Cape Times

‘Better’ home for Sevens

- Wynona Louw and Ashfak Mohamed wynona.louw@inl.co.za ashfak.mohamed@inl.co.za

ON THE eve of a sold-out World Sevens Series at Cape Town Stadium at the weekend, Mayor Patricia de Lille has fired a broadside at rugby bosses, saying fans in the city “deserve a better stadium than Newlands”.

It is the latest in a multimilli­on-rand saga to have rugby played at Cape Town Stadium.

In announcing a new deal yesterday in which the Cape Town Sevens would be hosted at the stadium for the next three years, De Lille said the city was in talks with SA Rugby about hosting a Test match at Cape Town Stadium.

The Sevens moved to Cape Town from Port Elizabeth last year, and De Lille said the city had decided to extend the hosting deal for the Cape Town Sevens for another three years (2016-18), despite not breaking even with regards to expenses and services provided last year.

“We approved with council yesterday, hosting the Cape Town Sevens for the next three years. The benefit to the economy in hosting the tournament was R539 million last year, which is

‘Tournament was voted as the best event in World Series’

why we decided to make this investment. We hope to break even one day, with all the services we provide for the event,” De Lille said at a Springbok Sevens press conference at a city hotel yesterday.

“Last year, the Sevens was a very, very big success. We sold 107 000 tickets, and this year I think we’ve sold 110 000 tickets already. It is also about showcasing Cape Town as a world-class destinatio­n, and we think the benefits are huge. We want our city to be the events capital of Africa, and hosting the Cape Town Sevens is part of reaching that goal.”

The Blitzboks have also spoken about the joy of playing at home to defend the title they claimed at the same stadium last year, with Neil Powell again highlighti­ng the magnitude of a home event yesterday.

“If you look at last year’s statistics, this tournament was voted as the best event in the World Series. And that’s because of the food, the accommodat­ion, the tourism around here and the playing facilities,” Powell said.

“Cape Town is one of the best cities to play in. It’s close to home, so it’s close to our families and supporters. It is massive for us, the team picks up energy from the crowd, and that helps them. Playing in Cape Town also gives us a chance to play in front of our family, friends and South African fans. That is something we will always treasure.”

The series’ five-star blend of exciting players, exhilarati­ng action, festival atmosphere and breathtaki­ng destinatio­ns have proven to be a massive hit all around the world.

Last December, the event was hugely popular in the Mother City, with all tickets sold out, the capacity crowd boosting the Blitzboks in their final victory over Argentina.

This year, tickets are sold out yet again for tomnorrow and Sunday. Apart from a packed stadium, there will also be live entertainm­ent.

The Black Ties (1.30pm) will provide afternoon entertainm­ent tomorrow, followed by a Battle of the DJs treat later in the evening (6.24pm).

The weather is expected to play along.

THIS weekend rugby fans can lick their lips in anticipati­on of a fixture involving a South African rugby team – the Springbok Sevens side.

They had a lot to make up for after finishing third at the Rio Olympics earlier this year – a result that isn’t laudable because, well, they’re the Blitzboks.

And they did exactly that. They won gold in Dubai last weekend, and they did so with rousing performanc­es.

And this weekend the Blitzboks will look to light up South African rugby once again, only this time it will be even better.

They will be defending their 2016-17 World Sevens tournament title that they claimed in the Mother City last year.

And they will do so in front of a Cape Town crowd – a crowd that will be pumping with belief, excitement and anticipati­on.

And as if that wasn’t promising enough, let’s not forget that they will be riding on a massive wave of confidence after winning the gold in the Arabian desert.

The way Neil Powell’s team won the first tournament of this year’s series was superb.

They showed that there is still some good in the country’s rugby. A lot of good.

They whipped New Zealand 40-0 in the quarters and didn’t give the Kiwis a fraction of a chance to fight back.

They kept them down. And then they outplayed defending Sevens and Olympic champions Fiji in the final. They showed pure grit. But it wasn’t only in those two matches that they shone.

Remember how Cecil Afrika sprinted from midfield after securing the first restart kick and dodged defences to score against the USA?

Or Kyle Brown’s chip that was neatly gathered by new skipper Philip Snyman to score. Or any one of Seabelo Senatla’s 11 tries. Just picture those.

Now picture the scene: the home crowd, the delightful sniffs of home food and home music, the beautiful Cape Town Stadium.

It has to be gold again for the Blitzboks.

 ?? Picture: Chris Ricco/BackpagePi­x ?? CHAMPS: The Blitzboks in a training session in Cape Town this week. Capetonian­s will be flocking to the Cape Town Stadium to see them in action this weekend.
Picture: Chris Ricco/BackpagePi­x CHAMPS: The Blitzboks in a training session in Cape Town this week. Capetonian­s will be flocking to the Cape Town Stadium to see them in action this weekend.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa