IRB Sevens
New Zealand named top seeds in Dubai
IRB
September 30, 2008
DJ Forbes of New Zealand lifts the trophy after the final of the IRB World Sevens Series Cup Final between New Zealand and Fiji on December 1, 2007 at the Exiles Rugby Club in Dubai, UAE.
New Zealand 7s skipper DJ Forbes lifts the Dubai trophy following his side's success in 2007 © Getty Images
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Six months after defending their IRB Sevens World Series crown, New Zealand have been named top seeds at the Dubai Sevens, the first event of the 2008-09 season to be played on November 28-29, 2008.

The Dubai tournament kick-starts seven months of intense international Sevens action, including the eight events on the grand-prix style Series and the Rugby World Cup Sevens, scheduled to be held in Dubai on March 5-7, 2009.

The Emirates Airline Dubai Sevens will be the first event to be played at 'The Sevens', a new purpose-built stadium which will be the headquarters for rugby in the region. The new state-of-the-art facility will also host the Sevens World Cup for both men and women three months later.

New Zealand proved unbeatable for much of last season, winning in Dubai and then capturing four further Cup titles on the bounce in George (South Africa), Wellington, San Diego and Hong Kong before finishing the season strongly to defend their Edinburgh crown and rubber-stamp a remarkable season, their eighth Series triumph in nine years.

Their reward is a tough start to the 10th anniversary Sevens season and a mouth-watering clash in Pool A with trans-Tasman rivals Australia, who have a new coach in former test star Michael O'Connor. Wales also start in New Zealand's pool under new coach Paul John and the line-up will be completed by the African qualifier for next year's Rugby World Cup Sevens, to be decided on 31 October - 1 November.

South Africa finished second to the Kiwis in last season's standings and are named second seeds in Dubai. Victors of the Adelaide Sevens earlier in 2008, the Boks also face tough opposition in fellow Africans Kenya, Scotland and host nation Arabian Gulf.

The islanders of Samoa were the only other side to win a tournament in the 2007/08 Series, the London Sevens at Twickenham, and as third seeds they top Pool C against a resurgent Argentina and the dual European challenge of France and Georgia.

With former Sevens maestro Waisale Serevi back at the helm as coach, Fiji head Pool D and face England, Portugal and the USA, who replace Canada this season as the North American region's 'core' team to play at all eight events.

"Dubai never fails to deliver a fantastic event for the teams and the fans and this year is historic with the tournament moving to a brand new venue. It's a real opportunity for the teams to get to know the place, and for the venue to establish itself," said Beth Coalter, the IRB's Sevens Manager.

"The big question has to be whether the other teams can hit back at New Zealand's dominance in the last Series, and I think the fact that it is also a World Cup year means that they can," Coalter added.

"As we saw for the last Sevens World Cup in 2005, and during 2006 for the Commonwealth Games, these high-profile events have a tendency to attract more of the top players for the entire season, which can only be a good thing for further increasing the global appeal of Sevens. RWC Sevens 2009 taking place half way through this 10th Series Anniversary year will set new standards."

© Scrum.com

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