2001 Cardiff Sevens

The 2001 Cardiff Sevens was an rugby sevens tournament that took place at the Rodney Parade with the finals being held at the Millennium Stadium. It took place between 2–3 June 2001 and was the first edition of the Cardiff Sevens and the final round of the 2000–01 World Sevens Series.

2001 Cardiff Sevens
IRB Sevens II
Host nation Wales
Date2–3 June 2001
Cup
Champion New Zealand
Runner-up Australia
Plate
Winner Fiji
Runner-up Wales
Bowl
Winner England
Runner-up Portugal
Tournament details
Matches played41
2002

Heading into the tournament, New Zealand held an eight point lead over Australia with a semi-final placing in the cup being enough to give New Zealand the title. After both teams qualified through to the cup knockout stage with them only conceding ten points between the two, they would meet in the cup final with New Zealand taking out not only the Cardiff Sevens but the World Series with a 31–5 win over Australia. In the minor placings, Fiji took out the plate final defeating Wales while England won the bowl over Portugal.

Teams

16 teams participated in the final round of the World Sevens Series:

Format

The teams were drawn into four pools of four teams each. Each team played the other teams in their pool once, with 3 points awarded for a win, 2 points for a draw, and 1 point for a loss (no points awarded for a forfeit). The pool stage was played on the first day of the tournament. The top two teams from each pool advanced to the Cup/Plate brackets. The bottom two teams from each pool went on to the Bowl bracket.[1]

Summary

The opening day of the 2001 Cardiff Sevens saw the leading two nations (Australia and New Zealand) each finished top of their pool group while only conceding five points in their pool stage. The Northern hemisphere teams though had a day that they rather forget with only Wales qualifying through to the quarter-finals of the major European teams with France and Scotland not recording a single win while England only recorded 19-all draw with Spain before losing to the qualifiers of Pool C in Fiji in Georgia. Samoa finished ahead of South Africa in Pool D with the Samoans getting a 28–10 win.[2]

In the cup quarter-finals, New Zealand would take the World Sevens title defeating Wales 29-0 to claim their second World Sevens title. They would also go on to win the Cup final over Australia with tries from Chris Masoe and Damien Karauna securing a 31-5 victory. In the plate-final, Fiji took home the plate defeating host nation Wales who came back from 19-0 down against Georgia in the plate semi-final to win 26-19. England got the remaining two points as they home took the bowl final over Portugal.[3]

Pool stage

The pool stage was played on the first day of the tournament. The 16 teams were separated into four pools of four teams and teams in the same pool played each other once. The top two teams in each pool advanced to the Cup quarterfinals to compete for the 2001 Cardiff Sevens title.[4]

Key to colours in group tables
Teams that advanced to the Cup quarterfinals
Teams that advanced to the Bowl quarterfinals

Pool A

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 New Zealand 3 3 0 0 114 5 +109 9
 Argentina 3 2 0 1 46 41 +5 7
 Portugal 3 1 0 2 29 65 36 5
 West Indies 3 0 0 3 24 102 78 3
Source:
2 June 2001
13:00
New Zealand 24-0 Portugal
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 20011
13:20
Argentina 19–5 West Indies
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
15:30
New Zealand 59–0 West Indies
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
15:50
Argentina 22–5 Portugal
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
17:20
Portugal 24–19 West Indies
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
18:40
New Zealand 31–5 Argentina
Rodney Parade, Newport

Source: [5]

Pool B

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 Australia 3 3 0 0 119 5 +114 9
 Wales 3 2 0 1 50 57 7 7
 Canada 3 1 0 2 26 69 43 5
 Scotland 3 0 0 3 26 90 64 3
Source:
2 June 2001
11:40
Canada 14-12 Scotland
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 20011
12:00
Australia 31–5 Wales
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
14:30
Australia 50–0 Scotland
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
16:10
Wales 19–12 Canada
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
18:00
Australia 38–0 Canada
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
19:00
Wales 26–14 Scotland
Rodney Parade, Newport

Source: [5]

Pool C

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 Fiji 3 3 0 0 93 20 +73 9
 Georgia 3 2 0 1 34 57 23 7
 England 3 0 1 2 46 55 9 4
 Spain 3 0 1 2 36 77 41 4
Source:
2 June 2001
12:20
Fiji 33-0 Georgia
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
12:40
England 19–19 Spain
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
14:50
Fiji 41–5 Spain
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
15:10
Georgia 17–12 England
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
17:00
Georgia 17–12 Spain
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
18:20
Fiji 19–15 England
Rodney Parade, Newport

Source: [5]

Pool D

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 Samoa 3 3 0 0 101 17 +84 9
 South Africa 3 2 0 1 72 42 +30 7
 Russia 3 1 0 2 31 69 38 5
 France 3 0 0 3 14 90 76 3
Source:
2 June 2001
11:00
Samoa 40-0 France
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
11:20
South Africa 29–7 Russia
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
13:50
Samoa 33–7 Russia
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
14:10
South Africa 33–7 France
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
16:40
Russia 17–7 France
Rodney Parade, Newport

2 June 2001
17:40
Samoa 28–10 South Africa
Rodney Parade, Newport

Source: [5]

Knockout stage

Bowl

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 
 Portugal19
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Scotland7
 
 Portugal21
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Spain19
 
 Russia21
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Spain26
 
 Portugal26
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 England35
 
 Canada38
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 West Indies10
 
 Canada14
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 England29
 
 England17
 
 
 France12
 

Source: [5]

Plate

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 
 Wales26
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Georgia19
 
 Wales14
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Fiji47
 
 Argentina21
 
 
 Fiji28
 

Source: [5]

Cup

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 
 New Zealand29
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Wales0
 
 New Zealand24
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Samoa7
 
 Samoa38
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Georgia17
 
 New Zealand31
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Australia5
 
 Australia49
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 Argentina14
 
 Australia21
 
3 June 2001 – Millennium Stadium
 
 South Africa12
 
 Fiji7
 
 
 South Africa28
 

Source: [5]

Tournament placings

Place  Team Points
1st place, gold medalist(s)  New Zealand20
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Australia16
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Samoa12
 South Africa12
5  Fiji8
6  Wales6
7  Argentina4
 Georgia4
Place  Team Points
9  England2
10  Portugal0
11  Canada0
 Spain0
13  France0
 Russia0
 Scotland0
 West Indies0

Source: World Rugby

Series standings

At the completion of Round 9:

 
Pos.
Event 
Team

Durban

Dubai

Wellington

Hong Kong

Shanghai

Kuala Lumpur

Tokyo

London

Cardiff
Points
total
1 New Zealand 20204301216202020162
2 Australia 121220182020161616150
3 Fiji 1616162481212128124
4 Samoa 6128184812121292
5 South Africa 88281612881282
6 Argentina 126684424450
7 England 04086066232
8 Canada 40482044026
9 Wales 00030442619
10 United States 124016
11 South Korea 0122014
12 France 42600012
13 Cook Islands 1212
14 Zimbabwe 044
15 Portugal 22004
16 Georgia 00044
17 Ireland 22
18 Hong Kong 01001
19  Japan 000000
20  Chinese Taipei 00000
 Malaysia 00000
22  China 0000
 Russia 0000
24 Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf 000
 Kenya 000
 Morocco 000
 Scotland 000
 Singapore 000
 Sri Lanka 000
 Thailand 000
31  Namibia 00
 Niue 00
 Papua New Guinea 00
 Spain 00
 Tonga 00
 West Indies 0000

Source: world.rugby (archived)

References

  1. "IRB Sevens - Format & Regulation - 16-team tournament". irbsevens.com. Archived from the original on 20 May 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. "Kiwis one win from sevens crown". Newport: ESPN Scrum. 2 June 2001. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  3. "New Zealand Win Both Titles". International Rugby Board. 3 June 2001. Archived from the original on 21 November 2001.
  4. "Pools for Final Tournament". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 21 November 2001.
  5. "Cardiff Results". World Rugby. Retrieved 5 June 2001.
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