2013 London Sevens

The 2013 London Sevens was the seventh edition of the rugby union tournament and the final stage of the 2012–13 IRB Sevens World Series and was hosted at Twickenham Stadium in London, England.

2013 London Sevens
Host nationEngland England
Date11–12 May 2013
Cup
Champion New Zealand
Runner-up Australia
Third England
Plate
Winner Fiji
Runner-up United States
Bowl
Winner Wales
Runner-up France
Shield
WinnerNo Shield
Runner-upNo Shield
Tournament details
Matches played32
Tries scored179 (average 5.59 per match)
Most pointsEngland Dan Norton
(50 points)
Most triesEngland Dan Norton
(10 tries)
2012
2014

Format

The teams were divided into pools of four teams, who played a round-robin within the pool. Points were awarded in each pool on the standard schedule for rugby sevens tournaments (though different from the standard in the 15-man game)—3 for a win, 2 for a draw, 1 for a loss.

From the end of the 2012/13 Series, promotion and relegation from core team status came into effect, with a pre-qualifying competition in Hong Kong and a final core team qualifier in London at the ninth and final round of the season.

The 2013 London Sevens, the final round of the Series, featured two distinct tournaments, and a total of 20 teams. In the first, the top 12-ranked sides in the HSBC Sevens World Series standings after round eight in Glasgow competed for the London title, and final World Series points towards their overall tally.

In the second, the 13th, 14th and 15th-ranked core teams after the Glasgow event competed against five pre-qualified regional teams from Hong Kong, for the three available core team places on the 2013–14 IRB Sevens World Series.

Teams

Main draw

World Series qualifiers

Main draw

The draw was made on 5 May 2013.[1]

Pool Stage

Key to colours in group tables
Teams that advance to the Cup Quarterfinal

Pool A

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 Australia 32015432+227
 United States 32015348+57
 South Africa 32013433+17
 France 30034371−283
11 May 2013
09:30
United States 19 – 17 France
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
09:52
South Africa 5 – 0 Australia
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
13:40
South Africa 17 – 14 France
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
14:02
United States 15 – 19 Australia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
16:02
South Africa 12 – 19 United States
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
16:24
Australia 35 – 12 France
Twickenham Stadium, London

Pool B

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 New Zealand 330010029+719
 Kenya 32018662+247
 Wales 31024190−495
 Canada 30033379−463
11 May 2013
10:14
Wales 19 – 31 Kenya
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
10:36
New Zealand 24 – 7 Canada
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
14:24
New Zealand 31 – 17 Kenya
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
14:46
Wales 17 – 14 Canada
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
17:03
Canada 12 – 38 Kenya
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
17:25
New Zealand 45 – 5 Wales
Twickenham Stadium, London

Pool C

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 England 32017833+457
 Fiji 32015734+237
 Argentina 32013648−127
 Samoa 30032177−563
11 May 2013
10:58
Argentina 10 – 7 Samoa
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
11:20
England 27 – 0 Fiji
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
15:18
England 34 – 7 Samoa
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
15:40
Argentina 0 – 24 Fiji
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
17:47
Fiji 33 – 7 Samoa
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
18:09
England 17 – 26 Argentina
Report[Usurped!]
Twickenham Stadium, London

Bowl

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
12 May – 12:55 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 Wales21
 
12 May – 16:34 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Samoa12
 
 Wales19
 
12 May – 13:17 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 France7
 
 France28
 
 
 Canada14
 

Plate

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
12 May – 14:23 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 Argentina12
 
12 May – 16:59 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Fiji26
 
 Fiji14
 
12 May – 14:45 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 United States5
 
 United States22
 
 
 South Africa5
 

Cup

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
12 May – 10:28 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 New Zealand52
 
12 May – 15:22 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Argentina7
 
 New Zealand7
 
12 May – 10:50 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Kenya0
 
 Kenya20
 
12 May – 18:14 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Fiji7
 
 New Zealand47
 
12 May – 11:12 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Australia12
 
 Australia24
 
12 May – 15:44 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 United States19
 
 Australia14
 
12 May – 11:34 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 England7 Third place
 
 England19
 
12 May – 17:49 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 South Africa14
 
 Kenya19
 
 
 England26
 

World Series qualifiers

The draw was made on 5 May 2013.[2]

Pool A

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 Scotland 32016934+357
 Zimbabwe 32014542+37
 Hong Kong 32014443+17
 Georgia 30032665−393
11 May 2013
09:00
Zimbabwe 12 – 7 Hong Kong
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
09:22
Scotland 29 – 0 Georgia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
12:12
Hong Kong 17 – 12 Georgia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
12:34
Scotland 21 – 14 Zimbabwe
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
14:58
Zimbabwe 19 – 14 Georgia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
16:00
Scotland 19 – 20 Hong Kong
Twickenham Stadium, London

Pool B

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 Portugal 33004522+239
 Spain 31024140+15
 Russia 31024352−95
 Tonga 31023348−155
11 May 2013
09:44
Tonga 19 – 17 Spain
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
10:06
Portugal 26 – 10 Russia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
12:56
Spain 19 – 14 Russia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
13:18
Portugal 12 – 7 Tonga
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
15:20
Tonga 7 – 19 Russia
Twickenham Stadium, London

11 May 2013
16:22
Portugal 7 – 5 Spain
Twickenham Stadium, London

Knockout stage

The winners of the Semifinals, Spain and Scotland, earned core status for the 2013–14 IRB Sevens World Series. The losing teams, Portugal and Russia, advanced to the Qualifier Third Place playoff. Portugal won the Qualifier Third Place playoff and therefore became the final team to earn core status next season.

 
QuarterfinalsSemifinalsThird place playoff Qualifier
 
          
 
12 May – 09:00 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 Portugal17
 
12 May – 13:39 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Georgia5
 
 Portugal5
 
12 May – 09:22 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Spain10
 
 Spain29
 
12 May – 17:24 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Hong Kong14
 
 Portugal10
 
12 May – 09:44 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Russia5
 
 Zimbabwe7
 
12 May – 14:01 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Russia26
 
 Russia0
 
12 May – 10:06 – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Scotland19
 
 Scotland31
 
 
 Tonga0
 

References

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