Olympics-bound Aussies still have plenty to ‘prove’ at Oceania Sevens
When the Oceania Sevens gets underway at Brisbane’s Ballymore Stadium on Friday, both the Australian women’s and men’s teams will arrive with the confidence and peace of mind that comes with securing their place at the Paris Olympics.
Brisbane's iconic rugby stadium, Ballymore, which received a lucrative $31.5 million upgrade earlier this year, will host the best teams in Oceania over three days.
But there’s much more than just national pride on the line.
When the likes of Samoa, Tonga, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu take the field on Friday through to Sunday, their Olympic dreams can be realised if they become champions of their pool.
The 2023 edition of the Oceania Sevens serves as an Olympic qualification event for the top-placed teams in both the men’s and women’s competitions.
But for teams like Australia, New Zealand and Fiji, they’ll still take the field in Brisbane but they won’t be competing for the same shot at destiny. They’ve already booked their ticket to Paris.
Instead, they’ll play other qualified teams alongside the main draw. For the Australian women’s side, they’ll take a New Zealand development side four times in three days – a team that includes a number of World Series champions and Olympic gold medallists.
The Aussies couldn’t be happier about it.
Sitting with Australian Sevens youngsters Teagan Levi and Bienne Terita at the team hotel ahead of the Oceania Sevens, both players spoke about the opportunity that they have to “prove” themselves a few weeks out from the SVNS season.
“Yeah, we’ve just been overseas. We went to Italy for a little training camp for two weeks and then went over to Ireland to play some footy over there as well in a comp against them and France,” Levi told RugbyPass.
“We just want to keep playing as much footy as we can.
“We went to Fiji as well. Pretty stoked to get the win over there, and as I said, just want to get the footy in the hands and get those combos right. We’ve been working really hard.
“Our preseason started quite a while ago but the official preseason started a month ago so we’ve just been working extra hard at training, doing those extra sessions and hopefully getting the work done before we get to Oceania to prove where we are.
“We want to win the gold medal and we’re prepared to do whatever it takes to achieve that.”
After winning the World Series in 2021/22, Australia came crashing down to earth last season as the Black Ferns ran riot during a practically perfect season.
But that the Aussies didn’t let that hurt scar them. The women in gold “came back in mid-June” for a pre-preseason of sorts, with the team travelling the world as they continue to work tirelessly for improvement.
Waiting for the Aussies on the other side of long plane rides has been some of the best teams in the world. When the team flew to Fiji, they ended up playing the hosts, USA, France and New Zealand in a “really good” hit out.
Including Australia, they’re four of the top five teams in women’s sevens, while Fiji placed sixth last season.
The Black Ferns Sevens are definitely the team to catch less than a year out from the Olympics in Paris, and the Aussies will get another chance to test themselves against a New Zealand development side in Brisbane.
“It was just really good for us to get game time to play against those players, I think that’s what Timmy (coach Tim Walsh) really wanted for us during our preseason,” Terita added.
“New Zealand are always good and they were probably our biggest competition during preseason as well as France – France were really good also. It was just really good for us to get really good game time, good quality football, and get those combos right.
“(We’ve got) some new players coming through… it just goes to show we’ve always got new talent coming through which really pushes us to be the best that we can be and produce really good rugby on the field.”
As for the men’s team, the Oceania Sevens could’ve been a whole lot more nerve-wracking if this year’s season finale went a bit differently.
Australia were beaten by Samoa 10-5 at London’s Twickenham Stadium in May, which set up a must-win clash with rivals Great Britain the seventh-placed playoff. A win would secure their spot at the Games.
The Australians overcame the pressure and lived up to the hype as they swept Team GB off the park with a commanding 34-5 victory.
While a young Aussie side prepares to park, they can breathe that little bit easier knowing that the team is off to Paris. But with the SVNS circuit starting in just a few weeks in Dubai, this tournament still serves as a decisive event.
“On the bus on the way here we were talking about how we’d be pretty stressed if we’re coming up for qualification. We’re kind of using this tournament as a warmup for the World Series like we’re playing quality sides like Fiji, New Zealand, Nui and the Oceania boys,” Dally Bird told RugbyPass.
“We know if we want to go deep into any World Series comps you’re going to come up against those teams and hopefully Samoa at the end of the tournament. We’re not taking this tournament lightly.
“We’ve got a lot of young boys but we’re expecting them to step up and we know we’ve got to step up as well.”
Australian squads for Oceania Sevens in Brisbane
Women’s squad
Sariah Paki, Bella Nasser, Kaitlin Shave, Madison Ashby, Maddison Levi, Tagan Levi, Faith Nathan, Demi Hayes, Bienne Terita, Sharni Smale, Charlotte Caslick, Dominique Du Toit, Alysia Leafau-Fakosilea
Men’s squad
Nick Malouf, Dally Bird, Aden Ekanayake, Ben Dalton, Tim Clements, James McGregor, Hayden Sargeant, Ben Dowling, Dietrich Roache, James Turner, Henry Palmer, Nathan Lawson
Latest Comments
Possibly. But this welsh team is no better than a good URC team at this point.
But a tough match is what is needed for the inexperienced in the group. Building depth etc.
Nobody learns anything pumping a team by 50.
Go to commentsJeepers. That’s a nuclear response given the context.
By all means back the man. But there’s no need to go overboard with calling him the world best coach.
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