Rugby sevens at the 2017 Pacific Mini Games

Rugby sevens at the 2017 Pacific Mini Games was held in Port Vila, Vanuatu at the Korman Stadium, from 8 to 9 December 2017.[1][2] There was no women's tournament for this sport at these games. The competition also doubled as the final Oceania qualifying spot to the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens in San Francisco.[3]

Men's rugby sevens
at the 2017 Pacific Mini Games
VenueKorman Stadium
LocationPort Vila, Vanuatu
Dates8–9 December 2017
Teams10
Medalists
gold medal 
silver medal 
bronze medal 
← 2013

Samoa edged Fiji to win the gold medal.[4][5] Tonga beat the Solomon Islands for the bronze medal.[3][5] Since Fiji and Samoa had already qualified for the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens, the final World Cup spot went to Tonga.[3][1]

Participating teams edit

Twelve teams were initially expected to compete in the competition.[1] Tahiti withdrew at the last minute due to the French Polynesian government's decision to boycott the games.[6][7]

Pool Stage edit

Pool A edit

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
  Fiji 4 4 0 0 149 5 +144 12
  Solomon Islands 4 3 0 1 71 58 +13 10
  New Caledonia 4 2 0 2 39 69 –33 8
  Niue 4 1 0 3 25 91 –66 6
  Tuvalu 4 0 0 4 26 87 –61 4

Source:[8]

8 December
New Caledonia  17–5  Niue
Korman Stadium
8 December
Solomon Islands  26–14  Tuvalu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Fiji  43–0  New Caledonia
Korman Stadium
8 December
Niue  15–12  Tuvalu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Solomon Islands  21–10  New Caledonia
Korman Stadium
8 December
Fiji  43–0  Niue
Korman Stadium
8 December
Fiji  29–5  Solomon Islands
Korman Stadium
8 December
New Caledonia  12–0  Tuvalu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Fiji  34–0  Tuvalu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Solomon Islands  19–5  Niue
Korman Stadium

Pool B edit

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
  Samoa 4 4 0 0 154 15 +139 12
  Tonga 4 3 0 1 106 31 +75 10
  Nauru 4 2 0 2 60 90 –30 8
  Vanuatu 4 1 0 3 45 129 –84 6
  Wallis and Futuna 4 0 0 4 32 132 –100 4

Source:[8]

8 December
Tonga  33–0  Wallis and Futuna
Korman Stadium
8 December
Nauru  24–12  Vanuatu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Samoa  24–5  Tonga
Korman Stadium
8 December
Vanuatu  26–17  Wallis and Futuna
Korman Stadium
8 December
Tonga  32–0  Nauru
Korman Stadium
8 December
Samoa  42–5  Wallis and Futuna
Korman Stadium
8 December
Tonga  36–7  Vanuatu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Samoa  36–5  Nauru
Korman Stadium
8 December
Samoa  52–0  Vanuatu
Korman Stadium
8 December
Nauru  31–10  Wallis and Futuna
Korman Stadium

Knockout stage edit

Ninth–place playoff edit

9 December
Wallis and Futuna  19–14  Tuvalu
Korman Stadium

Plate Pool edit

9 December
New Caledonia  24–0  Vanuatu
Korman Stadium
9 December
Niue  15–0  Nauru
Korman Stadium

Seventh-place playoff edit

9 December
Vanuatu  12–7  Niue
Korman Stadium

Fifth-place playoff edit

9 December
New Caledonia  17–12  Nauru
Korman Stadium

Cup Semi-finals edit

 
Semi-finalsCup Final
 
      
 
9 December
 
 
  Samoa33
 
9 December
 
  Solomon Islands0
 
  Samoa14
 
9 December
 
  Fiji7
 
  Fiji41
 
 
  Tonga7
 
3rd Place
 
 
9 December
 
 
  Tonga24
 
 
  Solomon Islands19

Final rankings edit

Legend
Championship final
Qualified for 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens
Rank Team
    Samoa
    Fiji
    Tonga
4   Solomon Islands
5   New Caledonia
6   Nauru
7   Vanuatu
8   Niue
9   Wallis and Futuna
10   Tuvalu

Source:[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Ratulevu, Pate (2017-12-08). "Regional Support for 2017 Pacific Mini Games". Official Website of Fiji Rugby Union. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  2. ^ "Sport: Sevens minnow sets sights on World Cup". RNZ. 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  3. ^ a b c "Tonga book ticket to San Francisco". www.world.rugby. 2017-12-10. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  4. ^ Begum, Faria (2017-12-10). "Samoa claims gold after beating Fiji in the rugby final of the Pacific Mini Games". www.fijivillage.com. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  5. ^ a b "Sport: New Caledonia extends medals lead at Mini Games". RNZ. 2017-12-11. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  6. ^ "Tahiti athletes to compete under neutral banner". The Vanuatu Independent. 1 December 2017. Archived from the original on 15 December 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Sport: Tahiti rugby players pull out of Mini Games". RNZ. 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  8. ^ a b "South Pacific Games - Rugby sevens result". rugby7.com. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  9. ^ "Pacific Mini Games : Samoa wins gold but Tonga secures the bigger prize". One Papua New Guinea. 2017-12-09. Retrieved 2023-11-30.