2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens

Summary

The 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens was the eighth edition of the Rugby World Cup Sevens organised by World Rugby. The 2022 tournament, comprising 24 men's and 16 women's teams as previously, was played over three days in one venue in September. It took place at the Cape Town Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa between 9 and 11 September 2022. It was the first ever Rugby World Cup Sevens in Africa. The dates were chosen to take into account in the Commonwealth Games tournament which took place in July the same year.[1]

2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens
Tournament details
Host nation South Africa
VenueCape Town Stadium, Cape Town
Dates9 September – 11 September
No. of nations
  • 24 (men)
  • 16 (women)
Final positions
Champions 
Tournament statistics
Attendance105,000
Tries scored457
Points scored2,821
2018
2026 →

Bidding edit

A record 11 unions formally expressed interest in hosting Rugby World Cup Sevens 2022.[1] The unions were issued formal bid application documents by World Rugby and had to submit their responses by 16 July 2019.[1] South Africa was awarded the rights to host the tournament on 29 October 2019.[2]

Venue edit

The tournament took place at the Cape Town Stadium in Cape Town.

The 55,000-capacity stadium was the same venue that hosted the Cape Town Sevens since 2015, and for the first time that year hosted both men's and women's teams across three days of competition as part of the new-look World Rugby Sevens Series.

The 2022 tournament followed a Rugby World Cup Sevens 2018 in San Francisco which attracted a record attendance for a rugby event in the United States of more than 100,000 fans, as well as a huge domestic broadcast audience of more than nine million viewers.[3] The 2018 event, hosted at AT&T Park, generated a US$90.5 million economic contribution to San Francisco (Nielsen Sport) and saw both New Zealand's men's and women's teams retain the title.

Cape Town
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Location of 2022 Rugby World Cup Sevens
Cape Town Stadium
Capacity: 55,000

Schedule edit

The tournament was played for 3 days between 9 and 11 September.

Qualifying edit

Men edit

The eight quarter-finalists from the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens, including the 2022 tournament host South Africa, were automatic qualifiers.[4] The remaining 16 places were decided from the six continental regions.[4]

Region Automatic
qualifiers
Continental
qualifiers
Total
teams
Africa   South Africa (hosts)   Uganda
  Zimbabwe
  Kenya
4
North America   United States   Canada
  Jamaica
3
South America   Argentina   Chile
  Uruguay
3
Asia   Hong Kong
  South Korea
2
Europe   England
  France
  Scotland
  Germany
  Ireland
  Portugal
  Wales
7
Oceania   Fiji
  New Zealand (holders)
  Australia
  Samoa
  Tonga
5
Totals 8 16 24

Women edit

The four semifinalists from the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens were automatic qualifiers, with South Africa also qualifying as host.[4] The remaining eleven places were decided from the six continental regions.[4]

Region Automatic
qualifiers
Continental
qualifiers
Total
teams
Africa   South Africa (hosts)   Madagascar 2
North America   United States   Canada 2
South America   Brazil
  Colombia
2
Asia   China
  Japan
2
Europe   France   England
  Ireland
  Poland
  Spain
5
Oceania   Australia
  New Zealand (holders)
  Fiji 3
Totals 5 11 16

Tournament edit

Men edit

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Melrose Cup   Fiji 29–12   New Zealand   Ireland (3)

  Australia

5th Place   Argentina 10–7   France   South Africa (7)

  Samoa

Challenge Trophy   England 28–5   Uruguay   United States (11)

  Kenya

13th Place   Canada 12–10   Chile   Wales (15)

  Scotland

Bowl   Uganda 19–12   Germany   Hong Kong (19)

  Tonga

21st Place   South Korea 12–10   Portugal   Zimbabwe (23)

  Jamaica

Women edit

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
World Cup   Australia 24–22   New Zealand   France (3)

  United States

5th Place   Fiji 53–0   Canada   Ireland (7)

  England

Challenge Trophy   Japan 17–12   Poland   Brazil (11)

  Spain

13th Place   China 21–19   South Africa   Madagascar (15)

  Colombia

Attendance edit

More than 105,000 spectators attended the three day tournament.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Record hosting interest for Rugby World Cup Sevens 2022 - HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series".
  2. ^ "South Africa to host Rugby World Cup Sevens 2022".
  3. ^ "Rugby World Cup Sevens: New Zealand wins historic title". CNN. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d "Qualifying". RWC Sevens. Archived from the original on 25 May 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  5. ^ "RECORD NUMBERS ATTENDED AFRICA'S FIRST EVER RUGBY WORLD CUP SEVENS IN CAPE TOWN". EWN. Retrieved 14 September 2022.

External links edit

  • Rugby World Cup Sevens