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2009 Rugby World Cup Sevens
كأس العالم للرجبي 2009 السبعات
Tournament details
Host nation  United Arab Emirates
DatesMarch 5 – March 7
No. of nations
  • 24 (men)
  • 16 (women)
Final positions
Champions    Wales (men)
  Australia (women)
Runner-up    Argentina (men)
  New Zealand (women)
Tournament statistics
Attendance78,000 [1]
2005
2013

The 2009 Rugby sevens World Cup was the fifth edition of the Rugby World Cup Sevens. The International Rugby Board (IRB) selected Dubai in the United Arab Emirates as the host venue for the tournament ahead of bids from four other countries. [2] The format included nine direct qualifiers and a further fifteen qualifiers from all six regions defined by the IRB. A women's version of the world cup was also held alongside the men's tournament for the first time and featured sixteen teams. [3] The men's cup was won by Wales, with the women's cup going to Australia.

The men's teams of Fiji, New Zealand and Australia, who entered the semi-finals in the two previous editions, failed to do so in 2009: the former were defeated by quarter-finals Kenya and Wales respectively, whereas Australia lost two of the three matches in the pool stage and did not advance to quarter-finals.

Wales, which had never reached quarter-finals in the previous editions of the World Cup, beat Samoa in semi-finals and Argentina in the final to win the tournament. Kenya had never reached the Cup or Plate stages before, but shared 3rd place in 2009.

Bids

A record seven countries originally expressed interest in hosting the tournament however, only five officially submitted bids for hosting rights after Kenya and South Africa withdrew from the bidding process. [4] The United Arab Emirates, Australia, the Netherlands, Russia and the United States were the five candidates. The voting process consisted of two rounds. No clear majority was reached in the first round and therefore the top two, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Australia, progressed to a second round, with the IRB subsequently selecting the UAE as the host union. [5] The IRB cited the provision of a new purpose built stadium, the recent success of the Dubai Sevens tournament and the Under 19 Rugby World Championship as strong factors in their decision to select the Arabian Gulf RFU as the host union. The event was the first major rugby tournament to be held in the Middle East.

Qualification

Men

24 Teams took part in this tournament

Africa North America/
Caribbean
South America Asia Europe Oceania
Automatic qualification
  South Africa   Argentina Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Arabian Gulf (host)   England
  France
  Scotland
  Australia
  Fiji (holders)
  New Zealand
Regional qualifiers
  Kenya
  Tunisia
  Zimbabwe
  Canada
  United States
  Uruguay   Hong Kong
  Japan
  Georgia
  Ireland
  Italy
  Portugal
  Wales
  Samoa
  Tonga

Women

16 Teams took part in this tournament

Africa North America/
Caribbean
South America Asia Europe Oceania
  South Africa
  Uganda
  Canada
  United States
  Brazil   China
  Japan
  Thailand
  England
  France
  Italy
  Netherlands
  Russia
  Spain
  Australia
  New Zealand

Men's tournament

Women's tournament

Trophy Overview

Men's Women's
Champions Runner-up Champions Runner-up
Cup   Wales   Argentina   Australia   New Zealand
Plate   Scotland   Australia   England   Canada
Bowl   Zimbabwe   Ireland   China   Brazil

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rugby parties in Dubai's Sevens heaven". CNN. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  2. ^ "IRB news - confirmation of host". Archived from the original on 2012-04-03. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  3. ^ "IRB news - confirmation of dates and teams". Archived from the original on 2008-12-04. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  4. ^ "Rugby sevens: Plenty of interest in hosting rights". The New Zealand Herald. 3 October 2006. Retrieved 14 September 2011.
  5. ^ "IRB news - voting breakdown". Archived from the original on 2012-04-03. Retrieved 2008-12-09.

External links