2009 European Sevens Championship

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2009 European Sevens Championship
Tournament details
Host nationFile:Flag of Germany.svg GER
Dates11 July – 12 July
No. of nations13
Final positions
Champions File:Gold medal blank.svgMen: File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia
Women: File:Flag of England.svg England
Runner-up File:Silver medal blank.svgMen: File:Flag of France.svg France
Women: File:Flag of Spain.svg Spain
2008
2010

The 2009 European Sevens Championship was a rugby sevens competition, with the final held in Hanover, Germany. It was the eighth edition of the European Sevens championship and was organised by rugby's European governing body, the FIRA – Association of European Rugby (FIRA-AER).[1] The tournament differed from the previous seasons event as the number of participating men's teams had been reduced from twelve to ten. Instead, a women's tournament was held alongside the men's, also consisting of ten teams. The men's tournament was won by Russia, while England took out the women's title.

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.[1] The first European Championship was held in 2002 in Heidelberg, Germany, and was won by Portugal, the team that won every men's championship since except 2007 and 2009, when Russia won. In 2003, 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.[1] Hanover held the tournament for the first time in 2008 and did so again in 2009.[1] In 2010, the tournament will return to Moscow.

Finals stadium

The 2008 and 2009 finals tournaments were 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.[2]

Qualifying

A qualifying competition was held for the men's teams, with points allocated according to final placings in each tournament. Each nation was required to play two qualifying tournaments.[3] Ten teams qualified through the six qualifying tournaments, held at the following locations:

Location Country Date Winner Runner-up
Sopot Poland 16–17 May File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal File:Flag of Poland.svg Poland
Athens Greece 23–24 May File:Flag of France.svg France File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania
Split Croatia 30–31 May File:Flag of France.svg France File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy
Odesa Ukraine 6–7 June File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova
Ostrava Czech Republic 6–7 June File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal File:Flag of Spain.svg Spain
Moscow Russia 20–21 June File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova

Final standings

These are the final standings of the tournament:

Place Men Women
1st File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia File:Flag of England.svg England
2nd File:Flag of France.svg France File:Flag of Spain.svg Spain
3rd File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy File:Flag of the Netherlands.svg Netherlands
4th File:Flag of Spain.svg Spain File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany
5th File:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia File:Flag of France.svg France
6th File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal
7th File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal File:Flag of Russia.svg Russia
8th File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy
9th File:Flag of Germany.svg Germany File:Flag of Sweden.svg Sweden
10th File:Flag of Poland.svg Poland File:Flag of Moldova.svg Moldova

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 The 7s European Championship Hannover Sevens website, accessed: 4 June 2010
  2. AWD-Arena - facts Hannover Sevens website - stadium information, accessed: 4 June 2010
  3. Qualifiers for the Hannover Sevens 2009 Hannover Sevens website, accessed: 4 June 2010

External links