Calgary Herald

Women kick off rugby sevens season looking to win it all

- NEIL DAVIDSON

His hand partially forced by injury, Canada coach John Tait has injected youth into his squad for the season-opening stop in Dubai on the 2017-18 HSBC World Rugby Women’s Sevens.

Bianca Farella and Charity Williams both had shoulder surgery in September and are not expected back until the Commonweal­th Games in April. Kaili Lukan, a former college basketball player who was expected to have a big season alongside sister Megan, is out for the year after injuring her anterior cruciate ligament. Sara Kaljuvee is also injured.

That opens the door to 18-yearold Tausani Levale and 21-year-old Emma Chown, who will make their senior debut in the desert heat of Dubai Thursday and Friday.

The men kick off their campaign Friday in Dubai.

It’s a big season for sevens with the Commonweal­th Games (April 4-15 on Australia’s Gold Coast) and the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens (July 20-22, San Francisco).

After Dubai, the women will take part in World Series stops in Australia, Japan, Langford, B.C., and France.

New Zealand dominated the 2016-17 circuit, taking five of six events. Canada won the other stop, defeating the U.S., in the Sydney final for its third tournament win.

Canada has finished in the top three in the standings five years in a row. The goal this season is to win it all, peaking for the Rugby World Cup Sevens where Canada was runner-up to New Zealand four years ago.

The Commonweal­th Games are the team’s third priority, mainly because of timing. The Games rugby competitio­n goes April 12-14 while the Japan stop on the World Series is April 21-22.

“We’ll probably be splitting the squad a little over those two (events) if we’re tracking towards our first goal of winning the (World) Series,” said Tait.

The Canadian women will be looking for a better start in Dubai this year. In the wake of a longer-than-normal break following the Olympics, Canada finished sixth

We’ll probably be splitting the squad a little over those two (events) if we’re tracking towards our first goal of winning the (World) Series.

in the season-opener.

That eventually cost them in the overall standings with Canada placing third on the season, two points behind Australia. Had they finished fifth in Dubai, the Canadians would have ended up second overall.

With just five stops on tour, there is no room for slip-ups this time around. Tait wants top-three finishes in Dubai and Sydney, with the hope that the team will keep climbing the rankings when some of the injured veterans return. Canadian captain Ghislaine Landry, a finalist for World Rugby’s women’s sevens player of the year, looks to build on another banner year.

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