South China Morning Post

REVIVED NEW ZEALAND BREAK FIJI HEARTS

After ousting the crowd favourites and perennial finalists, the All Blacks side will today come up against old foes Australia for a place in Cup final

- Paul McNamara paul.mcnamara@scmp.com

New Zealand arrived for the Cathay/HSBC Hong Kong Sevens low on form and scrambling for confidence, but if any team had to shoot Bambi, it was always going to be the dead-eyed All Blacks.

The Kiwis ousted crowd favourites Fiji, finalists in each of the past seven years, to set up a crackerjac­k semi-final meeting with Australia today.

It seems almost cruel that the winners will have one more sizeable hurdle to mount, in the shape of either France or Ireland, to forever go down in history as reigning Hong Kong Stadium champions.

Neither of these teams would expect, nor want, any sympathy, however. New Zealand refused to feel sorry for themselves following a desperatel­y disappoint­ing event in Los Angeles last month.

Instead of navel-gazing, they rooted through every corner of their off-field methodolog­y to try to revive a flagging aura.

“We had a good hard look at ourselves, and it [recovering form] was about discipline on and off the field,” Dylan Collier, the New Zealand captain, said.

“We put the effort into doing our recoveries, and our preparatio­n, and our previews and reviews, and made sure our nutrition was right. When you have that discipline off the field, it transfers to the matches. We wear a jersey that demands we win, so when you are not, there will always be question marks.”

New Zealand went some way to answering those questions on day one when they beat Great Britain, before going to town on series leaders Argentina to win 22-0. Yesterday, they completed a hat-trick of pool wins, against USA, then staged a daring comeback to break the hearts of Fiji and their ardent supporters.

“We felt we were playing well [before Hong Kong] but only in patches,” Collier said. “We needed to find consistenc­y and once we got there we knew we could put teams away.”

Imposing forward Collier is playing his sixth Hong Kong Sevens, after injury kept him out of LA and the previous leg in Vancouver, where New Zealand were beaten finalists. His last appearance came in January when the Kiwis limped home ninth in Perth.

After five World Series tournament wins in 2022-23, the current campaign threatened to continue in barren fashion when Fiji led 12-7 entering the final three minutes. New Zealand duly conjured an exhilarati­ng spell of rugby, moving the ball speedily and accurately, and physically overpoweri­ng the sturdy Fijians.

Explosive 19-year-old Xavier Tito-Harris crossed in the corner, after Fiji could not keep pace with a passing sequence from left to right, laying the platform for Tone Ng Shiu to score for the killer blow.

It was a passage of play illustrati­ve of an indomitabl­e spirit.

“We know if we get into our game, and we hold the ball and build phases, we can grind teams down,” Collier said. “Sometimes, our silly mistakes let the opposition back in, but [when trailing], you have to stay composed and move to the next job.”

Collier is anticipati­ng an “epic battle” with Australia, who put away South Africa 15-0 in their quarter-final.

The outcome never looked in doubt following Nathan Lawson’s second-minute try, with the Blitzboks looking more like the Blitzed-Boks in the face of an aggressive Australian defence.

Maurice Longbottom scored after 10 minutes, then defied a crowd chiding the Aussies for their negativity when he kicked a penalty soon after to leave South Africa hopelessly adrift. “In sevens, you basically have to scrape through your pool,” said Australia captain Nick Malouf.

“This was the biggest game of the weekend, because if you win it you are playing for a medal. We were close to our best, and, hopefully, we will be at our best against New Zealand.”

We had a good hard look at ourselves, and it was about discipline on and off the field DYLAN COLLIER, NEW ZEALAND SKIPPER

 ?? Photo: Sam Tsang ?? New Zealand’s Regan Ware shrugs off a tackle by Fiji’s Filipe Sauturaga on his way to a try in their quarter-final clash yesterday.
Photo: Sam Tsang New Zealand’s Regan Ware shrugs off a tackle by Fiji’s Filipe Sauturaga on his way to a try in their quarter-final clash yesterday.
 ?? ?? For full coverage of the sevens, visit our dedicated website at scmp.com/topics/ hong-kong-sevens
For full coverage of the sevens, visit our dedicated website at scmp.com/topics/ hong-kong-sevens

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