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Australia name new sevens captain as legend Charlotte Caslick steps down

Australia captain Charlotte Caslick runs out for her 50th cap on the HSBC SVNS Series. Picture: World Rugby.

Defending HSBC SVNS Series champions Australia will have a new captain this season with Charlotte Caslick stepping down from the role. Australia Sevens announced on Wednesday that Isabella Nasser will take on that responsibility starting in Dubai this weekend.

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Before the season-opening event at Dubai’s The Sevens Stadium from November 30 to December 1, the dawn of a new era awaits SVNS Series heavyweights Australia. Veterans Sharni Smale and Dominique du Toit have retired, and Caslick has now made a big call.

Caslick is revered as one of the greatest players in the history of women’s rugby sevens, with the 29-year-old one of five players to win World Rugby’s Women’s Sevens Player of the Year award on multiple occasions. The Aussie also has the most nominations in women’s sevens with four.

With Madison Ashby, Alysia Leafau-Fakosilea, Kaitlin Shave and Sidney Taylor all unavailable for the season-opener in the UAE, Caslick will continue to play a pivotal role in Australia’s quest for more silverware on the SVNS Series, even if she doesn’t have the ‘C’ next to her name.

“The last few seasons captaining this team has been one of the biggest highlights of my career and a true honour,” Caslick said in a statement.

“Moving forward into the new season I’ve decided to step away from this role to allow the girls to grow in this space leading into the Los Angles Olympic Games in 2028.

“I pride myself on always putting the team first and I have always had that expectation on the girls too. I will continue to put my heart and soul into the Aussie Sevens program, this group and the jersey.

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“I’ve watched Bella grow from a high school student at Brisbane State High School to an incredible rugby player, person and leader, and cannot wait to support her any way I can throughout the upcoming season.”

There’s something poetic and fairytale-like about Nasser’s appointment as Australia’s newest sevens captain. Both Nasser and Caslick attended Brisbane State High School, with the former idolising the 2016 Olympic gold medallist and the history-making team from those Rio Games.

 

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This writer walked into Rugby Australia’s headquarters in March 2023, and ended up sitting down with a young Nasser in one of the meeting rooms. The Queenslander wasn’t a regular in the starting side at the time, having only recently debuted on the Series in South Africa.

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But, what stood out from this 15 minute chat was Nasser’s admiration for Caslick and the 2016 Olympic champions. The future Australia Women’s skipper spoke about still having to “pinch” herself at training, while also pinpoint those Games as a turning point.

“I’m playing with the Sharni (Smale) and the Charlotte Caslick’s. It’s amazing to be part of a profile like this,” Nasser told RugbyPass in 2023. “… I feel like she’s a role model to so many people… she went through a similar path as me… definitely a role model and definitely someone I still look up to,” she said of Caslick.

Nasser has since become a mainstay of the starting side. The 22-year-old put in some strong performances on the Series before earning selection for the Team Australia squad that went to the Paris Olympics – once again speaking with this writer before flying out to Europe.

It’s been a rapid rise but coach Tim Walsh is clearly confident in Nasser’s ability to lead this team. The coach has turned to some younger players for the season-opener at Dubai’s The Sevens Stadium, so it’s fitting that one of the nation’s rising stars leads that team.

“It is an honour and privilege to be named captain of the Australian Women Sevens rugby team,” Nasser explained.

“There have been incredible leaders who have gone before me and I only hope to follow in their footsteps and to lead the team to future success.

“Charlotte is and always will be such an immortal legend of the game and it’s an honour to have her in the team.

“As a team and program we are evolving and maturing and we are looking forward to performing this season and leading into the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.”

Australia started their 2023/24 SVNS Series season with Cup Final glory in Dubai and Cape Town. The Aussies got the better of their neighbouring rivals New Zealand in a dramatic decider in the UAE before backing that up a week later in the Western Cape.

They’ll look to do the same this season with Nasser leading the way.

“The program has always been blessed with strong, authentic and pioneering leaders,” coach Tim Walsh added.

“Bella is a very impressive young woman possessing huge leadership potential and I am looking forward to working with Bella and the team to further unlock our potential.

“This squad will get better with age, and the best is yet to come.”

HSBC SVNS Perth takes place on 24-26 January at HBF Park. Plan your ultimate rugby weekend in Western Australia with the help of flexible travel packages including tickets and accommodation. Buy Now or Find Out More.  

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f
fl 2 hours ago
What is the future of rugby in 2025?

on the article "Why defensive aggressor Felix Jones will drive new-look England" I said:


"Look at the kick:pass ratio from England’s games under Borthwick:

Italy 20:100

Argentina 50:100

South Africa 53:100

Fiji 24:100

Samoa 22:100

Chile 12:100

Japan 25:100

Argentina 55:100

Fiji 30:100

Ireland 21:100

Wales 24:100

Wales 13:100

Ireland 26:100

France 22:100

Wales 26:100

Italy 23:100

Scotland 18:100

The average is 27:100

The average in games we have won is 28:100

The average in games we have lost is 26:100, but these averages are skewed by the fact that we have tended to kick less and pass more against worse sides

The average in games where we have beaten current top 10 sides is 35:100

The average in games where we have beaten current top 8 sides is 39:100

The average in games where we have beaten current top 7 sides is 53:100

The average in games where we have lost to teams currently ranked lower than us is 20:100"


on the article "Four talking points after England's narrowest-ever win over Italy" I said:


"Look at the kick:pass ratio from England’s last 8 games

Italy 20:100

Argentina 50:100

South Africa 53:100

Fiji 24:100

Samoa 22:100

Chile 12:100

Japan 25:100

Argentina 55:100

So (1) England spread it wide more yesterday than against anyone bar Chile, and (2) all of england’s best performances have been when we kick loads, and in every match where we kick loads we have had a good performance."


"In particular you're neglecting the impact of the type of D Felix Jones was trying to introduce, which demanded most of England's training energy at the time."


I'm not, actually, I'm hyper aware of that fact and of its impact. I think it is because of the defence that England's new attack faltered so much for the first three games, something you ignore when you try to judge England's attack in the six nations by taking an average of either the trys scored or the rucks completed over the whole tournament.


"International coaches don't just pick those styles like sweets from a sweet shop!"

Yeah, I know. England's defence wasn't exactly the same as SA's, but it was similar. England's attack did rely on turnovers more than the Irish system did, but it was still pretty similar to it, and then shifted to something similar-but-not-identitcal to the Labit/Nick Evans systems, which are themselves similar but not identical.

102 Go to comments
f
fl 3 hours ago
The Fergus Burke test and rugby's free market

"So who were these 6 teams and circumstances of Marcus's loses?"


so in the 2023 six nations, England lost both games where Marcus started at 10, which was the games against Scotland and France. The scotland game was poor, but spirited, and the french game was maybe the worst math england have played in almost 30 years. In all 3 games where Marcus didn't start England were pretty good.


The next game he started after that was the loss against Wales in the RWC warmups, which is one of only three games Borthwick has lost against teams currently ranked lower than england.


The next game he's started have been the last 7, so that's two wins against Japan, three losses against NZ, a loss to SA, and a loss to Australia (again, one of borthwicks only losses to teams ranked lower than england).


"I think I understand were you're coming from, and you make a good observation that the 10 has a fair bit to do with how fast a side can play (though what you said was a 'Marcus neutral' statement)"


no, it wasn't a marcus neutral statement.


"Fin could be, but as you've said with Marcus, that would require a lot of change elsewhere in the team 2 years out of a WC"


how? what? why? Fin could slot in easily; its Marcus who requires the team to change around him.


"Marcus will get a 6N to prove himself so to speak"


yes, the 2022 six nations, which was a disaster, just as its been a disaster every other time he's been given the reigns.

224 Go to comments
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