Penticton Herald

No margin for error for Canadian men

Knockout format means off nights aren’t an option

- By NEIL DAVIDSON

Canada coach Henry Paul knows there is no margin for error at the Rugby World Cup Sevens in Cape Town.

The tournament features the “winner takes all” knockout format introduced four years ago at the tournament in San Francisco, with a single loss taking teams out of championsh­ip contention.

The 24-country men’s field in Cape Town sees 10th-seeded Canada open against No. 23 Zimbabwe on Friday with the winner facing No. 7 France in the round of 16.

In contrast, stops on the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series start with pool play, with the top teams in each group then advancing to knockout play.

“I would have preferred a pool (format). That way you work your way through the pool,” said Paul. “But I do like that we get to play Zimbabwe. We’ve watched a lot of them in the recent Challenger Series. They’re a threat, of course, but I’d like to think our guys can do a job against them. And that gives us a chance to get some game under our belts before hopefully matching up against France. ”

France blanked the Canadian men 42-0 at the recent Los Angeles Sevens with the Canadian team feeling the effects of injuries and a tough day one with games against New Zealand, South Africa and the U.S.

“We tried a few things and it didn’t come off for us,” said Paul, who represente­d both New Zealand and England as a player. “But the effort was there, in spades. Now that we’ve got that tournament under our belt and we’ve got those same guys coming down here, I’m hoping that day one in Cape Town we can get through the first game and that will give us a good warm-up into France.”

The French also beat Canada earlier on the circuit in Dubai (26-14), Malaga, Spain, (38-5), Singapore (40-12) and London (19-14).

The Rugby World Cup Sevens runs through Sunday at Cape Town Stadium.

The Canadian men’s team features one change from the Los Angeles roster. Cooper Coats, who was injured in the World Series finale in California, is replaced by Matthew

Oworu, who has recovered from the minor injury that kept him out of the L.A. event. Veteran Phil Berna captains the Canadian men.

The women’s competitio­n kicks off with round-of-16 knockout matches. The fifthseede­d Canadians open against No. 12 China with the winner moving on to face either the fourth-seeded U.S. or No. 13 Poland.

The men’s best showing at the Rugby World Cup Sevens was a fifth-place finish in 2001 in Argentina. They were 12th four years ago in San Francisco.

The Canadian women, runner-up to New Zealand at the 2013 event in Moscow, finished seventh four years ago. Like the Canadian women, the men’s program has gone through a lot of changes with a spate of retirement­s after the Tokyo Olympics where the men finished eighth.

The Canadian men finished a disappoint­ing 14th overall in their nine-event World Series

campaign. The men tied for seventh in July at the Commonweal­th Games.

Relegation was off the World Series table this season with the decision of England, Scotland, and Wales to compete as Britain starting with the 2023 Series. The decision, which aligns with Olympic participat­ion. meant no relegation in 2022 since England, Scotland and Wales are being replaced by Britain on the men’s side.

In 2023, the 14 core men’s teams will be Canada, Argentina, Australia, Britain, Fiji, France, Ireland, Japan, Kenya, New Zealand, Samoa, South Africa, Spain and the U.S. They will be joined by Uruguay, which won last month’s World Rugby Challenger Series.

One invitation­al team will take part in each round, with 16 teams participat­ing at each tournament. South Africa marks the eighth edition of the men’s World Cup Sevens and the fourth for the women. Canada has qualified for every one of those.

 ?? ?? The Associated Press
Canada’s Justin Douglas, left, runs past Japan’s Dai Ozawa to score during the Rugby Sevens World Cup in San Francisco in this file photo from 2018.
The Associated Press Canada’s Justin Douglas, left, runs past Japan’s Dai Ozawa to score during the Rugby Sevens World Cup in San Francisco in this file photo from 2018.

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