Hong Kong Sevens: All Blacks claim gold, BlitzBoks end sixth

DAY THREE WRAP: Leroy Carter beat the dead-ball line and two defenders in a high-speed chase as New Zealand raced to a big early lead in the first half before Fiji - looking for consecutive win number 42 in Hong Kong - hit back from 90 metres out.

Cody Vai had opened the scoring with just 30 seconds on the clock as the All Blacks opened with a statement of intent in their first Hong Kong final since 2016, with Sione Molia doubling their try tally six minutes later, before Carter struck to take the score to 19-0.

Vuiviwa Naduvalu finished off a length-of-the-pitch riposte 60 seconds later to get Fiji on the board - but Nigardhi McGarvey-Black extended the All Blacks’ lead again to 24-7 before a breathless opening period ended.

Joseva Talacolo got Fiji’s second early in the second half - and a consolation third on the final whistle as New Zealand claimed their first Hong Kong title since 2014.

Bronze final: France third after a thriller

The competition had already exploded into life, to the delight of a large crowd at Hong Kong Stadium. Great Britain’s men were unable to repeat the medal-winning heroics of the women’s team, as they lost an enthralling encounter against France 19-17, Stephen Parez with the decisive score after an end-to-end encounter.

“It feels really good,” Jonathan Laugel said afterwards. “We’ve had some difficult games - all of them were really tough - but we showed consistency. I’m really proud of the guys, even though I would have preferred to play the next [match] against Fiji.”

Fifth place: Argentina’s Osadczuk uses his head to claim win

Meanwhile, South Africa could not secure the fifth spot as they went down to Argentina.

A moment of football-style genius/madness ended a slow-burn thriller between Argentina and South Africa. Scoreless for 12 minutes, the game exploded into life when Joaquin Pellandini touched down to give Argentina a 7-0 lead. Ricardo Duarttee crossed just before the final whistle for the Blitzbokke to take the score to 7-5.

South Africa needed to claim the restart as the clock ticked into the red. But they didn’t get the chance, as Matías Osadczuk headed the kick-off into touch to end the match.

Argentina had earlier ended Spain’s Hong Kong adventure with a workmanlike 19-0 win, while South Africa ran in six tries to beat USA 38-7.

Results:

Day One:

New Zealand 29-5 Kenya

Ireland 7-14 South Africa

Fiji 12-7 Samoa

Argentina 17-7 Canada

United States 0-7Spain

Australia 26-5 Japan

Great Britain 14-12 Uruguay

France 21-14 Hong Kong China

Day Two:

New Zealand 12-7 South Africa

Ireland 26-14 Kenya

Fiji 40-7 Canada

Argentina 26-19 Samoa

United States 31-0 Japan

Australia 12-7 Spain

Great Britain 33-12 Hong Kong China

France 17-14 Uruguay

Kenya 17-26 South Africa

Ireland 7-26 New Zealand

Samoa 29-5 Canada

Argentina 19-26 Fiji

Spain 31-7 Japan

Australia 5-24 United States

Uruguay 24-14 Hong Kong

Day three:

9TH PLACE QUARTERFINAL

Ireland 17 - 0 Canada

Uruguay 40 - 0 Japan

Samoa 26 - 12 Kenya

Australia 22 - 5 Hong Kong China

Cup Quarterfinals

New Zealand 24 - 10 Argentina

France 19 - 14 Spain

Fiji 10 - 7 South Africa

USA 10 - 21 Great Britain

13TH PLACE SEMIFINAL

Canada 19 - 12 Japan

Kenya 10 - 19 Hong Kong China

9TH PLACE SEMIFINAL

Uruguay 7 - 31 Ireland

Samoa 15 - 12 Australia

Argentina 19 - 0 Spain

5TH PLACE SEMIFINAL

South Africa 38 - 7 USA

CUP SEMIFINALS

France 7 - 12 New Zealand

Fiji 19 - 14 Great Britain

13TH PLACE PLAY-OFF

Canada 7 - 17 Hong Kong China

9TH PLACE PLAY-OFF

Samoa 17 - 19 Ireland

5TH PLACE PLAY-OFF

Argentina 7 - 5 South Africa

BRONZE FINAL

Great Britain 17 - 19 France

CUP FINAL

Fiji 17 - 24 New Zealand