Wellington Sevens

Wellington Sevens
Sport Rugby sevens
Founded 2000
No. of teams 16
Country New Zealand
Most recent champion(s)  New Zealand (2016)
Most titles  New Zealand (9 titles)

The Wellington Sevens or New Zealand Sevens is an annual rugby sevens tournament held at Westpac Stadium in Wellington, New Zealand. The tournament is the fourth on the Sevens World Series circuit, and is generally held on the first weekend of February on the weekend following the USA Sevens tournament. The Wellington Sevens includes teams from 16 countries.

The event attracts over 30,000 spectators annually. The tournament has become Wellington's largest sporting event, and one of New Zealand's leading sporting events.

Atmosphere

It also has a reputation for a party atmosphere, with a large proportion of attendees choosing to wear fancy dress. Recent years have seen large groups of costumes that vary from Fred Flintstone and Wilma to Care Bears, dance troops, wrestlers and many other interesting costumes. More recently items of recent media interest or advertisements form a key theme. Saddam Hussein, Osama Bin Laden, George Bush have made appearances. Movie figures such as Men in Black (MIB) and Austin Powers are crowd favorites and an impersonator of Austin has been a regular feature each year performing to the crowd.

In 2009 Air New Zealand, one of the major sponsors for the Wellington sevens, introduced a 'Beads for Kisses' ambient media campaign as a yearly sevens ritual. Over 100,000 strings of Mardi gras style beads were given to the crowd, who could then exchange the beads for kisses from other participants. This was followed in 2010 with the addition of kissing booths.

Past Champions

Year Champion Score Runner up
2000  Fiji 24 – 14[1]  New Zealand
2001  Australia 19 – 17[1]  Fiji
2002  South Africa 17 – 14[1]  Samoa
2003  New Zealand 38 – 26[1]  England
2004  New Zealand 33 – 15[1]  Fiji
2005  New Zealand 31 – 7[1]  Argentina
2006  Fiji 27 – 22[1]  South Africa
2007  Samoa 17 – 14[1]  Fiji
2008  New Zealand 22 – 17[1]  Samoa
2009  England 19 – 17  New Zealand
2010  Fiji 19 – 14  Samoa
2011  New Zealand 29 – 14[2]  England
2012  New Zealand 24 – 7  Fiji
2013  England 24 – 19  Kenya
2014  New Zealand 21 – 0  South Africa
2015  New Zealand 27 – 21  England
2016  New Zealand 24 – 21  South Africa
2017 TBC

Notes and references

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.