Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Defensive lapses cost Australia in tight battles with rivals at Oceania Sevens

(Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

Australia have been left to rue some key defensive lapses after suffering tight losses to Fiji and New Zealand in the men’s competition at the Oceania 7s at Ballymore Stadium in Brisbane.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Australian men and women’s teams entered the three-day event having already qualified for the 2024 Olympics.

But the guaranteed ticket to Paris didn’t mean the home sides were going to take it easy.

Related

Video Spacer

Video Spacer

The Australian men opened their campaign on Friday with a 24-0 romp over the Oceania Barbarians and their first match on Saturday resulted in a 47-5 win over Niue, running in seven tries.

But the Aussies were brought crashing back to earth against Fiji later in the day when they blew a 10-0 lead on the way to a 28-22 loss.

Against NZ in the final match of Saturday, Australia went down 14-10 in a hard-fought contest to leave them third in Pool A on eight points, behind Fiji (12) and NZ (10).

Fiji and NZ will battle it out on Sunday in the Oceania final for bragging rights.

“It was a good hitout for the boys,” Australian Sevens player Nathan Lawson told Stan Sport after the loss to the Kiwis.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We’ve got a young squad, so it’s pretty good to come here and play against some world-class teams.

“It was a tough hit-out. We were on top for parts, but there were some lapses in D (defence), and that’s what games are built on, and sadly we weren’t there.”

The Australian women got better and better during their five-match series against a strong NZ Development side.

The two sides fought out a 21-21 draw in their opening clash on Friday, before the Aussies prevailed 21-19 in the second encounter later that day.

ADVERTISEMENT

On Saturday, the Australians produced a valiant display on the way to a 26-12 victory in their first clash of the day.

The re-match at night was a one-way affair as Australia ran out 40-12 winners with the final match to come on Sunday.

The Oceania 7s involves 25 teams from across the Pacific for 66 matches (35 men’s and 31 women’s) over three days.

For some nations, Olympic qualification is still up for grabs.

For other nations like Australia, it’s a final tune-up before the new-look Sevens series starts in Dubai in December.

Samoa, Papua New Guinea, Tonga and the Solomon Islands remain in Olympic contention for the men’s competition, with only one spot up for grabs.

In the women’s section, PNG and Fiji loom as the ones to beat for the sole spot in Paris after topping their pools.

They’ll face Tonga and Samoa respectively in Sunday’s semis.

ADVERTISEMENT
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

t
takata 1 hour ago
Can Les Bleus avoid a Black-wash in New Zealand?

but I do not accept that international rugby and who plays France in France doesn’t matter not a big deal we will just get somebody else who cares ?


I’m sorry, my bad, it doesn’t sound right when read under this angle


This part of my post you are refering to was certainly poorly worded as I wasn’t weighting an AB test playing in France (or not) vs the huge audience and media attention it gets all the time, or not, if not played.


By “not a big deal”, I mostly meant financially for FFR as, contrary to many other Rugby Unions (most as broke as FFR) who are still making nearly all their money with such big events tickets sale, FFR is not. Using the Stade de France* even when it was sold out or near full capacity (something garanteed for an AB game) was only for the operator to turn on profits. Hence they would survive an AB boycott because not as much was at stake compared to other Unions who are still desperately chasing the biggest crowds as possible in order to survive.


Also, I don’t think that the NZRU could push other Unions to boycott France over sending a development team on summer tours, like say when South Africa was boycotted over apartheid. So, the FFR would also survive that (with less audience but less drama).


Because WR can’t help without juridiction on team selection, France is simply fulfilling their engagement by sending whatever team they want. By the way, that’s why WR is trying to sell a “Nation League?” instead of tours, in order to up what’s at stakes but it probably won’t change anything for the French selection in July.


(*) conditions were reviewed and improved, as FFR was going to reconsider playing in the Stade de France at all.


you would expect the first game since Bok world champs knocked the French boys out at the WC surely would be more than that? that’s how I would market it anyhow !! Revenge game ! And that will be a major rugby event even tho u don’t think so

When you are overstretched and can’t do everything with the means at your disposal, the best way is to rank those tasks and assign your best forces following priorities:

- WC knock out game

- 6 Nations Chelem or decider game

- WC pool game

- (…)

- November International

- July International


Looks like what Galthié is doing is also matching priorities for the French public manipulated by the media coverage.


But the domestic record audience was for a WC knock out game which wasn’t vs. RSA in 2023. Why would an old game vs England score above 20 million and a pool game vs New Zealand with low drama would nearly score as much as this knock out quarter final.


I don’t know but maybe it’s because England are the French arch-enemies, ABs’ are the most renowned team and RSA is simply not there yet. We’ll see and I certainly can be wrong in my pronostic and 15 million will turn up for this game.

302 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Record highs and lows as World Rugby Rankings get shaken up Record highs and lows as World Rugby Rankings get shaken up
Search
OSZAR »