Fiji win dedicated to flood victims
Fiji won the Hong Kong Sevens on Sunday in a tight match against New Zealand 35-28 that takes them just two points off top spot in the overall standings for the World Series title.
"I'm very happy, especially for the boys, for the way they won the game," Fiji's coach Alifereti Dere said after the match.
"Everyone in Fiji will be in a happy mood, especially after the last months and the floods," he said, referring to the deluge that lashed the Pacific nation in January and killed at least six people and displaced some 3,500.
"This win will encourage the people back home."
Fiji got off to a blistering start in the final, going 14-0 ahead, but New Zealand's Mark Jackman kept his team in the contest with two tries to go into the break equal 14-14.
In the second half Fiji quickly scored their third try of the night and the Kiwis struggled to respond to their opponent's precise passing and pace, until a breakaway try from Bryce Heem gave Gordon Tietjens' men some hope.
It was dashed when Fiji scored again in the last minute of the match, and as the final whistle went the players fell to their knees to celebrate what was their record 13th title victory in Hong Kong, including two World Cup wins.
"They [New Zealand] just wanted to play, we wanted to win," Dere said.
The result puts Fiji on 109 points in the overall standings, just two behind New Zealand with three legs left to play -- the next coming at the end of this month in Tokyo.
Fiji's solo World Series win came in 2005-06 while New Zealand have taken the title nine times.
"No team in the world would beat a Fiji like that," said Kiwis coach Tietjens.
"Great Final, they were explosive, I've never seen Fiji like that."
The Fijians looked in top form from the start of the three-day event in Hong Kong, breezing through their group matches, making light work of Argentina 26-7 in the quarters and edging out England 14-7 in the semis.