Gulf News

Dubai Rugby Sevens turns 50

Longest running sporting spectacle in Mideast set to take off at the Sevens

- BY ALARIC GOMES Chief Reporter

This weekend (December 5-7) will usher in a historic occasion as the Emirates Airline Dubai Rugby Sevens marks the 50th anniversar­y of the premier rugby tournament in the UAE.

With the live music and tribute bands helping spectators to relive five decades of the event, Dubai will turn yet another page in its sporting history as 16 men’s and 12 women’s teams go head-to-head in the main competitio­n, which serves as the opening leg of the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series at the Sevens ground.

Founded in 1970, the event is the longest running sporting spectacle in the Middle East with the men’s 16 teams drawn into four pools of four teams. The Staffordsh­ire Regiment was the first-ever champions at the Dubai Rugby Sevens.

Throughout the 1970s, fresh ideas and innovation­s made the tournament bigger and better and by 1987, the associatio­n with Emirates Airline began taking the event a step higher. Since 1996, Dubai started hosting the event as a qualifying round of the World Cup Sevens

Since 1996, Dubai started hosting the event as a qualifying round of World Cup Sevens and three years later, it evolved into a leg of the IRB’s Sevens World Series.

and three years later, it evolved into a leg of the Internatio­nal Rugby Board’s Sevens World Series — now branded as the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series.

On the first day, each team plays the other three teams in the pool. The two highest teams in each pool advance to the quarter-final knockout rounds, and the bottom two teams move to the challenge bracket. Tomorrow, Samoa and Canada will kick off the main competitio­n at 5.06pm from Pool C, while defending champions New Zealand will take on Wales in the second fixture at 5.28pm.

Three sections

Three more competitio­ns act as a sideshow to the men’s event — a 12-team competitio­n for women (on the World Rugby Women’s Sevens Series), Rugby Invitation tournament and a Netball Invitation tournament.

For the invitation tournament­s, it’s a much more elaborate affair with teams taking part in 15 various sections, while the rugby invitation­al tournament is even more popular with hundreds of teams flocking at the venue. The netball tournament includes teams in three sections, namely Gulf women, Open youth and Open women.

After Dubai, the series will move to Cape Town, South Africa (December 13-15), New Zealand (January 25-26) and Australia (December February 1-2) followed by stops in the US (February 29-March 1), Canada (March 7-8), Hong Kong (April 3-5), Singapore (April 11-12), England (May 23-24) and the culminatio­n in Paris on May 3031. The winner of the series will be determined by the overall points standings gained across all events during the course of the season.

Much of the attention this year will be on the qualifying spots for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics with the top four teams in the men and women’s at the end of the 2019 World Rugby Sevens Series automatica­lly securing a place at the Olympic Games.

An additional six teams will join them through the regional associatio­n Olympic qualificat­ion tournament­s that are due to to be held in Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceania and South America from June to December next year, with only the top-ranked team sealing their Olympic berth.

Teams who miss out by either of these two methods will have a final chance to book their Tokyo 2020 ticket at the Olympic repechage event, featuring 12 countries. As hosts, Japan have secured an automatic qualifying spot for the men’s and women’s competitio­ns, leaving 11 places up for grabs in both competitio­ns.

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 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? Captains of the Emirates Airline Dubai Rugby Sevens teams with the trophies in front of the iconic Burj Al Arab yesterday.
Clint Egbert/Gulf News Captains of the Emirates Airline Dubai Rugby Sevens teams with the trophies in front of the iconic Burj Al Arab yesterday.

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