2000 Punta del Este Sevens

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2000 Punta del Este Sevens
IRB Sevens I
Host nation Uruguay
Date7–8 January 2000
Cup
Champion New Zealand
Runner-up Fiji
Plate
Winner Australia
Runner-up Canada
Bowl
Winner France
Runner-up Germany
Tournament details
Matches played41

The 2000 Punta del Este Sevens was a Rugby Sevens tournament held in Punta del Este, Uruguay and was the third leg of the 1999-2000 World Sevens Series. The competition took place on 7 and 8 January at the Campus de Maldonado.[1]

The hosts, Uruguay were eliminated in the Plate semi-finals.[1] For the third consecutive event in the Series, the Cup final was contested between Fiji and New Zealand. The Punta del Este Sevens was not included on the World Sevens circuit for the 2000-01 series.

Teams[]

Sixteen national teams played in the tournament with New Zealand and Fiji being seeded one and two due to winning the previous two tournaments in Dubai and Stellenbosch.[2] Peru were debuting on the world stage after becoming a member of the International Rugby Board as they were invited to compete in Punta del Este and Mar del Plata.[3]

Format[]

The pool stage was played on the first day of the tournament. The 16 teams were separated into four pools of four teams and teams in the same pool played each other once. The top two teams in each pool advanced to the Cup quarterfinals to compete for the 2000 Punta del Este Sevens title.[4]

Summary[]

The first day of the Punta del Este Sevens saw three teams end the day unbeaten from their pool stages. In Pool A, it was New Zealand who had an handful of players playing rugby sevens for the first time finishing top with victories over Spain (50–5), Peru (63–0) and Uruguay (24–5). Joint-leaders in the series heading into the round, Fiji only conceded twelve points in their group to finish top of the group with Canada coming in second place. The other team that finished unbeaten throughout Day 1 was Argentina who just slightly edged over Samoa, 19–12 in the fifth game of Pool D to finish top of the pool.[5] Pool C was the only group to not have an unbeaten team with Chile forcing an tiebreaker after defeating South Africa 28–21. But Chile was the unlucky team with the team being the lowest in point average off the three teams.[6]

The second day of the tournament saw the first extra time match in the series history with South Africa defeating Argentina 24–19 in the cup quarter final after they initially were locked at 19-all during regulation.[7] After recording victories over South Africa and Samoa in the semi-finals respectively, New Zealand and Fiji met in the third consecutive cup final. During the final, an injury to Fijian player occurred in the 14th minute of the final with the score at 21–19.[7] The injury saw New Zealand score three more tries and go to the top of the table with a 42–19 victory. Australia won the plate final for the third consecutive event defeating Canada while France took out the bowl defeating Germany.[8]

Pool stage[]

Key to colours in group tables
Teams that advanced to the Cup quarterfinals
Teams that advanced to the Bowl quarterfinals

Pool A[]

Team Pld W D L PF PA +/- Pts
 New Zealand 3 3 0 0 137 10 +127 9
 Uruguay 3 2 0 1 67 36 +31 7
 Spain 3 1 0 2 48 81 −33 5
 Peru 3 0 0 3 5 130 −125 3

Source: World Rugby

7 January
16:00
Uruguay  36–7  Peru
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
16:20
New Zealand  50–5  Spain
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
18:40
New Zealand  63–0  Peru
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
19:00
Uruguay  26–12  Spain
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
21:20
New Zealand  24–5  Uruguay
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
22:00
Spain  31–5  Peru
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

Source: World Rugby

Pool B[]

Team Pld W D L PF PA +/- Pts
 Fiji 3 3 0 0 148 12 +136 9
 Canada 3 2 0 1 61 42 +19 7
 France 3 1 0 2 47 68 −21 5
 Paraguay 3 0 0 3 7 141 −134 3

Source: World Rugby

7 January
16:40
Fiji  42–12  Canada
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
17:00
France  47–7  Paraguay
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
19:20
Fiji  59–0  Paraguay
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
19:40
Canada  14–0  France
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
21:40
Fiji  47–0  France
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
22:20
Canada  35–0  Paraguay
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

Source: World Rugby

Pool C[]

Team Pld W D L PF PA +/- Pts
 Australia 3 2 0 1 92 31 +61 7
 South Africa 3 2 0 1 98 52 +46 7
 Chile 3 2 0 1 59 54 +5 7
 Germany 3 0 0 3 17 129 −112 3

Source: World Rugby

7 January
17:20
Australia  26–5  Chile
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
17:40
South Africa  56–5  Germany
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
20:00
South Africa  21–19  Australia
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
20:20
Chile  26–7  Germany
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
22:40
Australia  47–5  Germany
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
23:00
Chile  28–21  South Africa
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

Source: World Rugby

Pool D[]

Team Pld W D L PF PA +/- Pts
 Argentina 3 3 0 0 107 22 +85 9
 Samoa 3 2 0 1 80 33 +47 7
 United States 3 1 0 2 43 71 −28 5
 Brazil 3 0 0 3 19 123 −104 3

Source: World Rugby

7 January
18:00
Argentina  42–5  Brazil
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
18:20
Samoa  25–0  United States
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
20:40
Argentina  46–5  United States
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
21:00
Samoa  43–14  Brazil
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
23:20
Argentina  19–12  Samoa
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

7 January
23:40
United States  38–0  Brazil
Campus de Maldonado, Punta del Este

Source: World Rugby

Finals[]

Bowl[]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 
 Spain26
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Paraguay5
 
 Spain12
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Germany26
 
 Germany21
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 United States12
 
 Germany12
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 France31
 
 Chile29
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Brazil5
 
 Chile10
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 France14
 
 France50
 
 
 Peru0
 

Source: World Rugby

Plate[]

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 
 Uruguay5
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Australia35
 
 Australia27
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Canada12
 
 Canada17
 
 
 Argentina12
 

Source: World Rugby

Cup[]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 
 Fiji38
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Uruguay5
 
 Fiji19
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Samoa7
 
 Samoa12
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Australia7
 
 Fiji19
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 New Zealand42
 
 New Zealand33
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 Canada0
 
 New Zealand31
 
8 January – Punta del Este
 
 South Africa7
 
 South Africa (aet)24
 
 
 Argentina19
 

Source: World Rugby

Tournament placings[]

Place  Team Points
1st place, gold medalist(s)  New Zealand 20
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Fiji 16
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Samoa 12
 South Africa 12
5  Australia 8
6  Canada 6
7  Argentina 4
 Uruguay 4
Place  Team Points
9  France 2
10  Germany 0
11  Chile 0
 Spain 0
13  Brazil 0
 Paraguay 0
 Peru 0
 United States 0

Source: Rugby7.com[9]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "IRB Sevens I - Punta del Este, Uruguay. 1/7/2000 - 1/9/2000". rugby7.com. 1999. Archived from the original on 2014-01-01. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  2. ^ "Seeding and Fixtures". International Rugby Board. 15 December 1999. Archived from the original on 16 July 2002.
  3. ^ "New Zealand - Fiji rivalary set to resume". International Rugby Board. 5 January 2000. Archived from the original on 16 July 2002.
  4. ^ "Punta del Este Sevens finalised". ESPN. 22 November 1999. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  5. ^ "Chile beat Springboks in first day of play in Uruguay". International Rugby Board. 7 January 2000. Archived from the original on 17 July 2002.
  6. ^ "Fiji on form in Punta del Este". ESPN. 8 January 2000. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  7. ^ a b "New Zealand beat Fiji to win Punta sevens". ESPN. 9 January 2000. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  8. ^ "New Zealand win third IRB World Sevens Tournament". 9 January 2000. Archived from the original on 17 July 2002. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  9. ^ "IRB Sevens Standings". Rugby 7. 2000. Archived from the original on 26 May 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
IRB Sevens I
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