0 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 194 |
Semi-finals
- Russia 45–0 Israel
- Romania 24–7 Malta
5th/6th place
- Bulgaria 19–7 Greece
3rd/4th place
- Israel 7–12 Malta (AET)
Final
- Russia 39–5 Romania
- Venue: Hong Kong. 28 March 2014
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Brazil, Canada, China, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, South Africa, Singapore, Papua New Guinea
- Venue: Guangzhou University City Stadium, Guangzhou, China 5–6 April2013
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, England, Ireland, France, New Zealand, Fiji, Spain, United States
- Venue: 12 April 2014. Machakos, Kenya
- Winner: South Africa
- Participants: Kenya, Namibia, Madagascar, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia, Uganda, Zimbabwe
Stanislas Sevens
- Venue: 10–11 May 2014. Meurthe-et-Moselle, France
- Winner: Brazil development
- Internationals: Czech Republic 36–5 Georgia; Brazil Development 55–0 Belgium; Czech Republic 22–5 Switzerland; Switzerland 14–5 Georgia
IRB Women's Sevens World Series
- Venue: NRCA Stadium, Amsterdam, 16–17 May 2014.
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Ireland, New Zealand, Russia, Netherlands, Spain, South Africa, United States
Women's Shield
- Venue: NRCA Stadium, Amsterdam, 17–18 May 2014.
- Winner: Tribe (Aus/Eng/Malta)
- Participants: Germany, Georgia, Norway, Switzerland, Poland, Wales, and various club teams
Centrale Sevens
- Venue: Ecole Centrale Paris
- Winner: Tribe (Aus/Eng/Malta)
- Internationals: Brazil Development 15–5 Tunisia; Ukraine 12–19 Germany; Belgium 0–36 Germany; Ukraine 28–10 Belgium; Ukraine 5–14 Tunisia; Germany 24–19 Brazil Development; Belgium 0–40 Tunisia
- Venue: Moscow. 6–7 June 2013
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Belgium, Spain, Sweden, Wales
- Venue: Bergen. 7–8 June 2014
- Winner: Ukraine
- Participants: Norway, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Georgia, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Scotland, Ukraine, Croatia
- Venue: Brive. 14–15 June 2014
- Winner: France
- Participants: England, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Belgium, Spain, Sweden, Wales
- Venue: Vilnius. 30 June 2014
- Winner: Hungary
- Participants: Austria, Bulgaria, Israel, Latvia, Slovenia, Luxembourg, Malta, Bulgaria, Serbia, Lithuania, Bosnia and Herzegovina
- At: Hong Kong, 22–23 August 2014
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Philippines, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Thailand
IRB Women's Sevens World Series Qualifier
- Venue: Shek Kip Mei Sports Ground, Hong Kong, 12–13 September 2014[38]
- Winner: Fiji
- Other core team qualifiers: France, China, South Africa
- Participants: Argentina, Brazil, China, Fiji, France, Hong Kong, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Netherlands, Portugal, South Africa
Group A
Group B
Plate Semi Finals (5th–8th)
7th/8th Match
Plate final: 5th/6th Match |
Group C
Bowl Semi Finals (9th–12th) 11th/12th Match Bowl final:9th/10th Match Quarter-finals (1st–8th)
Cup Semi Finals (1st–4th)
3rd/4th place
Cup Final: 1st/2nd place
|
- Venue: Enkoping, Hong Kong, 13–14 September 2014
- Winner: England
- Participants: England, Ireland, Wales, Sweden, Portugal, Belgium, Russia, Italy, Netherlands, Germany
- At: Incheon, Korea, 30 September – 1 October 2014
- Winner: China
- Participants: China, Uzbekistan, Philippines, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Thailand, Laos
- At: Noose, Australia 4–5 October 2014
- Winner: New Zealand.
- Participants: Australia, Cook Islands, Fiji, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa
- At: Beijing, 18–19 October 2014
- Winner: Japan
- Participants: China, Philippines, Kazakhstan, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Thailand
- Venue: Montevideo, Uruguay. 8–9 November 2014
- Winner: Brazil
- Participants: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Paraguay, Uruguay, Venezuela
Souston Sevens
- At Souston, France, 15 November 2014
POOL 1
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
England Chariot | 3 | 0 | 0 | 55* | 5* |
Ireland | 2 | 0 | 1 | 55 | 36 |
Spain | 1 | 0 | 2 | 26 | 62 |
Wales | 0 | 0 | 3 | 19* | 52* |
- England Chariot 31 Spain 0
- Ireland 33 Wales 7
- Wales 12 Spain 19
- England Chariot 24 Ireland 5
- Ireland 17 Spain 7
- England Chariot bt Wales*
7th Place
- Wales bt Tunisia
5th Place
- Spain bt Spain B
POOL 2
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
France | 3 | 0 | 0 | 91 | 0 |
England TW3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 76 | 14 |
Spain B | 1 | 0 | 2 | 17 | 67 |
Tunisia | 0 | 0 | 3 | 12 | 115 |
- England TW3 24 Spain B 0
- France 46 Tunisia 0
- France 31 Spain B 0
- Tunisia 0 England TW3 52
- Tunisia 12 Spain B 17
- France 14 England TW3 0
3rd Place
- England TW3 38–7 Ireland
Final
- France 19–17 England Chariots
2015
- Venue: Mar del Plata, Argentina, 10–11 January 2015
- This tournament also acted as South America's qualifier for the 2015 Pan American Games
Day One: Pool A
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argentina | 2 | 0 | 0 | 65 | 5 |
Chile | 1 | 0 | 1 | 17 | 51 |
Paraguay | 0 | 0 | 2 | 10 | 36 |
- Chile 12 Paraguay 10
- Argentina 24 Paraguay 0
- Argentina 41 Chile 5
Pool B
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venezuela | 3 | 0 | 0 | 46 | 22 |
Columbia | 2 | 0 | 1 | 53 | 17 |
Uruguay | 1 | 0 | 2 | 41 | 22 |
Peru | 0 | 0 | 3 | 12 | 91 |
- Colombia 36 Peru 0
- Venezuela 10 Uruguay 5
- Colombia 5 Venezuela 10
- Uruguay 29 Peru 0
- Colombia 12 Uruguay 7
- Peru 12 Venezuela 26
Day Two: Championship pool (top two qualify for PanAm)
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argentina | 3 | 0 | 0 | 61 | 10 |
Columbia | 2 | 0 | 1 | 32 | 17 |
Venezuela | 1 | 0 | 2 | 15 | 36 |
Chile | 0 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 52 |
- Argentina 17 Colombia 0
- Venezuela 10 Chile 0
- Argentina 22 Chile 5
- Venezuela 0 Colombia 12
- Chile 0 Colombia 20
- Argentina 22 Venezuela 5
5th/7th play-off pool
Paraguay 38 Peru 5 Paraguay 10 Uruguay 0 Uruguay 26 Peru 7
- Venue: São Paulo. 7–8 February 2015
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Fiji, South Africa, New Zealand, Russia, Spain, United States
- Venue: Atlanta. 14–15 March 2015
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Fiji, South Africa, New Zealand, Russia, Spain, United States
- Venue: Langford. 18–19 April 2015
- Winner: New Zealand
- Participants: Australia, Brazil, Canada, England, France, Fiji, South Africa, New Zealand, Russia, Spain, United States
- Venue: Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. 8–10 July 2015
- Winner: Fiji
- Participants: Australia, Fiji, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tahiti, Tonga
- Venue: Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 8–10 July 2015
- Winner: Canada
- Participants: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Mexico, United States
IRB Women's Sevens World Series Qualifier
- Venue: University College Dublin, 22–23 August 2015
- Winner:
- Other core team qualifiers: Ireland, Japan
- Participants: Brazil, China, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Netherlands, Netherlands, South Africa, Samoa, Wales
Group A
Group B
Plate Semi Finals (5th–8th)
7th/8th Match
Plate final: 5th/6th Match
|
Group C
Bowl Semi Finals (9th–12th)
11th/12th Match
Bowl final:9th/10th Match
Quarter-finals (1st–8th)
Cup Semi Finals (1st–4th)
3rd/4th place
Cup Final: 1st/2nd place
|
Elche Sevens
- Venue: Elche, 23–24 March 2014
- Winner: Great Britain
Day One
- Great Britain 33–5 Spain
- Portugal 12–19 Ireland
- France 65–0 Alicante
- Spain 50–0 Alicante
- Ireland 07-26 Great Britain
- France 24–0 Portugal
- Spain 24–5 Ireland
- Great Britain 12–19 France
- Alicante 0–61 Portugal
Day Two
- Alicante 78–0 Ireland
- Spain 7–31 France
- Portugal 0–36 Great Britain
- Ireland 0–12 France
- Spain 19–0 Portugal
- Alicante 0–79 Great Britain
- 5th/6th place Portugal 55–0 Alicante
- 3rd/4th place Spain 12–5 Ireland
- Final France 19–35 Great Britain
Nation | Won | Drawn | Lost | For | Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
France | 5 | 0 | 0 | 151 | 19 |
Great Britain | 4 | 0 | 1 | 186 | 31 |
Spain | 3 | 0 | 2 | 100 | 64 |
Ireland | 2 | 0 | 3 | 109 | 71 |
Portugal | 1 | 0 | 4 | 73 | 98 |
Alicante | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 272 |
Women's Rugby Sevens rankings
Unofficial Women's Seven Rugby World Rankings | |||
---|---|---|---|
November 2013, 25th | |||
Rank | Change* | Team | Points |
1 | New Zealand | 5574 | |
2 | Canada | 5424 | |
3 | 1 | United States | 5285 |
4 | 1 | Australia | 5261 |
5 | England | 5225 | |
6 | Spain | 5092 | |
7 | Russia | 5077 | |
8 | 2 | France | 4727 |
9 | Ireland | 4721 | |
10 | 2 | Netherlands | 4715 |
11 | 1 | Fiji | 4714 |
12 | 2 | Japan | 4569 |
13 | 2 | China | 4568 |
14 | 1 | South Africa | 4273 |
15 | 2 | Brazil | 4266 |
16 | Tunisia | 3888 | |
17 | Germany | 3385 | |
18 | Kazakhstan | 3332 | |
19 | 1 | Italy | 3191 |
20 | 3 | Hong Kong | 3134 |
21 | 1 | Portugal | 2953 |
22 | 1 | Ukraine | 2837 |
23 | 31 | Western Samoa | 2818 |
24 | 2 | Wales | 2726 |
25 | 1 | Scotland | 2655 |
26 | 5 | Papua New Guinea | 2630 |
27 | 1 | Singapore | 2598 |
28 | 3 | Thailand | 2551 |
29 | 2 | Argentina | 2456 |
30 | 11 | Belgium | 2332 |
31 | 3 | Sweden | 2192 |
32 | 3 | Switzerland | 2152 |
33 | 3 | Trinidad and Tobago | 2123 |
34 | 5 | Chinese Taipei | 1903 |
35 | 3 | Moldova | 2062 |
36 | 3 | Czech Republic | 2012 |
36 | 3 | Croatia | 2012 |
38 | 3 | Romania | 1969 |
39 | 13 | Philippines | 1948 |
40 | 4 | Uganda | 1916 |
41 | 4 | Hungary | 1909 |
42 | 4 | Poland | 1904 |
43 | 6 | United Arab Emirates | 1895 |
44 | 4 | Austria | 1886 |
45 | 29 | Sri Lanka | 1849 |
46 | 4 | Kenya | 1795 |
47 | 4 | Georgia | 1761 |
48 | 4 | Finland | 1750 |
49 | 1 | India | 1699 |
50 | 5 | Colombia | 1698 |
51 | 4 | Uruguay | 1690 |
52 | 6 | Chile | 1650 |
53 | 5 | Denmark | 1605 |
54 | 11 | South Korea | 1570 |
55 | 4 | Norway | 1540 |
56 | 12 | Iran | 1532 |
57 | 14 | Mexico | 1525 |
58 | 2 | Venezuela | 1503 |
59 | 6 | Malta | 1482 |
60 | 10 | Guatemala | 1477 |
61 | 6 | Israel | 1472 |
62 | 5 | Latvia | 1397 |
63 | 5 | Zimbabwe | 1376 |
64 | 2 | Jamaica | 1351 |
65 | 6 | Bulgaria | 1343 |
66 | 1 | Paraguay | 1330 |
67 | 7 | Cook Islands | 1286 |
68 | 7 | Malaysia | 1252 |
69 | 6 | Andorra | 1270 |
69 | 3 | Peru | 1270 |
71 | 7 | Slovenia | 1252 |
72 | 9 | Laos | 1194 |
73 | 11 | Cayman Islands | 1165 |
74 | 5 | Lithuania | 1162 |
75 | 3 | Senegal | 1084 |
76 | 3 | Zambia | 1082 |
77 | 2 | Uzbekistan | 1014 |
78 | 2 | Luxembourg | 1009 |
79 | 2 | Tonga | 1004 |
80 | 2 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 948 |
81 | 2 | Saint Lucia | 903 |
82 | 2 | Guyana | 902 |
83 | 1 | Slovakia | 838 |
84 | 1 | Serbia | 820 |
85 | Madagascar | 772 | |
86 | Morocco | 755 | |
87 | Hawaii | 611 | |
88 | 1 | Nicaragua | 605 |
89 | 13 | Bermuda | 549 |
90 | 2 | Botswana | 455 |
91 | 3 | Barbados | 549 |
92 | 18 | Curaçao | 499 |
93 | 3 | Solomon Islands | 493 |
94 | 3 | Burkina Faso | 455 |
95 | 2 | Guatemala | 430 |
96 | 2 | Réunion | 418 |
96 | 2 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 418 |
98 | 2 | Turkey | 404 |
99 | 2 | Mayotte | 372 |
99 | 2 | Rwanda | 372 |
Sources
The sources for each individual tournament entry are listed individually above. Most of the information has come from the websites of various nations which has also been contributed to by news reports. If only one source is listed then it should be considered the primary source. The listings are also checked by members of various rugby discussion fora.
External links
Notes
- ^ "First "official" women international in the Caribbean". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
- ^ "Cayman RFU". Archived from the original on 21 July 2012. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Details of the Invitation team are not known
- ^ USA won another 2 matches that are not mentioned here (Final record W4, D1, L2)
- ^ (Source Fiji Rugby)Mainly a club tournament in Fiji, the Fiji team took the opportunity to help some of their players make the transition from touch to contact. The USA also played thus warranting inclusion in the main list. The tournament saw USA 3rd and Touchdown 1st. What leads to confusion is that an exhibition match was played with mostly Touchdown players bolstered by two from the runners up (QVSOB). This appears to be considered the national Fiji team. USA are then described as Champions although the last match appears to have had little to do with the tournament.
- ^ Although more properly this was actually the Fiji touch team playing contact.
- ^ (Source Fiji Union)
- ^ "Latest News : Friends of Rwandan Rugby". Archived from the original on 23 June 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
- ^ (Source Austria Union)
- ^ It appears that this was a regional tournament only rather than for the whole of Asia. There is also some doubt over the South Korean team and it is possible that this was a club side. (Source Peoples Daily)
- ^ (Source Sabah Union)
- ^ A round robin competition followed by semi finals and a final (and bronze medal match) was planned.(Source SEA Games) Summarised
- ^ Shown live on TV via the BBC interactive service, commentary by Nigel Starmer-Smith. Due to the coverage, a lot of information was recorded.
Nation Squad New Zealand Aotearoa Maori Chanel Huddleston • Selica Winiata • Tate (?) • Baker • Anna Richards • Ngahuri Thomas • Blackledge • Peter Joseph (Coach) England Claire Allan (Saracens) • Emma Layland (Richmond) • Joanne Yapp (Worcester) • Susan Day (c) (Wasps) • Danielle Waterman (Clifton) • Alice Richardson (Richmond) • Heather Fisher (Wasps) • Sarah Marsh (Wasps) • Gemma Sharples (Worcester) • Sonia Green (Saracens) • Simon Amor (Coach) • Mike Friday (Assistant)• Paul March (Trainer) Subs
1st Half
- NZ Blood sub – probably Mcgregor, came on for Richards
2nd Half
- NZ – McGregor for Richards, Unknown for Huddlestone
- Eng – Sharples on for Unknown, Sarah Marsh on for Unknown
Tries
NZ kicked off
1st Half
- ENGLAND try – Layland, from 5m line out, converted by Richardson 7–0
- NEW ZEALAND try – Winiata, long range attack, conversion missed by Richards 7–5
2nd Half
- NEW ZEALAND try – Thompson, open play led to a shortrange penalty, taken quickly, conversion missed by Winiata 7–10
- ENGLAND try – Sharples, short KO by NZ resulted in FK, numerous players involved in long range attack, conversion by Richardson 14–10
Referee: Bruce Robertson
- ^ This tournament was held at Edinburgh on the Murrayfied back pitches (whilst the finale of the IRB circuit was ongoing). (Sources SRU and RFUW)
- ^ (One source lists this as "a win by more than 45 points")
- ^ Whilst a club tournament, Italy and Spain also took part (a Portugal VII did not have official status). The two nations met in the final
- ^ Spain and France took part along with French Universities and French South Selection. All teams played each other (both national teams beating the two French extra teams) followed by a third place match and a final.
- ^ Amidst a number of men's and youth matches, Rwanda and Burundi are believed to have played a game of sevens.
- ^ This appears to have been part of a tournament including Zimbabwe and Zambia "A" teams. Invites may have gone to Namibia and Botswana.
- ^ A women's "showcase" was held during the first stop on the new Asian Seens circuit. Initially China, Japan, Hong Kong and Guam were expected to participate but this appeared to reduce to just China and Guam playing four games
- ^ http://stluciastar.com/content/archives/13337 [permanent dead link]
- ^ "Magyar Rögbi Szövetség".
- ^ The Pangolins are the main Zimbabwe women's sevens team
- ^ Match report[permanent dead link]
- ^ After sudden death extra time
- ^ "Women's Rugby: Tunisia too strong for Malta | MaltaToday". Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
- ^ "Fixtures | Emirates Airline Dubai Rugby Sevens". Archived from the original on 30 November 2010. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
- ^ http://stluciastar.com/content/archives/20503 [permanent dead link]
- ^ "Elvérine Eraude est décédée à l'âge 104 ans". Clicanoo.re.
- ^ "Magyar Rögbi Szövetség".
- ^ "FEDERACION ESPAÑOLA RUGBY - La DH y LIGA IBERDROLA". ferugby. Archived from the original on 4 November 2011.
- ^ "Macoocoo - Home". www.macoocoo.com.
- ^ http://safarisevens.kenyarfu.com Archived 29 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ This is the first official IRB women's sevens tournament apart from the World Cup Sevens, and was intended to become part of a full IRB International Women's Sevens Series starting with the 2012–13 season.
- ^ "CT Rugby Guyane". Archived from the original on 26 February 2012. Retrieved 16 February 2012.
- ^ "Guatemala festejó el título en la Copa Mesoamericana de rugby femenino". Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ "Fiji, China, France and SA qualify for Series" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 13 September 2014. Archived from the original on 13 September 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2014.