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The unlikely moment that set Marcos Moneta on the path to sevens stardom

By Frankie Deges reporting from Buenos Aires
Marcos Moneta of Argentina celebrates after their sides victory during day 2 of HSBC Dubai Sevens at Sevens Stadium on December 3, 2023 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Gaspafotos/MB Media/Getty Images)

It was in Scotland, in 1883, that rugby sevens was first played. The Melrose Club needed funding and a sports day was held. With rugby being the sport that had taken alight in the Border country, a butcher apprentice who played for the club came up with the idea of the shortened version of the game.

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Despite the game booming in the country, when sevens went global more than a century later, Scotland never showed any real presence.
Ironically, one of the biggest superstars in the sevens game, prolific try-scorer Marcos Moneta, constantly celebrates with the St. Andrew’s cross.

The Argentine flyer, since shining in his first Olympic Games in Tokyo, in 2021, after scoring a try crosses his arms.

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There is a back story, of course.

Having attended the St. Andrew’s Scots School in the leafy northern suburbs of Buenos Aires and honed his rugby skills at San Andrés, the FP club, “My mates asked me to celebrate so that they knew I was thinking of them, and I started with the St. Andrew’s Cross for the club and then two Ls for my school mates. I then put them together into one celebratory motion,” he opens when speaking to RugbyPass in a very warm midday in Los Pumas 7s home HQ in Maschwitz, about one hour north of downtown BA.

San Andrés, founded as a club in 1911, 73 years after the school was established, has never risen high in the Buenos Aires RU. This year, after a historic season, they won promotion to the Second Division in which they will play next year. Moneta could not play, but shirtless, was seen signing and supporting his team throughout the game and celebrating well into the night.

“Marcos,” says club member Rodrigo Arizaga, “represents all that is good at the club. An example on and off the field, he has time for everybody, will help out on Tuesdays, Thursdays. He is a beacon for the kids, showing that you can make it big coming from San Andrés.

With Santiago Vera Feld, also in the Puma 7s squad, they have been helping our senior sevens team prepare for the end-of-season tournament.”

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Always amiable, Moneta, 24, shines when speaking about San Andrés.

“I never left the club; with Santi, we coach the U17s, attend games, go to the seniors’ training season. One of the good things of amateur rugby is that you are there because you chose to be there. You enjoy the social aspect.”

“And San Andrés has helped me grow as a person, as a player; it gave me values. I only pay back as much as I can.”

Playing in age grade teams, they never competed in the elite, yet “we were taught well, developed, grew, and were able to express ourselves.”

The speedster can nowadays clock 40km an hour, he started growing and getting faster around 17, when he shone in a domestic sevens tournament.

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A few days later, “I was trying the suit for my prom night when the club manager called to inform me I’d been invited to a national sevens training squad.”

Buenos Aires was hosting the U18 Youth Olympic Games in 2018 and sevens was part of the ticket. “I was totally unaware of the Games and went in with the goal to enjoy myself. At that time, my goal was to finish high school, I had no dreams of international rugby, only playing for my club’s FXV.”

He won an Olympic Gold Medal with teammates Juan Martín González and Rodrigo Isgró, who will play France this weekend.

Soon after, he was preparing for the World Rugby U20 Championship to be played at home in Rosario 2019. A shoo-in for that squad, coach Santiago Gómez Cora took him to Hong Kong, the first of 26 SVNS tournaments he’s played.

That experience, and the U20s, certainly left a mark in him. Preparing as a professional was something that he wanted more of.

With a second U20 Championship on the horizon, Gómez Cora started taunting him as Tokyo 2020 was fast approaching. And when an injury gave Moneta the opportunity, he joined the sevens team for Los Angeles and Vancouver. Upon arriving back, the pandemic changed the world.

No longer eligible for the U20s in 2021, he became a full-time sevens player and his game took off. After helping Argentina to an unlikely silver medal, turning the quarterfinal around with only five players against the Blitzboks, he was chosen World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year.

And, for the following two seasons was in the SVNS Dream Team. “It was very nice, but I took them as an accolade for the team because I did my job which was to score tries. I shone as Rodri Isgró did last year, but it was all thanks to the team.”

Moneta had been fortunate with injuries and as Los Pumas Sevens were owning the 2024 series, a freak accident in the opening game in Hong Kong saw him break his fibula. It was then a mad dash to get him fit in time for Paris.

“The injury taught me a number of life lessons. You can always be in a worse place, so you have to be thankful. Things happen and time passes. The good and the bad eventually will be in the past.”

The team won the SVNS League but lost in Madrid the Series finale against France.

Whilst Moneta did make it to his second Olympic Games, the team was carrying a few niggling injuries amongst key players and things did not go to plan.

“Rugby opened the Games and certain things were not right in the Village: food was not good, we had no water for a couple of days. Certainly not excuses, but something was off.”

When the team faced eventual gold winners France in the quarterfinals, a bad start left them trailing 21-0. With the whole stadium against the Argentines from day one – the French were still hurting from Messi’s World Cup win in 2022 – the tense atmosphere went against Argentina and the team left the Games empty-handed.

Although he has not yet rewatched the final, “I still have flashbacks from Paris and it continues to hurt. I’ve processed it quite a bit, but when I can’t sleep it comes back.”

Hours away from jumping on a long journey that will take him again to Dubai and Cape Town, his confidence levels are high. With only two newcomers that will be eased into the team, Argentina has a hungry squad.

“The goal is to stay in the top three and I want to win in LA and be Series champions.”

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J
JW 2 hours ago
'Passionate reunion of France and New Zealand shows Fabien Galthie is wrong to rest his stars'

Ok, managed to read the full article..

... New Zealand’s has only 14 and the professional season is all over within four months. In France, club governance is the responsibility of an independent organisation [the Ligue Nationale de Rugby or LNR] which is entirely separate from the host union [the Fédération Française de Rugby or FFR]. Down south New Zealand Rugby runs the provincial and the national game.

That is the National Provincial Championship, a competition of 14 representative union based teams run through the SH international window and only semi professional (paid only during it's running). It is run by NZR and goes for two and a half months.


Super Rugby is a competition involving 12 fully professional teams, of which 5 are of New Zealand eligibility, and another joint administered team of Pacific Island eligibility, with NZR involvement. It was a 18 week competition this year, so involved (randomly chosen I believe) extra return fixtures (2 or 3 home and away derbys), and is run by Super Rugby Pacific's own independent Board (or organisation). The teams may or may not be independently run and owned (note, this does not necessarily mean what you think of as 'privately owned').


LNR was setup by FFR and the French Government to administer the professional game in France. In New Zealand, the Players Association and Super Rugby franchises agreed last month to not setup their own governance structure for professional rugby and re-aligned themselves with New Zealand Rugby. They had been proposing to do something like the English model, I'm not sure how closely that would have been aligned to the French system but it did not sound like it would have French union executive representation on it like the LNR does.

In the shaky isles the professional pyramid tapers to a point with the almighty All Blacks. In France the feeling for country is no more important than the sense of fierce local identity spawned at myriad clubs concentrated in the southwest. Progress is achieved by a nonchalant shrug and the wide sweep of nuanced negotiation, rather than driven from the top by a single intense focus.

Yes, it is pretty much a 'representative' selection system at every level, but these union's are having to fight for their existence against the regime that is NZR, and are currently going through their own battle, just as France has recently as I understand it. A single focus, ala the French game, might not be the best outcome for rugby as a whole.


For pure theatre, it is a wonderful article so far. I prefer 'Ntamack New Zealand 2022' though.

The young Crusader still struggles to solve the puzzle posed by the shorter, more compact tight-heads at this level but he had no problem at all with Colombe.

It was interesting to listen to Manny during an interview on Maul or Nothing, he citied that after a bit of banter with the All Black's he no longer wanted one of their jersey's after the game. One of those talks was an eye to eye chat with Tamaiti Williams, there appear to be nothing between the lock and prop, just a lot of give and take. I thought TW angled in and caused Taylor to pop a few times, and that NZ were lucky to be rewarded.

f you have a forward of 6ft 8ins and 145kg, and he is not at all disturbed by a dysfunctional set-piece, you are in business.

He talked about the clarity of the leadership that helped alleviate any need for anxiety at the predicaments unfolding before him. The same cannot be said for New Zealand when they had 5 minutes left to retrieve a match winning penalty, I don't believe. Did the team in black have much of a plan at any point in the game? I don't really call an autonomous 10 vehicle they had as innovative. I think Razor needs to go back to the dealer and get a new game driver on that one.

Vaa’i is no match for his power on the ground. Even in reverse, Meafou is like a tractor motoring backwards in low gear, trampling all in its path.

Vaa'i actually stops him in his tracks. He gets what could have been a dubious 'tackle' on him?

A high-level offence will often try to identify and exploit big forwards who can be slower to reload, and therefore vulnerable to two quick plays run at them consecutively.

Yes he was just standing on his haunches wasn't he? He mentioned that in the interview, saying that not only did you just get up and back into the line to find the opposition was already set and running at you they also hit harder than anything he'd experienced in the Top 14. He was referring to New Zealands ultra-physical, burst-based Super style of course, which he was more than a bit surprised about. I don't blame him for being caught out.


He still sent the obstruction back to the repair yard though!

What wouldn’t the New Zealand rugby public give to see the likes of Mauvaka and Meafou up front..

Common now Nick, don't go there! Meafou showed his Toulouse shirt and promptly got his citizenship, New Zealand can't have him, surely?!?


As I have said before with these subjects, really enjoy your enthusiasm for their contribution on the field and I'd love to see more of their shapes running out for Vern Cotter and the like styled teams.

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