Waterloo Region Record

Canada getting stung by injuries, lack of depth

- Neil Davidson

TORONTO — His team down 12-7 at halftime to Argentina at the Sydney Sevens, Canada rugby coach Damian McGrath urged his players to pick up the tempo and stick to the game plan.

“You’ve the quarter-finals in the palm of your hands and in a moment you’re just throwing it away,” he said.

Needing a win to advance to the Cup quarter-finals on the weekend, Canada clawed its way to a 17-17 tie on a Pat Kay try with less than 15 seconds remaining. But the hard-luck Canadians had to settle for the tie after Kay, subbing as kicker for the injured Nate Hirayama, missed the conversion attempt.

Instead of contending in the tournament’s top eight, the Canadian men dropped into consolatio­n play and finished 13th for the third time in four stops on the 2016-17 HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series.

A sparkling fourth-place finish in Wellington the week before showed the Canadians are better than their current 12th place on the overall standings. But injuries and a lack of depth are costing Canada.

“I would back our starting seven or eight players any time against any team,” said McGrath, who took over the Canadian team this season.

“The week before in Wellington we had a very consistent starting lineup, which I regard as our strongest, and we went all the way to the closing stages.”

But with Hirayama sidelined and Kay, Justin Douglas and Adam Zaruba all ailing, Sydney was a different story.

“The loss of those four key players with no real replacemen­ts maybe highlights where we are as a program — that we’ve got some good players but there’s a big drop-off to what comes next,” McGrath said.

To that end, the English coach will be in Toronto this weekend to scout talent at an Ontario under-18 camp. Finding depth will take time, he acknowledg­es.

Hirayama, Canada’s influentia­l playmaker, suffered a hamstring injury in the dying minutes at Wellington and had to sit out in Sydney. Kay and Zaruba were hurt in the first game there.

“In the normal course of events I would have withdrawn them from the competitio­n,” McGrath said.

“But with no real like-for-like replacemen­ts, I tried to squeeze a little bit more out of them, and ultimately it was too much for them.”

Amazingly, Douglas tied for second in tournament scoring with five tries despite fighting a bug in the sapping heat and humidity Down Under.

“Fair play to him. He climbed off his sick bed and tried to take part but he was nothing like the force he usually is,” said McGrath.

“Standing still on the sideline was hard work. You were sweating and feeling drained,” he added. “To run out there, even when you’re fit, was even harder. But to try and do it when you’ve been sick and your stomach wasn’t feeling great, I can’t say enough good things about him.”

 ??  ?? Martin Iosefo, left, of the United States dives for the line to score a try in front of Canada’s Justin Douglas during their match at the World Rugby Sevens Series tournament in Sydney on Saturday.
Martin Iosefo, left, of the United States dives for the line to score a try in front of Canada’s Justin Douglas during their match at the World Rugby Sevens Series tournament in Sydney on Saturday.

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