2022 London Sevens
Sevens World Series XXIII
Host nation England
Date28–29 May 2022
Cup
Champion Australia
Runner-up New Zealand
Third Fiji
Tournament details
Matches played45
Tries scored128 (average 2.84 per match)
Most points Ngarohi McGarvey-Black (50 points)
Most tries Terry Kennedy (8 tries)
2019
2023

The 2022 London Sevens was the twentieth edition of the annual rugby sevens event held at Twickenham Stadium, Richmond, London.

The tournament winners were Australia. Australia won their second London Sevens event, beating trans-tasman rivals New Zealand in a thrilling extra-time victory (19–14). Two-time back-to-back defending champions Fiji finished third, beating Pacific Island neighbours Samoa 31–26.[1][2]

The final victory was the first Sevens Series Australia has won since their home Sevens Series win in 2018 (4 years, 121 days). Following the event Australia jumped from third to second on the Sevens Series ladder. Similarly New Zealand jumped two places following their second-place finish (eleventh to ninth).[3][4]

In World Rugby Sevens Series history, the second-last event of the series has been almost futile regarding seasonal points that the teams are vying for as most teams' points accrued in the second-last event would not affect their overall standing. However, during the 2021–22 season, the season standings pre- and post-London Sevens have been the most competitive since the establishment of the Sevens Series, with just eight points separating the top three teams (two points between the top two) before the tournament and six points after it.[3] By the final event, there are mathematically four teams capable of taking the 2021–22 World Rugby Sevens Series title.[5]

Format

The sixteen teams were drawn into four pools of four. Each team played the three opponents in their pool once. The top two teams from each pool advanced to the Cup bracket, with the losers of the quarter-finals vying for a fifth-place finish. The remaining eight teams that finished third or fourth in their pool played off for 9th place, with the losers of the 9th-place quarter-finals competing for 13th place.

Teams

The sixteen national teams competing in London were:[6]

Pool stage

The pools were officially announced on 25 May.[6]

  Team advances to the Cup quarter-finals

Pool A

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 Fiji 3 3 0 0 93 55 +38 9
 Spain 3 2 0 1 87 56 +31 7
 United States 3 1 0 2 62 71 –9 5
 Wales 3 0 0 3 53 113 –60 3
28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
United States 10–26 Spain
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Fiji 38–17 Wales
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
United States 33–19 Wales
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Fiji 29–19 Spain
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Spain 42–17 Wales
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Fiji 26–19 United States
Report
Twickenham Stadium

Pool B

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 South Africa 3 3 0 0 69 52 +17 9
 Ireland 3 2 0 1 51 54 –3 7
 Argentina 3 1 0 2 66 48 +18 5
 Kenya 3 0 0 3 35 67 –32 3
28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Argentina 19–26 South Africa
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Ireland 17–14 Kenya
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Argentina 26–0 Kenya
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Ireland 12–19 South Africa
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
South Africa 24–21 Kenya
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Ireland 22–21 Argentina
Report
Twickenham Stadium

Pool C

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 New Zealand 3 3 0 0 100 40 +60 9
 Australia 3 2 0 1 73 48 +25 7
 France 3 1 0 2 45 78 –33 5
 Canada 3 0 0 3 33 85 –52 3
28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Australia 19–24 New Zealand
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
France 19–14 Canada
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Australia 26–5 Canada
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
France 7–36 New Zealand
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
New Zealand 40–14 Canada
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
France 19–28 Australia
Report
Twickenham Stadium

Pool D

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
 Samoa 3 3 0 0 73 46 +27 9
 England 3 2 0 1 76 55 +21 7
 Scotland 3 1 0 2 53 40 +13 5
 Japan 3 0 0 3 34 95 –61 3
28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
England 19–17 Scotland
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Samoa 33–15 Japan
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
England 38–12 Japan
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Samoa 14–12 Scotland
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Scotland 24–7 Japan
Report
Twickenham Stadium

28 May
GMT (UTC±0)
Samoa 26–19 England
Report
Twickenham Stadium

Knockout stage

13th–16th playoffs

 
13th place Semi-finals13th place Final
 
      
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 Japan14
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Kenya5
 
 Japan19
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Canada26
 
 Wales21
 
 
 Canada22
 

9th–12th playoffs

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finals9th Place Final
 
          
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 United States26
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Japan24
 
 United States31
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 France19
 
 France31
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Kenya0
 
 United States5
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Argentina31
 
 Scotland14
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Wales5
 
 Scotland12
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Argentina26
 
 Argentina28
 
 
 Canada7
 

5th–8th playoffs

 
5th place Semi-finals5th place Final
 
      
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 England12
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Ireland36
 
 Ireland5
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 South Africa14
 
 Spain12
 
 
 South Africa24
 

Cup playoffs

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsCup Final
 
          
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 
 Fiji36
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 England10
 
 Fiji19
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 New Zealand22
 
 New Zealand17
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Ireland7
 
 New Zealand14
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Australia19
 
 Samoa34
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Spain12
 
 Samoa14
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Australia28 Third place
 
 South Africa17
 
29 May – Twickenham Stadium
 
 Australia21
 
 Fiji31
 
 
 Samoa26
 

Placings

Place  Team Points
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Australia 22
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  New Zealand 19
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Fiji 17
4  Samoa 15
5  South Africa 13
6  Ireland 12
7  England 10
 Spain 10
Place  Team Points
9  Argentina 8
10  United States 7
11  France 5
 Scotland 5
13  Canada 3
14  Japan 2
15  Wales 1
 Kenya 1

References

  1. ^ "Australia earn stunning gold in London as HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series title race goes down to the wire". world.rugby. World Rugby. 29 May 2022.
  2. ^ ""I couldn't be prouder" – Nick Malouf on Australia's historic win in HSBC London Sevens". World Rugby. 30 May 2022.
  3. ^ a b "HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series Standings". World Rugby. 26 May 2022. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022.
  4. ^ "HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series Stadnings". world.rugby. World Rugby.
  5. ^ "Four teams aiming to win Sevens Series title in LA". World Rugby. 26 August 2022.
  6. ^ a b "London welcomes the stars of rugby sevens". World Rugby. 25 May 2022.
Sevens Series XXIII Preceded by2022 France Sevens 2022 London Sevens Succeeded by2022 USA Sevens London Sevens Preceded by2019 London Sevens 2022 London Sevens Succeeded by2023 London Sevens