2014 Oceania Women's Sevens Championship

The 2014 Oceania Women's Sevens Championship was the fourth edition of the tournament. It was held from 3–4 October 2014 in Noosa, Australia.[1][2][3] Samoa was ranked ahead of PNG due to winning their head-to-head match. There were no semifinals but the top two teams, New Zealand and Australia, played off in a final to decide the championship title.

2014 Oceania Women's Sevens Championship
Host nationAustralia Australia
Date3-4 October
Cup
Champion New Zealand
Runner-up Australia
Tournament details
Matches played22
2013
2015

Tournament edit

Nation Played Won Drawn Lost PF PA Diff
  New Zealand 6 6 0 0 205 31 174
  Australia 6 5 0 1 191 24 167
  Fiji 6 4 0 2 181 48 133
  Samoa 6 3 0 3 55 138 -83
  Papua New Guinea 6 2 0 4 75 134 -59
  Cook Islands 6 1 0 5 40 172 -132
  Tonga 6 0 0 6 31 231 -200

Day 1

3 October
Fiji  38 - 0  Papua New Guinea
3 October
Australia  41 - 0  Tonga
3 October
New Zealand  41 - 0  Cook Islands
3 October
Samoa  24 - 12  Tonga
3 October
Australia  24 - 5  Fiji
3 October
Papua New Guinea  24 - 10  Cook Islands
3 October
Papua New Guinea  34 - 14  Tonga
3 October
Samoa  19 - 0  Cook Islands
3 October
New Zealand  24 - 7  Fiji
3 October
Tonga  5 - 30  Cook Islands
3 October
Samoa  12 - 10  Papua New Guinea
3 October
New Zealand  19 - 17  Australia

Day 2

4 October
Fiji  50 - 0  Tonga
4 October
Australia  33 - 0  Cook Islands
4 October
New Zealand  40 - 0  Samoa
4 October
Fiji  50 - 0  Cook Islands
4 October
Australia  45 - 0  Samoa
4 October
New Zealand  29 - 7  Papua New Guinea
4 October
Fiji  31 - 0  Samoa
4 October
Australia  31 - 0  Papua New Guinea
4 October
New Zealand  52 - 0  Tonga

Final

4 October
New Zealand  31 - 10  Australia

References edit

  1. ^ "Big Guns Progress on Day One at Oceania Sevens". Federation of Oceania Rugby Unions. 3 October 2014. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  2. ^ "Fiji Crowned 2014 Oceania Sevens Champion". Federation of Oceania Rugby Unions. 4 October 2014. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Australia and NZ participate in strongest ever Oceania Sevens". www.rugby.com.au. Archived from the original on 25 September 2020. Retrieved 27 November 2021.