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Fiji hand All Blacks Sevens heavy loss to secure spot in Perth quarters

Terio Veilawa of Fiji crosses for a try during the match between Fiji and n on day two of the HSBC Perth SVNS at HBF Park on January 25, 2025 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

HSBC SVNS Series leaders Fiji have secured their spot in the Men’s Cup quarterfinals after recording a much-needed 33-5 win over New Zealand at Perth’s HBF Park on Saturday.

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On the back of their title-winning run to glory at the season-opening event in Dubai and another strong outing in Cape Town last month, Fiji emerged as the top team on the men’s standings with 36 competition points from those two stops.

Fiji would’ve been widely considered one of the favourites to secure the first sevens title of the new year in Perth, but their favouritism took a blow in game one. In one of the biggest upsets in SVNS Series history, Fiji started their tournament in Perth with a shock loss to Uruguay.

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The Fijians had beaten Uruguay by an emphatic 70-7 scoreline at Cape Town’s DHL Stadium and they appeared to be on track for another big win in Perth after an idyllic start on a scorching January morning. But the Uruguayans managed to claw their way back.

From a 17-point deficit, Uruguay rallied to knock off the Fijians 24-17. Fiji bounced back later on day one with a hard-fought 21-14 win over newly promoted Kenya, which set the stage for a blockbuster showdown on Saturday morning against their traditional foe.

New Zealand also beat Kenya but lost to Uruguay, putting them on four competition points in Perth from their two matches. On day two, Kenya beat Uruguay 19-15, so both Fiji and New Zealand had to win to secure their spot in the Cup knockout rounds.

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The All Blacks Sevens looked the more threatening of the two teams early on as they made their way deep into Fiji’s half, but against the run of play, Iowane Teba raced away for a long-range try as the Fijians registered the first points of this Pool C clash.

SVNS Series veteran Andrew Knewstubb hit back for the New Zealanders a few minutes later, but with that score going unconverted, the men in black still trailed their great rivals by a slender two-point margin.

Joji Nasova scored just before the half-time break, and a try to Pilipo Bukayaro early in the second term saw Fiji fly out to a 19-5 advantage. As the live ladder on the broadcast showed at the time, New Zealand sat in third place in their pool.

It was tense. Fiji had one foot in the Men’s quarterfinals while the All Blacks Sevens were frighteningly close to relying on other results – 12 months on from their pool stage exit at the very same tournament in Western Australia.

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An incredible offload set up Viwa Naduvalo’s try in the 12th minute, with that score all but ending New Zealand’s hopes of victory. Terio Veilawa also added another five-pointer in the final play which saw the All Blacks Sevens finish third in their pool.

“A little blip on the radar yesterday with the defeat to Uruguay but restoring their position as top dog and Fiji are through to the quarterfinals 33 points to 5. Absolutely emphatic over their rivals,” commentator Rikki Swannell said on the broadcast.

“New Zealand, well it’s written on their faces isn’t it? They are in a jam, struggling to find a way out at the moment.”

At the time of writing, the New Zealanders no longer control their destiny. They will need to wait for other results to see if they’ve done enough to qualify for the quarterfinals at SVNS Perth.


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J
JW 1 hour ago
Everyone knows Robertson is not supposed to be doing the coaching

Yeah it’s not actually that I’m against the idea this is not good enough, I just don’t know whos responsible for the appalling selections, whether the game plan will work, whether it hasn’t worked because Razor has had too much input or too little input, and whether were better or worse for the coachs not making it work against themselves.

I think that’s the more common outlook rather than people panicking mate, I think they just want something to happen and that needs an outlet. For instance, yes, we were still far too good for most in even weaker areas like the scrum, but it’s the delay in the coaches seemingly admitting that it’s been dissapoint. How can they not see DURING THE GAME it didn’t go right and say it? What are they scared of? Do they think the estimation of the All Blacks will go down in peoples minds? And of course thats not a problem if it weren’t for the fact they don’t do any better the next game! And then they finally seem to see and things get better. I’ve had endless discussions with Chicken about what’s happening at half time, and the lack of any real change. That problem is momentum is consistent with their being NO progress through the year. The team does not improve. The lineout is improved and is good. The scrum is weak and stays weak. The misfires and stays misfiring. When is the new structure following Lancasters Leinster going to click?



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