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Scotland to join forces with GB for world series

- DAVID BARNES

SCOTLAND will no longer compete in the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series after World Rugby – the global governing body – decreed that it must join forces with England and Wales to form a Great Britain team. This move is aimed at aligning the series with the Olympic Games.

This means that England, Scotland and Wales will play as individual nations in the Commonweal­th Games, which take place at Coventry Stadium next week, and at the Rugby World Cup Sevens in Cape Town on September 9-11, before reverting to GB when the 2023 men’s Series kicks off in Hong Kong on November 4-6, 2022, followed by combined men’s and women’s rounds in Dubai on December 2-3 and Cape Town on December 9-11.

While Scottish Rugby have stated that they plan to continue their sevens programmes for both men and women, it is not clear whether this can be viable as a costeffect­ive way of providing meaningful player developmen­t opportunit­ies.

The World Series is the pinnacle of internatio­nal sevens in any regular season so, unless something new is created, worthwhile tournament­s for the Scotland men’s team are going to be few and far between.

The situation is different for Scotland women, who have competed in the series occasional­ly as a guest side but are not a core team. However, the goal has surely been to reach that level, and if there is no real prospect of graduating beyond the Rugby Europe Women’s Sevens Championsh­ip then you have to ask: what is the point?

“Once rugby sevens became an Olympic sport there was increasing­ly a requiremen­t from World Rugby that Team GB, as the recognised Olympic entity, should also become part of the sevens landscape to align Olympic qualificat­ion through the HSBC World

Sevens Series,” said Jim Mallinder, Scottish Rugby’s director of high performanc­e.

“We want our players competing at the highest possible level moving forward and I fully expect Scotland to have good representa­tion in the Team GB squads, both for men and women.

“Sevens will continue to play a role in our developmen­t pathway and we want to maintain the pipeline of quality players capable of representi­ng both Scotland and Team GB in the future.

“We will continue discussion­s with World Rugby as to what those future playing opportunit­ies will look like.”

With only two pro men’s teams and no pro women’s rugby below internatio­nal level, there is limited opportunit­ies in Scotland for emerging players to develop in a full-time environmen­t, so the sevens programmes have been a safety net over the years for several players who have not

immediatel­y flourished in the XV-aside game.

Kyle Rowe is the most recent full cap to have played on the circuit, which helped keep him in the profession­al environmen­t when full-time contracts at Edinburgh and Glasgow Warriors were not forthcomin­g (although it was his performanc­es for London Irish last season which catapulted him into the Scotland set-up). Mark Bennett, Darcy Graham, George Horne and Damien Hoyland are among the other current full Scotland squad members to have benefited from a stint playing the abbreviate­d game.

Scott Johnson, previous director of performanc­e at Murrayfiel­d, provoked a furious backlash when he attempted to disband Scotland’s Sevens programme in 2015 on financial grounds and that scheme was soon abandoned. This time it is different, with Mallinder

on record as a supporter of Scotland’s continued involvemen­t in the World Series.

Four Scots made the 12 strong men’s sevens squad for the 2020 Olympics and a similar representa­tion in the GB squad when it launches this year is as good as the nation can hope for.

The situation is more fluid for the women’s players as they are not on full-time dedicated sevens contracts, but any reduction in the number of opportunit­ies for Scotland’s top women players to grow on the internatio­nal stage has got to be a concern at a time when all the stops are apparently being pulled out to develop this branch of the game.

“We are acutely aware of Scotland’s heritage and passion for sevens rugby. As such we remain fully committed to a Scotland 7s programme to develop our players and coaches,” added Mallinder. “The move to a GB Sevens team on the World Series will give Scottish players, both men and women, a unique opportunit­y to represent and compete on the largest global stage through the World Series and Olympic Games.”

Sevens will continue to play a role in our developmen­t pathway and we want to maintain the pipeline

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 ?? ?? Former Warriors winger Lee Jones was selected for the Scotland Sevens Commonweal­th Games squad
Former Warriors winger Lee Jones was selected for the Scotland Sevens Commonweal­th Games squad

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