Fiji Sun

THROUGH! PHEW!

- Anasilini Ratuva ANASILINI RATUVA

The Team Fiji men’s rugby sevens team are likely to face South Africa in the first semifinal of the Commonweal­th Games at 1.43pm today. The Seremaia Tuwai-captained side topped Pool D. They beat Wales 21-17 last night in a nailbiting Pool decider. South Africa were yet to play Scotland to determine who tops Pool A, when this edition went to press this morning. The other semifinal sees New Zealand take on England at 2.05pm.

The losing semifinali­sts will battle it out in the Bronze medal playoff at 4.17pm while the men’s final is set at 5.04pm.

It isn’t the World Series of Sevens but it looks a little like it, with most, if not quite all, the usual faces showing up on Australia’s Gold Coast for the Commonweal­th Games. France and Argentina are missing, but New Zealand, Australia, Samoa, Kenya, Canada, South Africa, three home nations (minus Ireland) and, of course Fiji are all present and correct. Jo Nayacavou grew up dreaming of playing for the Flying Fijians but an Under-21 trial was the closest he got. Even now the hurt of that rejection can be heard in his voice. Instead he chose a career in the British Army and made his first ever appearance for Scotland at the Gold Coast back in 2013 in the IRB’s series. Five years on he has returned there, a proud member of Scotland’s Commonweal­th Games squad.

“I still have that memory in my head,” says the big man. “The Gold Coast will always be a special place for me, because it’s where I first pulled on the thistle. I’ve still got fond memories of the stadium where we played and the whole environmen­t.

“To be involved in this Commonweal­th Games, I’m grateful for the opportunit­y and really excited to be representi­ng Team Scotland. I could never have imagined in my wildest dreams that I would be going back as a Team Scotland athlete. It’s been a long journey, five years in the making with Scotland Sevens.

“I got as far as the final trials for the [Fiji] under- 21s in XVs before I left. That’s still a bad one. I thought I would have got in. But I’ve now been in Scotland since 2008, I’ve got my wife and my two kids and we’ve never looked back since. We’ve loved every minute… except for the cold!”

RESIDENCY RULE

Nayacavou qualifies for his adopted country thanks to the residency rule after joining the army and being based with 2 Scots at the Glencorse barracks in Penicuik. Back home he grew up almost next door to Netani Talei, former Fiji captain and Edinburgh No.8 who was so impressive during that Heineken Cup run of 2012.

When Phil Greening took on the Scotland Sevens, he asked Talei if he knew any potential Fijian recruits in Scotland, and the burly eight immediatel­y fingered his former neighbour from back home and the call-up for Scotland saved Nayacavou from a second tour of Afghanista­n. The Fijian says that he enjoyed his first tour of duty but you can’t blame him for preferring to tour with Scotland Sevens instead.

The big man now sees Scotland as a “second home”. His wife returned to Fiji for the birth of their daughter but his five-year-old son is Scottish-born, both kids sport Scottish accents and they are not the only ones. Nayacavou inevitably attracts attention when travelling with the team and is frequently asked where he comes from? Adopting his broadest Scottish accent, the Fijian’s stock response is: “I’m fae Penicuik”… which usually ends the conversati­on.

KAVA DRINKING

The cultural appropriat­ion works both ways. For his part “Big Joe” has the Scots getting accustomed to drinking Kava. Fiji’s “national drink” is made from the roots of a plant, it looks and tastes like dishwater, albeit boasting some mild relaxing/numbing qualities.

The Scots will steer clear of anything stronger than isotonic drinks and protein shakes until after the tournament that has them seeded in Pool A alongside South Africa, Papua New Guinea and Malaysia. The games sevens started yesterdayw­ith the Aussie hosts kicking things off with a game against Samoa. England are pooled with Australia, New Zealand with Canada while Fiji must find a way past Wales after easy wins over Sri Lanka and Uganda. The women have an eight-team tournament, without Scotland).

STILL A FIJIAN FAN

The Scots played PNG first and South Africa last, with Malaysia the filler in the middle of that sandwich. Only the group winner progresses to the medal semi-finals. “I’m never nervous when I go out to play for us (Scotland),” says Nayacavou, “but I’m still nervous when I watch Fiji play. I’m always a Fiji sevens fan.

“I’ve played them more than few times now and it’s that idea of revenge that comes in. I grew up thinking I would represent them, but I didn’t, and I know I’m with Scotland so I want to show them what they’re missing.

“I’ve still got the respect from them, and that’s why the Fiji and Scotland teams are so close. All the other teams are so jealous because we speak to each other often, we train together, have a beer together after the game… maybe a kava.”

There is little doubt that Scotland’s recruit is understand­ably motivated by a desire to prove himself to his fellow countrymen and there is no doubting his importance to his adopted nation. Scotland’s attack can become a little lateral at times and the power of their import adds options along with the offload that seems to come as a birthright for most islanders.

POP PASS

Back at the 2016 Wellington Sevens, Sonny Bill Williams was drafted in ahead of the Olympics and everyone marvelled at his offloading… at least until Nayacavou split two Japanese defenders and threw a no-look, pop-pass out the back of his hand for Nick McLennan on the switch to score the equaliser.

The Fijian went on to score the winner in extra time and you can check it out on YouTube.

The beauty of this sevens competitio­n is that any one of about eight teams could win it. Kenya, South Africa and Canada sevens are better than their 15-aside team, New Zealand, Australia, Scotland, England and the fans’ favourite. There are no prizes for guessing who Fiji’s number one fan is backing.

“That’s what I’ve been telling everyone,” replies Nayacavou when someone suggests that this Games is Fiji’s target. “This is the big one for them because it’s the only medal they’ve not won. “They’ve won everything else apart from the Commonweal­th Games. Every (Commonweal­th) Games they’ve been to, they’ve come second to New Zealand. This is definitely the big one.

 ?? Photo: Zimbio ?? Team Fiji men’s rugby 7s prop Paula Dranisinuk­ula cops a tackle against Uganda during their pool clash at the Commonweal­th Games in Robina Stadium in Gold Coast, Australia on April 14, 2018. Fiji won 54-0. Earlier in the day they thrashed Sri Lanka 53-5.
Photo: Zimbio Team Fiji men’s rugby 7s prop Paula Dranisinuk­ula cops a tackle against Uganda during their pool clash at the Commonweal­th Games in Robina Stadium in Gold Coast, Australia on April 14, 2018. Fiji won 54-0. Earlier in the day they thrashed Sri Lanka 53-5.
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 ?? Photo: Zimbio ?? Fijian-born Scotland 7s forward Jo Nayacavou cops a tackle against Australia in the HSBC World Sevens Series. He is the currently playing for Scotland in the Commonweal­th Games in Gold Coast, Australia.
Photo: Zimbio Fijian-born Scotland 7s forward Jo Nayacavou cops a tackle against Australia in the HSBC World Sevens Series. He is the currently playing for Scotland in the Commonweal­th Games in Gold Coast, Australia.

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