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1999–2000 IRB Sevens
Series I
Hosts
Date2 December 1999 – 28 May 2000
Final positions
Champions  New Zealand
Runners-up  Fiji
Third  Australia
2000–01

The 1999–2000 World Sevens Series was the first season of the global circuit for men's national rugby sevens teams, organised by the International Rugby Board (now known as World Rugby). The series ran from December 1999 to May 2000 and incorporated ten tournaments spread over five continents. New Zealand was the series champion, winning five of the tournament events. Fiji finished as runner-up, eight points behind despite winning the remaining five tournaments. The leading try-scorer for the inaugural season was Fiji's Vilimoni Delasau, who notched 83 tries over the series. [1]

Schedule

The official schedule of ten events was announced by the International Rugby Board (IRB) on 2 December 1999. Prominent existing sevens tournaments were included in the new series, for the most part. The New Zealand and South Africa tournaments, however, were hosted as full international sevens events by their respective unions for the first time. [2] [3] An eleventh tournament, to be held in England, was considered but this did not come to fruition and was left off the calendar. [4]

The prestige of the Hong Kong Sevens was acknowledged by increasing the points scale awarded to teams at the tournament by an extra 50 per cent. This recognised the special status of the event organized by the Hong Kong Rugby Union, played over three days instead of two and incorporating 24 teams instead of the usual 16. [5] The union had initially wanted the Hong Kong tournament to be the final stop of the tour, [6] but this proposal had been rejected earlier by the IRB. [7]

Leg Venue Dates Winner
Dubai Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground 2–3 December 1999   New Zealand
South Africa Danie Craven Stadium, Stellenbosch 10–11 December 1999   Fiji
Punta del Este Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este 7–8 January 2000   New Zealand
Mar del Plata Estadio José María Minella, Mar del Plata 12–13 January 2000   Fiji
Wellington Westpac Stadium, Wellington 4–5 February 2000   Fiji
Fiji National Stadium, Suva 11–12 February 2000   New Zealand
Brisbane Lang Park, Brisbane 18–19 February 2000   Fiji
Hong Kong Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong 24–26 March 2000   New Zealand
Japan Chichibunomiya Rugby Stadium, Tokyo 1–2 April 2000   Fiji
Paris Stade Sébastien Charléty, Paris 27–28 May 2000   New Zealand

Final standings

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 played in a tournament but did not gain any points, however excludes teams that did not accumulate any points overall. A dash (—) is recorded in the event column if a team did not compete at a tournament.

1999–2000 IRB Sevens – Series I
 
Pos.
Event 
Team

Dubai

Stellen­bosch

Punta del Este

Mar del Plata

Well­ing­ton

Suva

Bris­bane

Hong Kong

Tokyo

Paris
Points
total
   
1   New Zealand 20 16 20 16 16 20 12 30 16 20 186
2   Fiji 16 20 16 20 20 16 20 24 20 8 180
3   Australia 8 8 8 12 12 12 16 18 12 12 118
4   Samoa 12 6 12 12 12 12 4 8 2 2 82
5   South Africa 12 12 12 4 6 6 12 [a] 8 4 16 80
6   Canada 4 4 6 6 8 4 4 8 12 4 60
7   Argentina 0 4 8 4 8 8 8 12 52
8   France 6 0 2 4 2 0 6 4 4 6 34
9   England 18 4 22
10   Tonga 4 2 4 0 2 12
  Georgia 0 12 0 12
12   Papua New Guinea 0 2 0 6 8
  Uruguay 0 4 0 0 4 0 8
  Japan 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 8
15   Morocco 0 4 0 4
16   Spain 0 2 2
  Scotland 2 0 0 2

Source: World Rugby (archived)

Notes:

  1. ^ South Africa reached the semi-final stage of the Brisbane Sevens but was stripped of all points for the tournament due to fielding ineligible players. [8]

Tournaments

Dubai

The opening tournament of the brand new series saw the teams head over to Dubai with the three day event starting on the Wednesday with the international tournament being played on the Thursday and Friday. [9] In the cup final, it was New Zealand that took out the cup final defeating Fiji by 24 points with Australia and Scotland taking out the plate and bowl respectively. [10]

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   New Zealand 38–14   Fiji   South Africa
  Samoa
Plate   Australia 33–20   France   Tonga
  Canada
Bowl   Scotland 31–24   Zimbabwe   Kenya
  United States

South Africa

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   Fiji 12–10   New Zealand   Georgia
  South Africa
Plate   Australia 22–19   Samoa   Canada
  Morocco
Bowl   Tonga 31–26   Argentina   Uruguay
  Namibia

Punta del Este

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   New Zealand 42–19   Fiji   South Africa
  Samoa
Plate   Australia 27–12   Canada   Uruguay
  Argentina
Bowl   France 31–12   Germany   Chile
  Spain

Mar del Plata

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   Fiji 26–14   New Zealand   Samoa
  Australia
Plate   Argentina 41–7   Canada   France
  South Africa
Bowl   Spain 40–7   Chile   United States
  Germany

Wellington

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   Fiji 24–14   New Zealand   Samoa
  Australia
Plate   Canada 24–21   South Africa   Argentina
  Tonga
Bowl   France 47–12   Croatia   Japan
  Papua New Guinea

Fiji

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   New Zealand 31–5   Fiji   Samoa
  Australia
Plate   Argentina 17–14   South Africa   Canada
  Uruguay
Bowl   Papua New Guinea 21–17   Tonga   Japan
  France

Australia

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   Fiji 24–21   Australia   South Africa
  New Zealand
Plate   Argentina 33–14   France   Samoa
  Canada
Bowl   Tonga 43–0   Papua New Guinea   Hong Kong
  Uruguay

Hong Kong

Event Winners Score [11] Finalists Semi-finalists Quarter-finalists
Cup   New Zealand 31–5   Fiji   Australia
  England
  Argentina
  Canada
  Samoa
  South Africa
Plate   France 19–14   Croatia   Italy
  Hong Kong
  Scotland
  South Korea
  United States
  Japan
Bowl   Ireland 59–7   China   Thailand
Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf
  Chinese Taipei
  Malaysia
  Sri Lanka
  Singapore

Japan

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   Fiji 27–22   New Zealand   Canada
  Australia
Plate   Japan 26–14   Papua New Guinea   France
  South Africa
Bowl   Samoa 19–12   South Korea   Hong Kong
  United States

France

Event Winners Score Finalists Semi-finalists
Cup   New Zealand 69–10   South Africa   Australia
  Argentina
Plate   Fiji 45–7   France   Canada
  England
Bowl   Samoa 37–5   Morocco   Ireland
French Barbarians

References

  1. ^ Sevens Briefs Archived 7 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Fiji Times, 14 December 2014.
  2. ^ "Series schedule complete". International Rugby Board. 2 December 1999. Archived from the original on 15 July 2001.
  3. ^ "Welcome to the IRB World Sevens Series Website". International Rugby Board. 1 December 1999. Archived from the original on 17 October 2000.
  4. ^ Sallay, Alvin (28 March 2000). "England in line to host sevens final". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 6 February 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  5. ^ Sallay, Alvin (15 November 1999). "World Sevens Series recognises HK as premier event". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 1 September 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  6. ^ Sallay, Alvin (25 March 1999). "HK hopes to host sevens circuit finale". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  7. ^ Sallay, Alvin (28 March 1999). "IRB acknowledges HK Sevens' special status". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 6 February 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  8. ^ "New Zealand leaves Fijian nationality issue to IRB". espnscrum.com. 14 November 2000. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016.
  9. ^ "World Sevens Series set for spectacular launch". International Rugby Board. 30 October 1999. Archived from the original on 15 July 2001.
  10. ^ "New Zealand lead series table". International Rugby Board. 3 December 1999. Archived from the original on 7 July 2002.
  11. ^ "Kiwis claim Hong Kong crown", BBC, 26 March 2000.

Sources

External links