‘Sh*t yeah, I love losing’: Black Ferns Sevens stunned by France
Black Ferns Sevens great Portia Woodman-Wickliffe has explained why she loves losing after New Zealand were stunned by France 26-21 in a thrilling Pool A clash at Hong Kong Stadium.
Vancouver and Los Angeles Cup final winners New Zealand looked promising in their opening two pool matches as they recorded strong wins over Great Britain and Brazil.
But their upcoming opponents France, who are only one place behind the Kiwis on the overall SVNS Series standings, were equally as impressive during their two wins over the same opponents.
In the last women’s pool game on day two at the prestigious Hong Kong Sevens, milestone woman Machaela Blyde inspired New Zealand’s red-hot start with a rapid double inside five minutes.
NRLW-bound Stacey Waaka also added to the Black Ferns Sevens’ score just after the break, but Les Bleues fought their way back with tries to Jade Ulutule and Chloe Jacquet.
The fixture was decided with the final play of the match. With New Zealand left defending on their own try line, Seraphine Okemba crashed over for the match-winning score.
“I think we look at that game and a lot of it comes from our little mistakes,” Portia Woodman-Wickliffe told RugbyPass. “Not taking anything away from France, they bring pressure.
“We see them playing exactly the way we like to play so they’re the best team in the world so we’re grateful to have that experience.
“To lose, it gives you fire, it allows you to go home and go back and learn and grow from there. Looking forward to the next one – we don’t know who’ve got next.”
That defeat is the Black Ferns Sevens’ first pool stage defeat of the 2023/24 season. It’s also their first loss since their thrilling quarter-final defeat to arch-rivals Australia at SVNS Perth in January.
But as the old sporting cliché goes, you learn more from your losses than your wins. As the defending champions here in Hong Kong China, the New Zealanders still seem supremely confident.
It wasn’t just their all-business demeanour as they walked down the tunnel which sparked confidence, but also Woodman-Wickliffe’s candid explanation of why losing can be a positive.
“Sh*t yeah, sh*t yeah. I love losing and we’re grateful that we had France in a pool round and not a quarter or a semi-final,” the all-time Rugby World Cup leading try scorer said
“To experience that gives us fuel. It allows us to go check ourselves because there were some moments we left out on the field – drop ball, penalties, all that sort of stuff.
“It allows us to go home and work on that.”
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As I said, there are legitimate criticisms of Foster and I made plenty of them.
Absolutely injury was affecting Cane’s performances.
But if you are going to do that, you have to acknowledge Foster’s role in the moments that went right.
During his tenure, comments sections were packed with how the latest win had nothing to do with Foster it was all his assistants.
And when they lost, you’d think Foster and Cane were the only two people on the field the way the public carried on.
Christ it was embarrassing.
Go to commentsKiwicentric response, no surprises there. But even if you look at a team like the Tahs, last this year, they are truly formidable on paper! The end of then Rebels may spell the beginning of Super success for Oz.
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