2008 European Sevens Championship


The 2008 European Sevens Championship was a rugby sevens competition, with the final held in Hanover, Germany. It was the seventh edition of the European Sevens championship and also functioned as a qualifying tournament for the 2009 Rugby World Cup Sevens. The event was organised by rugby's European governing body, the FIRA – Association of European Rugby.

Outcome

The finals tournament held in Hanover, Germany on 12 and 13 July 2008, as well as being the European Sevens Championship, functioned as a qualifying tournament for the world cup. England, France and Scotland had already qualified through their past performance. The five best nations out of the twelve participating ones qualified for the Dubai tournament. Teams finished in the following order:
PlaceCountry
1st'
2nd'
3rd'
4th'
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th

Bid

On 16 June 2007, the FIRA congress in Monaco decided to award the finals tournament to Hanover, beating bids from Russia, Greece and Bosnia-Herzegovina in the process.

Tournament history

From 2002, FIRA, the governing body of European rugby, has been organising an annual European Sevens Championship tournament. A number of qualifying tournaments lead up to a finals tournament, which functions as the European championship and, in 2008, also as the qualifying stage for the Sevens World Cup.
The first European Championship was held in 2002 in Heidelberg, Germany, and was won by Portugal, the team that won every championship since except 2007, when Russia won.
The next year, the tournament was again held in Heidelberg and in 2004, Palma de Mallorca, Spain was the host.
From 2005 to 2007, Moscow was the host of the tournament.
Hanover held the tournament for the first time in 2008 and will do so again in 2009.

Tournament

Stadium

The finals tournament was held at the AWD-Arena in Hanover, home ground of the football club Hannover 96. The stadium holds 50.000 spectators, 43,000 of them on seats, the rest standing.
The tournament was seen by over 30,000 spectators, a good turn out in a country like Germany, where rugby is not a mainstream sport. After selling more than 35,000 tickets in advance, mostly within Germany, the organisers were forced to open up the upper tier of the stadium to meet demand.

Qualifying

Twelve teams qualified through the seven qualifying tournaments, held at the following locations:
LocationCountryDateWinnerRunner-up
OdenseDenmark10–11 May
SopotPoland24–25 May
ZagrebCroatia31 May-1 June
TbilisiGeorgia7–8 June
OstravaCzech Republic14–15 June
CorfuGreece20–21 June
MoscowRussia28–29 June

Source:

Group stage

The tournament was divided into a group and a finals stage. In the group stage, two groups of six teams were drawn. Within each group, each team played each other once. The top two teams went to the Cup stage of the tournament while the third and fourth placed team qualified for the Plate stage. Five and six went to the Bowl finals.
Qualified for the Cup stage
Qualified for the Plate stage
Qualified for the Bowl stage

Group A

TeamPldWDLPFPA+/-Pts
550015132+11915
54018131+5013
520357107-509
52037599-249
511374100-268
501431100-696

Group B

TeamPldWDLPFPA+/-Pts
550015164+8715
540110552+5313
530211475+3911
520384104-209
510449135-867
500553124-715

Finals

Three separate rounds of finals were held, Bowl, the lowest, Plate and Cup. The semi final winners of each group went on to the final while the losers played each other. All teams from the Cup stage were qualified for the next sevens world cup and also the Plate winner.

Bowl

Winner: Russia

Plate

Winner: Italy ''''

Cup

Winner: Portugal ''''

Top point scorers

Key: Con = conversions; Pen = penalties; Drop = drop goals

Teams

Belgium

Head coach: Neil Massinon
Manager: Thierry Massinon
PlayerClub
Mathieu Verschelden

Georgia

Head coach: Kakhaber Alania
PlayerClub
Shalva Sutiashvili

Germany

Head coach: Lofty Stevenson
PlayerClub
Franck Moutsinga

Ireland

Head coach: Jon Skurr
PlayerClub
Cian Aherne

Italy

Head coach:
PlayerClub
Kris Burton

Poland

Head coach:
PlayerClub
Tomasz Grodecki

Portugal

Head coach: Tomaz Morais
PlayerClub
Aderito Esteves
David Mateus

Romania

Head coach:
PlayerClub
Carl Cimpoias

Russia

Head coach: Claude Saurel
PlayerClub
Evgeny Bystryakov"Slava" Moscow
Igor Galinovskiy"Krasniy Yar" Krasnoyarsk
Andrey Kuzin"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Andrey Garbuzov"Krasniy Yar" Krasnoyarsk
Evgeny Matveev"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Alexey Panasenko"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Yuri Kushnarev"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Alexander Shakirov"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Alexander Gvozdovskiy"Krasniy Yar" Krasnoyarsk
Oleg Kobzev"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Victor Gresev"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region
Sergey Gavryushin"VVA-Podmoskovje" Moscow region

Source:

Spain

Head coach: José Ignacio Inchausti
PlayerClub
Jaime Nava

Ukraine

Head coach: Michel Bishop
PlayerClub
Ruslan Tserkovnyy

Wales

Head coach: Gareth Baber
PlayerClub
Johnathan Edwards