2009 Oceania Sevens Championship

The 2009 Oceania Sevens Championship was the second edition of the Oceania Sevens. It was held in Papeete, Tahiti from 12 to 14 November. Samoa were the eventual winner.[1]

2009 Oceania Sevens Championship
Host nation Tahiti
Date12-14 November
Cup
Champion Samoa
Runner-up Tonga
Third Papua New Guinea
Tournament details
Matches played27
2008
2010

Tournament

Key to colours in group tables
Teams that progressed to the Cup Semi-finals
Teams that progressed to the Plate Semi-finals

Group phase

Team Pld W D L PF PA +/- Pts
 Samoa 6 5 0 1 199 40 159 16
 Tonga 6 5 0 1 140 57 83 16
 Niue 6 5 0 1 112 43 69 16
 Papua New Guinea 6 3 0 3 112 65 47 12
 Cook Islands 6 2 0 4 112 94 18 10
 Vanuatu 6 1 0 5 55 205 -150 8
 Tahiti 6 0 0 6 19 245 -226 6
12 November
Tonga  12 - 7  Papua New Guinea

12 November
Vanuatu  29 - 5  Tahiti

13 November
Tonga  14 - 5  Niue

13 November
Niue  7 - 5  Samoa

13 November
Papua New Guinea  24 - 0  Vanuatu

13 November
Samoa  33 - 7  Cook Islands

13 November
Cook Islands  41 - 0  Tahiti

13 November
Niue  22 - 0  Papua New Guinea

13 November
Tonga  31 - 0  Tahiti

13 November
Samoa  50 - 0  Vanuatu

13 November
Niue  7 - 5  Cook Islands

13 November
Samoa  24 - 19  Papua New Guinea

13 November
Papua New Guinea  43 - 0  Tahiti

13 November
Tonga  21 - 19  Cook Islands

13 November
Niue  33 - 14  Tahiti

13 November
Niue  38 - 5  Vanuatu

13 November
Samoa  19 - 7  Tonga

13 November
Cook Islands  33 - 14  Vanuatu

13 November
Samoa  68 - 0  Tahiti

13 November
Tonga  55 - 7  Vanuatu

13 November
Papua New Guinea  19 - 7  Cook Islands

Finals

Plate

Semi-final Plate Final
      
 Cook Islands 43
 Vanuatu 14
 Vanuatu 33
 Tahiti 10

Cup

 
Semi-finalsCup Final
 
      
 
14 November
 
 
 Samoa29
 
14 November
 
 Papua New Guinea0
 
 Samoa31
 
14 November
 
 Tonga14
 
 Tonga29
 
 
 Niue14
 
3rd Place
 
 
14 November
 
 
 Papua New Guinea24
 
 
 Niue12

[2]

References

  1. "Oceania Sevens - Samoa defend title in Tahiti". web.archive.org. 2009-11-17. Archived from the original on 2014-12-14. Retrieved 2021-11-28.
  2. "RugbyArchive". www.rugbyarchive.net. Retrieved 2021-11-28.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.