Samoa national rugby sevens team

Samoa
Union Samoa Rugby Football Union
Nickname(s) Manu
Coach(es) Gordon Tietjens
Captain(s) Alatasi Tupou
Most caps Uale Mai (359 matches)
Top scorer Uale Mai (1,320)
Most tries Mikaele Pesamino (161)
Team kit
World Cup Sevens
Appearances 6 (First in 1993)
Best result 3rd place, 1997, 2009 champions 2010

The Samoa national rugby sevens team, referred to as the Samoa Sevens or Manu Samoa 7s, competes in the annual World Rugby Sevens Series, and won the 2009–10 World Series.[1] Samoa were crowned winners of the 2010 Edinburgh Sevens. The historic victory followed three consecutive tournament wins in the world series, the Hong Kong Sevens,[2] the USA Sevens and the Adelaide Sevens.[3]

Representing the tiny Polynesian country of Samoa with a population of about 180,000 the Samoa competes against some of the wealthiest countries in the world.[4]

Samoa has played at all Rugby World Cup Sevens finals tournaments since the championship began in 1993, and won the third-place final in 1997 and 2007. The team has won four Oceania Sevens titles since the first competition in 2008. Samoa also won all four gold medals at the Pacific Games Sevens and Pacific Mini Games Sevens between 2007 and 2013, defeating Fiji in the final on each occasion.

Rugby union in Samoa is governed by the Samoa Rugby Football Union (SRU) which oversees the Samoa Sevens team and the 15-player Manu Samoa national team.

History

The first Samoan sevens team was selected in November 1978 to play at the invitation Hong Kong Sevens under the leadership of former SRU representative captain, Tuatagaloa Keli Tuatagaloa. The team included Rev-Dr Faitala Talapusi as captain, Lemalu Roy Slade (Brisbane) as vice-captain, Rev. Paul Gray (Melbourne), Peter Schmidt, Feausiga Sililoto, Andy Leavasa (USA), Salafuti Patu and others.

Uganda v Samoa (20 March 2006)

In 2007, the team won both the Wellington Sevens and Hong Kong Sevens. Another past victory was the Hong Kong Sevens in 1993. In 2009, the team made the finals in the Dubai Sevens but lost to the New Zealand team.

While long a solidly competitive side, the Samoa Sevens emerged as true world contenders in the 2006-07 Sevens World Series, finishing third overall while winning two events. This new team has reached the final four times in a row, playing against series favourite Fiji.

Coaches

The current coach is Gordon Tietjens. Past coaches have included Lilomaiava Taufusi Salesa who coached the 1993 Hong Kong Sevens winning team. Other notable coaches who have led Samoa to sevens prominence were head coach Fuimaono Titimaea "Dicky" Tafua and his assistant Galumalemana Rudolph Moors. In the 2005 - 2006 IRB Sevens Circuit they managed to qualify to two finals (London and Paris) but failed to win any. The Samoa Sevens lost to South Africa in London and island rivals Fiji at Paris. Damian McGrath who won a Cup in Paris was sacked by the SRU controversially,

Fuimaono resigned from coaching in 2007 to his new post as Secretary to Samoa's Head of State, Tupua Tamasese Tufuga Efi. He would later return to coaching in 2009 as head coach of the 15s national team. Galumalemana took over as coach and after a disappointing team performance in the 2008–09 series was temporarily replaced by Lilomaiava Taufusi Salesa for the final two legs of the series. Stephen Betham was named as Moors' successor in 2009.

Tournament history

Summer Olympics

Olympic Games record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
Brazil 2016 Did Not Qualify
Total0 Titles0/1----

Rugby World Cup Sevens

Rugby World Cup Sevens Record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
Scotland 1993 Quarterfinalists 5th 8 6 2 0
Hong Kong 1997 Semifinalists 3rd 6 5 1 0
Argentina 2001 Quarterfinalists 5th 6 4 2 0
Hong Kong 2005 Plate Winners 9th 8 7 1 0
United Arab Emirates 2009 Semifinalists 3rd 5 4 1 0
Russia 2013 Plate Finalists 10th 6 4 2 0
United States 2018 Qualified
Total0 Titles6/6393090

Commonwealth Games

Commonwealth record
Year Round Position Pld W L D
Malaysia 1998 Semifinalists 4th 7 4 2 1
England 2002 Semifinalists 4th 6 2 4 0
Australia 2006 Plate Semifinalists 7th 5 2 3 0
India 2010 Plate Winners 5th 6 4 2 0
Scotland 2014 Semifinalists 4th 6 4 2 0
Australia 2018 Qualified
Total0 Titles5/53016131

2009-10 IRB Sevens World Series

The itinerary for the 2009–10 IRB Sevens World Series;

2009–10 Itinerary[5]
Leg Venue Date Winner
DubaiThe Sevens4–5 December 2009 New Zealand
South AfricaOuteniqua Park, George11–12 December 2009 New Zealand
New ZealandWestpac Stadium, Wellington5–6 February 2010 Fiji
United StatesSam Boyd Stadium, Las Vegas13–14 February 2010 Samoa
AustraliaAdelaide Oval, Adelaide19–21 March 2010 Samoa
Hong KongHong Kong Stadium26–28 March 2010 Samoa
LondonTwickenham22–23 May 2010 Australia
EdinburghMurrayfield, Edinburgh29–30 May 2010 Samoa

Overall Standings

2009–10 Standings[6]
Pos. Country Dubai South Africa
(George)
New Zealand
(Welling­ton)
USA
(Las Vegas)
Australia
(Adelaide)
Hong Kong England
(London)
Scotland
(Edin­burgh)
Overall
1 Samoa206202424301624164
2 New Zealand2424162012251216149
3 Australia126121616162420122
4 Fiji162024862086108
5 England161216642061696
6 South Africa8881281020680
7 Argentina6160016016862
8 Kenya616616080052
9 Wales4446606434
10 United States00042080032
11 CanadaDNPDNP60DNP54015
12 Scotland00000001212

Win summaries

Event Venue Cup Plate Bowl Shield
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Winner Winner
2016 Paris Sevens Stade Jean Bouin
Samoa
29 - 26
Fiji

South Africa

Scotland

Portugal
2012 Dubai Sevens The Sevens Stadium
Samoa
26 - 15
New Zealand

Wales

Argentina

England
2012 USA Sevens Sam Boyd Stadium
Samoa
26 - 19
New Zealand

Kenya

Canada

France
2010 Edinburgh Sevens Murrayfield Stadium
Samoa
41 - 14
Australia

Scotland

Wales

Russia
2010 Hong Kong Sevens Hong Kong Stadium
Samoa
24 - 21
New Zealand

Australia

Canada

Hong Kong
2010 Adelaide Sevens Adelaide Oval
Samoa
38 - 10

United States

New Zealand

England

Japan
2010 USA Sevens Sam Boyd Stadium
Samoa
33 - 12

New Zealand

South Africa

United States

Scotland
2008 London Sevens Westpac Stadium
Samoa
19 - 14
Fiji

New Zealand

Australia

Spain
2007 Hong Kong Sevens Hong Kong Stadium
Samoa
27 - 22
Fiji

Wales

Russia
2007 Wellington Sevens Westpac Stadium
Samoa
14 - 7
Fiji

England

Tonga

Portugal
1993 Hong Kong Sevens Hong Kong Stadium
Western Samoa
14 - 12
Fiji

Tonga

Romania

In July 1997, the Government of Samoa amended its constitution to change the country's name from Western Samoa to Samoa.[7]

Current squad

Samoa sevens team, 2014

Squad to 2015 Pacific Games:[8]

Previous squads

Former players

Two of the highest points and try scorers in series history, Uale Mai and Mikaele Pesamino, played for Samoa. Pesamino was also named the 2010 IRB International Sevens Player of the Year, an honour which Uale Mai, a former team captain and one of the most capped players in the sport, had won in 2006. Captain Lolo Lui and teammate Alafoti Fa'osiliva had also been nominated.[10]

Crowd at the 2009 Hong Kong Sevens.

Other statistics

Year Host Cup Final Plate Final
Winner Score Runner-up Winner Score Runner-up
2009
Details
Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground
New Zealand
24-12
Samoa

Australia
7-0
South Africa
2008
Details
Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground
South Africa
19-12
England

Samoa
12-7
Kenya
2007
Details
Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground
New Zealand
31-21
Fiji

Argentina
15-14
Samoa
2004
Details
Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground
England
26 - 21
Fiji

Samoa
21 - 19
Argentina
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2010
Details
Westpac Stadium
Fiji
19-14
Samoa

Australia
26-22
South Africa
2008
Details
Westpac Stadium
New Zealand
22-7
Samoa

South Africa
19-12
Wales
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2007[11]
Details
San Diego, California
Fiji
38 - 24
Samoa

South Africa
28 - 19
Scotland
2005[12]
Details
Carson, California
New Zealand
34 - 5
Argentina

Fiji
24 - 21
Samoa
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2007
Details
Outeniqua Park
New Zealand
33-9
Fiji

South Africa
12-7
Samoa
2005
Details
Outeniqua Park
Fiji
21 - 19
Argentina

Samoa
17 - 5
New Zealand
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2007
Details
Adelaide Oval
Fiji
21-7
Samoa

Australia
31-0
South Africa
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2007
Details
Murrayfield
New Zealand
34-5
Samoa

Fiji
31-7
Kenya
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2006
Details
Stade Jean-Bouin
South Africa
33-12
Samoa

Fiji
31-12
Argentina
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2006
Details
National Stadium, Singapore
Fiji
40-21
England

Samoa
26-5
France
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
2006
Details
Twickenham
Fiji
54-14
Samoa

South Africa
42-7
Kenya
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
1998
Details
Hong Kong Stadium
Fiji
28-19
Samoa

South Korea
40–14
Papua New Guinea
Year Venue Cup Plate
Winner Final Score Runner-up Winner Final Score Runner-up
1979
Details
HK Football Club Stadium
Australia
39-3
Samoa

Papua New Guinea
13-10
Hawaii

See also

References

  1. "International Rugby Board, Retrieved 31 May 2010". Archived from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2010.
  2. "Samoa win Hong Kong Sevens". Times LIVE. 28 March 2010. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  3. "Superb Samoa wins Adelaide Sevens". International Rugby Board. 21 March 2010. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  4. Hunter, Russell (22 March 2010). "A breathtaking achievement". Samoa Observer. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  5. "2009/10 IRB Sevens World Series schedule set" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 8 July 2009. Archived from the original on 11 July 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  6. "Overall Standings". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 20 February 2009. Retrieved 28 March 2010.
  7. "Constitution Amendment Act (No 2) 1997". Retrieved 27 November 2007.
  8. pg2015.gems.pro (9 July 2015). "2015 Pacific Games Men's 7s" (PDF). Retrieved 11 July 2015.
  9. IRB (16 July 2014). "Commonwealth Games Sevens squads: Latest". Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  10. "NZ sevens players miss awards list". Television NZ. 26 May 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  11. Official 2007 Results
  12. Official 2005 Results
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.