2012–13 IRB Sevens World Series

The 2012–13 IRB Sevens World Series, known for sponsorship reasons as the HSBC Sevens World Series, was the 14th annual series of rugby sevens tournaments for full national sides. The IRB Sevens World Series has been run by the International Rugby Board since 1999–2000.

2012–13 World Rugby Sevens
Series XIV
Hosts
Date13 Oct 2012 – 12 May 2013
Nations22
Final positions
Champions New Zealand
Runners-up South Africa
Third Fiji
Series details
Top try scorerEngland Dan Norton
(52 tries)
Top point scorerEngland Dan Norton
(264 points)

Itinerary edit

The schedule for the 2012–13 series was released in late June 2012. At the time, the schedule included a new event to be held in La Plata, Argentina.[1] However, on 16 August, the Argentine Rugby Union pulled out of hosting an event in 2012–13, citing demands associated with the country's 2012 entry into The Rugby Championship.

2012–13 Itinerary[1]
LegVenueDateWinner
AustraliaSkilled Park, Gold Coast13–14 October 2012  Fiji
DubaiThe Sevens, Dubai30 Nov–1 Dec 2012  Samoa
South AfricaNelson Mandela Bay Stadium, Port Elizabeth8–9 December 2012  New Zealand
New ZealandWestpac Stadium, Wellington1–2 February 2013  England
United StatesSam Boyd Stadium, Las Vegas8–10 February 2013  South Africa
Hong KongHong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong22–24 March 2013  Fiji
JapanChichibunomiya Rugby Stadium, Tokyo30–31 March 2013  South Africa
ScotlandScotstoun Stadium. Glasgow4–5 May 2013  South Africa
EnglandTwickenham, London11–12 May 2013  New Zealand

Core teams edit

Before each season, the IRB announces the "core teams" that received guaranteed berths in each event of that season's series. This was the first series in which 15 teams received this status, up from 12 in the recent past. All 12 core teams from 2011–12 retained their status, with three more being elevated as top finishers in a 12-team qualifying tournament conducted as part of the 2012 Hong Kong Sevens. The 2012–13 core teams are:[2][3]

Promotion and relegation edit

For the first time, the IRB instituted a formal promotion and relegation process for core team status in the Sevens World Series, replacing the former ad hoc process. The top 12 core teams in the season table after the next-to-last round of the series in Glasgow retained their status for 2013–14. The remaining three core teams for 2013–14 are being determined in a two-stage qualifying process:[4]

  • The first stage was a World Series Pre-Qualifier held as part of the 2013 Hong Kong Sevens. Two qualifiers from each of the IRB's six regions competed. The 12 teams were drawn into three pools, with the top two teams from each pool, plus the top two runners-up, advancing to a quarterfinal round. The winners of the four quarterfinal matches (Russia, Zimbabwe, Tonga, and Georgia) advanced to the second stage.
  • The final stage, the World Series Core Team Qualifier, was held as part of the 2013 London Sevens. The pre-qualifiers were joined by Hong Kong, which earned its spot by winning the HSBC Asian Sevens Series,[5] plus the bottom three core teams following the Scotland Sevens. The qualifier was conducted with a pool stage followed by knockout play, with the two finalists and the winner of the third-place match becoming 2013–14 core teams.

Final standings edit

The points awarded to teams at each event, as well as the overall season totals, are shown in the table below. Points for the event winners are indicated in bold. A zero (0) is recorded in the event column where a team competed in a tournament but did not gain any points. A dash (–) is recorded in the event column if a team did not compete at a tournament.

2012–13 IRB Sevens – Series XIV
 
Pos.
Event 
Team

Gold Coast

Dubai

Port Eliza­beth

Well­ing­ton

Las Vegas

Hong Kong

Tokyo

Glas­gow

Lon­don
Points
total
  
1  New Zealand191922171917191922173
2  South Africa1771710225222210132
3  Fiji22101271522101013121
4  Samoa102271517131055104
5  Kenya1517519115571599
6  England73522588171792
7  Wales5131331019515891
8  Australia1018133101781989
9  France121519583153787
10  Argentina1381510727121084
11  United States2510110513131271
12  Canada512181312310569
13  Scotland3511212112551
14  Portugal1101011101135
15  Spain8235511126
16  Hong Kong77
17  Tonga123
18  Russia123
19  Japan22
20  Uruguay22
21  Zimbabwe22
22  Georgia0

Source: rugby7.com (archived)

Legend
No colourCore team in 2012–13 and re-qualified for 2013–14
YellowInvited team
Blue barRe-qualified for 2013–14 via the 2013 London Sevens core team qualifier tournament
Red barFailed to qualify for 2013–14 via 2013 London Sevens core team qualifier tournament

Player statistics edit

Points scored edit

Points scored[6]
Pos.PlayerPoints
1  Dan Norton (ENG)264
2  Joji Baleviani Raqamate (FIJ)247
3  Nathan Hirayama (CAN)241
4  Junior Tomasi Cama (NZL)237
5  Christian Lewis-Pratt (ENG)221
6  Cornal Hendricks (RSA)190
7  Terry Bouhraoua (FRA)189
8  Lewis Holland (AUS)187
9  Paul Albaladejo (FRA)180
10  Sean Duke (CAN)175

Tries scored edit

Tries scored[7]
Pos.PlayerTries
1  Dan Norton (ENG)52
2  Cornal Hendricks (RSA)38
3  Sean Duke (CAN)35
4  Lewis Holland (AUS)29
5  Samisoni Viriviri (FIJ)29
6  Marcus Watson (ENG)27
7  Tim Mikkelson (NZL)26
8  Kurt Baker (NZL)25
 Julien Candelon (FRA)
 Joji Baleviani Raqamate (FIJ)

Tournaments edit

Gold Coast edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  Fiji32–14  New Zealand  Kenya
 South Africa
Plate  Argentina14–7  France  Australia
 Samoa
Bowl  Spain19–14  England  Canada
 Wales
Shield  Scotland40–5  United States  Portugal
 Tonga

Dubai edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  Samoa26–15  New Zealand  France
 Kenya
Plate  Wales21–14  Canada  Fiji
 Portugal
Bowl  Argentina14–10  South Africa  Scotland
 United States
Shield  England26–5  Spain  Australia
 Russia

South Africa edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  New Zealand47–12  France  Argentina
 South Africa
Plate  Wales26–14  Fiji  Portugal
 United States
Bowl  Australia26–14  Samoa  England
 Kenya
Shield  Spain33–0  Zimbabwe  Canada
 Scotland

Wellington edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  England24–19  Kenya  New Zealand
 Samoa
Plate  Australia22–7  Scotland  Argentina
 South Africa
Bowl  Canada28–19  Fiji  France
 Spain
Shield  Wales26–21  Tonga  Portugal
 United States

United States edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  South Africa40–21  New Zealand  Fiji
 Samoa
Plate  Canada22–5  Scotland  United States
 Wales
Bowl  France17–12  Argentina  England
 Spain
Shield  Australia41–0  Uruguay  Kenya
 Portugal

Hong Kong edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  Fiji26–19  Wales  New Zealand
 Kenya
Plate  Samoa12–7  Canada  Australia
 Portugal
Bowl  England42–7  Hong Kong  United States
 South Africa
Shield  France19–14  Argentina  Scotland
 Spain
World Series
pre-qualifier
 Zimbabwe22–19  Tonga  Russia
 Georgia

Japan edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  South Africa24–19  New Zealand  Australia
 France
Plate  United States17–0  Scotland  Fiji
 Samoa
Bowl  England38–0  Argentina  Kenya
 Wales
Shield  Canada27–14  Japan  Portugal
 Spain

Scotland edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  South Africa28–21  New Zealand  England
 Wales
Plate  United States17–7  Argentina  Canada
 Fiji
Bowl  Australia12–5  Kenya  Samoa
 Scotland
Shield  France21–17  Russia  Portugal
 Spain

London edit

EventWinnersScoreFinalistsSemifinalists
Cup  New Zealand47–12  Australia  England
 Kenya
Plate  Fiji14–5  United States  Argentina
 South Africa
Bowl  Wales19–7  France  Canada
 Samoa

Dream Team edit

The 2012–13 HSBC Sevens World Series 'Dream Team' was selected by the series' regular television broadcast commentators.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "HSBC Sevens World Series expands to 10 rounds". irbsevens.com. 2012-06-26. Archived from the original on June 29, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  2. ^ "Who will join the Sevens elite?" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 22 March 2012. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2012.{{cite press release}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ "Tears of joy for World Series qualifiers" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 25 March 2012. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2012.{{cite press release}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  4. ^ "HSBC World Sevens Series: Series Qualifying". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 14 October 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  5. ^ "HK win Mumbai Sevens to claim Asia Series" (Press release). International Rugby Board. 15 October 2012. Archived from the original on 18 October 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.{{cite press release}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "IRB Sevens World Series 2012/13 Statistics: Season Player Points". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 2010-11-23. Retrieved 2012-12-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ "IRB Sevens World Series 2012/13 Statistics: Season Player Tries". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 2010-11-21. Retrieved 2012-12-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  8. ^ "Seven make new World Series Dream Team". International Rugby Board. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

External links edit