Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

All Blacks Sevens suffer shock pool stage exit after tough losses in Perth

Sione Molia of New Zealand runs the ball during the match between Fiji and New Zealand on day two of the HSBC Perth SVNS at HBF Park on January 25, 2025 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

New Zealand are out of men’s title contention at SVNS Perth following pool stage defeats to Uruguay and Fiji at HBF Park. After a heavy loss to the Fijians on Saturday, the All Blacks Sevens needed other results to go their way, but those matches didn’t play as they’d hoped.

ADVERTISEMENT

Following relatively strong performances at the HSBC SVNS Series season-opening event in Dubai – where they finished fourth at The Sevens Stadium – and a sixth-place finish at last month’s stop in Cape Town, New Zealand turned their focus to Perth.

For the second year in a row, the top-flight rugby sevens competition headed to the west coast of Australia, which has been played in front of a passionate crowd. On a scorching January morning, the All Blacks Sevens started their tournament with a promising win over Kenya.

Catch up on the action from the HSBC SVNS Series on RugbyPass TV, which you can sign up for HERE.

New Zealand beat the Kenyans 29-14 which set them up well, and they had a chance to make a statement against Uruguay in their second match – a side who had shocked the rugby world with a 24-17 win over Fiji earlier on day one.

But Tomasi Cama’s men fell to Uruguay in another shock upset, which set the stage for an unmissable pool stage showdown between the men in black and Fiji. Both teams had to win to secure their spot in the Men’s Cup quarterfinals or risk elimination if they lost.

Iowane Teba got the party started for Fiji with a long-distance runaway try in the second minute. While Andrew Knewstubb hit back for the All Blacks Sevens a few minutes later, it was all Fiji from there as they took control with another four tries.

ADVERTISEMENT

Jiji Nasova, Pilipo Bukayaro, Viwa Naduvalo and Terio Veilawa all crossed for a five-pointer each as the Men’s SVNS Series leaders secured a dominant 33-5 win over New Zealand. Fiji had survived a scare to make the next round while New Zealand were in trouble.

“A little blip on the radar yesterday with the defeat to Uruguay but restoring their position as top dog and Fiji are through to the Quarter Finals 33 points to 5. Absolutely emphatic over their rivals,” commentator Rikki Swannell said on the broadcast.

“New Zealand, well it’s written on their faces isn’t it? They are in a jam, struggling to find a way out at the moment.”

Great Britain booked their place in the next round with a big win over Ireland. They went through to the next round as one of the top-two ranked third-placed teams out of pool play, finishing in third spot behind France and Spain in Pool B.

ADVERTISEMENT

For New Zealand to make it through, they needed results to go their way in Pool A with hosts Australia taking on a valiant USA side and reigning SVNS Perth champions Argentina taking on Cape Town winners South Africa in this heavyweight bout.

Australia did enough to book their spot in the next stage after hanging on for a 19-12 win. Aaron Cummings scored the opener for the USA with an impressive runaway effort in the first minute but the Aussies hit back through Michael Icely and Henry Hutchison.

Jack Wendling made things very interesting for the Americans with an effort in the eighth minute, but a James Turner try for Australia two minutes after the siren completed the win which was no doubt met with a positive cheer from the Perth crowd.

Following that, Argentina bounced back from two extra time matches on Friday with a clinical win over South Africa. Matteo Graziano, Marcos Moneta and Matias Osadczuk all contributed as Los Pumas Sevens went into the break with a 19-nil advantage.

South Africa mounted a minor comeback in the second term but Argentina never really looked like surrendering their lead, holding on for a 19-17 win. It was enough for the defending champions to book their spot in the quarterfinals.

Those results saw New Zealand place in the bottom four.

The All Blacks Sevens will take on Ireland in the second ninth-place semi-final, while the USA and Kenya will meet in the other men’s clash outside of the Cup quarterfinals.


To be first in line for Rugby World Cup 2027 Australia tickets, register your interest here 

ADVERTISEMENT

HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Men's Highlights

HSBC SVNS Singapore 2025 | Day Two Women's Highlights

Jet Lag: The biggest challenge facing international sports? | The Report

Boks Office | Episode 39 | The Investec Champions Cup is back

Rugby’s Greatest Rivalry? | New Zealand & Australia | Sevens Wonders | Episode 5

Kobelco Kobe Steelers vs Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 | Full Match Replay

The Rise of Kenya | The Report

The Fixture: How This Rugby Rivalry Has Lasted 59 Years

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
A
Andrew Nichols 78 days ago

No longer a shock. Thec7s are an NZ Rugby afterthought full of mainly elderly nobodies.

S
SadersMan 78 days ago

Not a shock unfortunately. The squad lost a lot of the younger players post Olys. Quick, x-factor, game changers, Leo, Carter, Fineanganofo, Cook-Savage, Tangitau, all gone to Super Rugby. Plus Rokolisoa, the magician, has been injured.


All that's left is a solid group of decent players, without x-factor, speed, or dynamism. Plus a couple of youngsters. The squad looks stale, low energy, leaderless, slow & predictable. Welcome to AB7s 2025 version unless something radical happens.

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

TRENDING
TRENDING Glasgow's honest take on Sam Prendergast: 'I think they make it easy for him' Franco Smith's honest take on Sam Prendergast
Search