2019–20 World Rugby Sevens Series


The 2019–20 World Rugby Sevens Series was the 21st annual series of rugby sevens tournaments for national men's rugby sevens teams. The Sevens Series has been run by World Rugby since 1999–2000.
In March 2020, World Rugby postponed all remaining tournaments in the series due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The events in London and Paris were postponed provisionally until September, preceding the Singapore and Hong Kong events previously postponed until October. On 30 June, the remaining four rounds of the series was cancelled which meant that New Zealand was awarded the title by 11 points over second-placed South Africa.

Format

Sixteen nations competed at each event, drawn into four pools of four teams each. Following the pool matches at each tournament, the top eight teams played off for a Cup, with gold, silver and bronze medals also awarded to the first three teams. The bottom eight teams after the pool matches played off for the lower-ranked placings from ninth to sixteenth at each tournament. The winner of the series was determined by the overall points standings gained across all events in the season.

Challenger Series and the COVID-19 pandemic

World Rugby announced in December 2019 that there would be a feeder competition to the Sevens Series consisting of sixteen teams that would play two sevens events in South America, determining the final eight teams to play in a playoff-style event at the Hong Kong Sevens. The final winner would be promoted to the World Rugby Sevens Series and replace the invitational side in the Sevens Series.
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, World Rugby postponed the Sevens Series and Challenger Series seasons to be completed at a later date in the year before subsequently cancelling the season entirely. Because of both competitions seasons being cancelled, the final playoff in Hong Kong to decide the team who would be promoted to the Sevens Series would not be decided and the team with the highest points tally would be the promoted team. Japan, an invited team to five of the six Sevens Series events was promoted having accumulated thirty-nine points in total, three points clear at the top of the table.

Core teams

The fifteen "core teams" qualified to participate in all series events for 2019–20 were:
Ireland joined as a core team for the first time after winning the 2019–20 World Series qualifier held in Hong Kong. They replaced Japan who were relegated after finishing as the lowest-placed core team in 2018–19. However, Japan will play in several tournaments as the wild card team in preparation to host the Olympic tournament.

Tour venues

The official schedule for the 2019–20 World Rugby Sevens Series was:
LegStadiumCityDatesWinner
DubaiThe SevensDubai5–7 December 2019
South AfricaCape Town StadiumCape Town13–15 December 2019
New ZealandFMG Stadium WaikatoHamilton25–26 January 2020
AustraliaBankwest StadiumSydney1–2 February 2020
United StatesDignity Health Sports ParkLos Angeles29 February1 March 2020
CanadaBC PlaceVancouver7–8 March 2020
Hong KongHong Kong StadiumHong Kong3–5 April 2020Cancelled
SingaporeNational StadiumSingapore11–12 April 2020Cancelled
LondonTwickenham StadiumLondon23–24 May 2020Cancelled
ParisStade Jean-BouinParis30–31 May 2020Cancelled

Events in Singapore and Hong Kong were originally scheduled to be played in April 2020 but were postponed due to health concerns relating to the COVID-19 pandemic and rescheduled to October 2020. In June 2020, World Rugby cancelled all four remaining rounds of the tournament due to the pandemic.

Standings

The final standings after completion of the six tournaments of the series are shown in the table below.
The points awarded to teams at each tournament, as well as the overall season totals, are shown. Gold indicates the event champions. Silver indicates the event runner-ups. Bronze indicates the event third place finishers. A dash is recorded in the event column if a team did not compete at a tournament.
Official standings for the 2019–20 series:
Pos.United Arab Emirates

Players

Scoring leaders

RankPlayerTries
1IRE|rugby union

Tournaments

Dubai

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'15–0
Bronze'19–17
5th Place'Tournament Points Difference 60–21
7th Place'Tournament Points Difference 20–
9th Place'40–17
11th Place'19–14
13th Place'29–24
15th Place'38–12

Cape Town

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'7–5
Bronze'29–24
5th Place'Tournament Points Difference 43–0
7th Place'Tournament Points Difference –
9th Place'17–12
11th Place'22–5
13th Place'38–7
15th Place'19–15

Hamilton

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'27–5
Bronze'33–21
5th Place'28–7
7th Place'19–17
9th Place'12–5
11th Place'24–19
13th Place'19–15
15th Place'21–7

Sydney

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'27–5
Bronze'33–21
5th Place'28–7
7th Place'19–17
9th Place'12–5
11th Place'24–19
13th Place'19–15
15th Place'21–7

Los Angeles

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'29–24
Bronze'21–19
5th Place'24–19
7th Place'Tournament Points Difference –
9th Place'21–19
11th Place'Tournament Points Difference 2–
13th Place'29–24
15th Place'Tournament Points Difference –

Vancouver

EventWinnerScoreFinalist
Cup'17–14
Bronze'26–19
5th Place'26–24
7th Place'Tournament Points Difference –
9th Place'7–12
11th Place'Tournament Points Difference –
13th Place'31–26
15th Place'Tournament Points Difference –