Cape Town SVNS: Gold for Black Ferns

WRAP: New Zealand followed up second place in Dubai with a third victory in Cape Town to round out 2024 with a title celebration and steal an early march on the HSBC SVNS Series ahead of the break before Perth.

A dramatic final day at the Cape Town Stadium had already seen last year’s champions here, Australia, lose to a Nia Tolliver-inspired USA in the semi-finals.

The Eagles gave the Black Ferns Sevens an early scare in an exciting final, but experience told, as they pulled away in the second half.

Final: New Zealand weather USA storm to lift title

Nia Tolliver raced clear to score her seventh Cape Town try as USA sprinted into a 12-0 lead in the opening three minutes of a dramatic, end-to-end showpiece match.

New Zealand, who had shipped two tries before getting on the scoreboard in a thriller of a final in Dubai, fired back before the break, taking a two-point lead courtesy of scores from HSBC Player of the Final Jorja Miller and Jazmin Felix-Hotham.

Kelsey Teneti added a third midway through the second half to extend the Black Ferns’ Sevens lead, as USA lost a little composure. Dhys Faleafaga then finished off a patient edge-to-edge attacking move to take the Olympic champions out of sight.

A knock-on denied Katelyn Vahaakolo a late try – but it would only have added an extra gloss on a 26-12 victory.

New Zealand captain Sarah Hirini said pitchside immediately afterwards: “I’m so happy! We were pretty disappointed with last weekend but I’m absolutely stoked here. We’re going home with goodies for Christmas!”

“Look at all the All Black jerseys, all the Black Ferns Sevens jerseys in the stadium. We love Cape Town, we love South Africa and they always turn out for us.”

 

Bronze Final: France hold on to claim second bronze

France - playing as if they had a point to prove after they were nilled in their semi-final against New Zealand - raced into a three-try 17-0 lead in the bronze final against Australia, a rerun of last year’s Cape Town final.

Alycia Chrystiaens, Hawa Tounkara and Ian Jason all scored as Les Bleues flew out of the starting blocks, before Australia could get their game together.

Maddison Levi reduced the deficit at the end of the first half, with her fifth try of the weekend, her 20th of the HSBC SVNS season so far – and cut it again with a 100m breakout try midway through the second to pull the score back to 17-14, one score in it with just over three minutes left on the clock.

A red card for Lili Dezou for a high tackle, after a long delay for a potentially serious injury to Perrine Fagnen, made for a tense finish. But Les Bleues held on for the win.

Semi-finals: Brilliant Tolliver breaks USA into final

The sensational Tolliver left three Australian defenders in her wake as she scored her second try of the match with the clock in the red as USA repeated their Olympic bronze match heroics.

Australia – defending champions here – looked to be in full control after Maddison Levi scored their third try, her fourth at the Cape Town Stadium this weekend, after nine minutes.

But Tolliver got her first a minute later, to pull USA to within two, then broke several tackles to celebrate her way to the line with the last play of the game.

“We don’t always play to our potential. But today we did,” an exhausted Tolliver said.

After qualifying for the last four with a scruffy win over Japan on day one, a disciplined and physical New Zealand dictated terms from first whistle to last in the opening semi-final against France. “We just turned up today,” Kelsey Teneti said pitchside immediately afterwards.

Seven different players scored for the Black Ferns Sevens as they won 43-0 to avenge their defeat at the same stage in Cape Town last year.

Play-off places: Canada claim fifth-place finish

Hana Nagata’s yellow card proved costly, as Japan conceded 12 points in the two minutes she was sidelined. Maya Addai then scored her first HSBC SVNS try to take the final score to 22-7 for the Olympic silver medalists.

Asia Hogan-Rochester had earlier bagged a hat-trick as Canada, who finished 10th in Dubai, beat Great Britain 27-12 to set-up a fifth-place play-off against Japan.

Japan, meanwhile, had held off Ireland’s second-half fightback to win an enthralling fifth-place semi-final 26-22, having been 19-5 ahead at the break.

In the seventh-place play-off, Katie Shillaker scored the first two tries of her international sevens career, and Ellie Boatman her fifth in Cape Town, to take her season tally to 14, as Great Britain finished the weekend on a positive note with a 24-7 win over illness-hit Ireland.

China’s defence told at the death, as they held off a late fightback from Fijiana, surviving a penalty decision against them after the hooter to win 14-12 and claim ninth place.

They had earlier scored three second-half tries in quick succession to beat Spain 19-7.

Having lost a thrilling, end-to-end ninth-place semi-final against Fiji 22-19, an organised Brazil finished 11th in Cape Town with a disciplined and clinical 26-14 win over Spain.

Day Two Results

China 19-7 Spain

Brazil 19-22 Fiji

Japan 26-22 Ireland

Canada 27-12 Great Britain

Spain 14-26 Brazil

China 14-12 Fiji

New Zealand 43-0 France

Australia 19-24 United States

Ireland 7-24 Great Britain

Japan 7-22 Canada

France 17-14 Australia

New Zealand 26-12 United States