2018–19 United States national rugby sevens team season

The United States national rugby sevens team got off to a strong start in the 2018–19 World Rugby Sevens Series. The team reached the finals in Dubai, South Africa, New Zealand, and Australia, the first time the U.S. had reached four consecutive finals and was ranked joint first in the overall Series after the first four legs. In the fifth leg, the U.S. won beating Samoa 27–0.[1] This was the U.S.’s second straight USA Sevens win, giving them sole possession of first place in the Sevens World Series. The U.S. remained in first place for several more tournaments, but consecutive semifinal losses to Fiji in the last two tournaments in London and Paris meant that Fiji won the Series with the U.S. finishing second. The U.S. overall had its best season ever — the second-place finish beating their previous best of fifth. Additionally, qualifying for five consecutive tournament finals as well as reaching the semifinals in all ten tournaments were U.S. records.[2] Carlin Isles scored 52 tries, ranked first overall among all players.

United States
2018–19 season

Standings

The following shows the standings for the 2018–19 series for the 15 core teams. The top four finish by the U.S. qualified the team for the 2020 Olympics.

2018–19 World Rugby Sevens
Series XX
 
Pos
Event 
Team

Dubai

Cape Town

Hamil­ton

Sydney

Las Vegas

Van­couver

Hong Kong

Singa­pore

London

Paris
Points
total
1 Fiji 13222215121722192222186
2 United States 19191919221517151715177
3 New Zealand 22151722 171312121319162
4 South Africa 12171513102210221017148
5 England 17138171312101725114
6 Samoa 8712319101513812107
7 Australia 15101012108510195104
8 France 75210119198151399
9 Argentina 108581510131051094
10 Scotland 101013185877372
11 Canada 55105371510859
12 Spain 51251073321149
13 Kenya 1371515311037
14 Wales 321525255131
15 Japan 211712713227

Source: World Rugby

Legend
No colour Core team in 2018–19 and re-qualified as a core team for the 2019–20 World Rugby Sevens Series
Pink Relegated as the lowest placed core team at the end of the 2018–19 series
Qualified to the 2020 Olympic Sevens as one of the four highest placed eligible teams from the 2018–19 series.[3]

World Series results by tournament

2018–19 Season
Leg Date Finish Record
(W-L-D)
Pts Diff Most tries Most points Dream Team
selection
DubaiNov–Dec 20182nd4–2+34Perry Baker (6)Perry Baker (30)---
South AfricaDecember 20182nd5–1+104Stephen Tomasin (5)Stephen Tomasin (43)Hughes & Barrett
New ZealandJanuary 20192nd5–1+31Carlin Isles (7)Madison Hughes (39)Pinkelman, Niua, & Isles
SydneyFebruary 20192nd5–1+89Isles & Williams (5)Madison Hughes (35)Tomasin, Hughes
United StatesMarch 20191st5–1+74Carlin Isles (8)Carlin Isles (40)Isles, Iosefo, Tomasin, Pinkelman
CanadaMarch 20194th3–3–8Carlin Isles (6)Madison Hughes (32)Stephen Tomasin
Hong KongApril 20193rd3–3+33Carlin Isles (9)Carlin Isles (45)Carlin Isles
SingaporeApril 20194th4–2+68(multiple) (3)Madison Hughes (27)
EnglandMay 20193rd5–1+53Perry Baker (5)Perry Baker (25)Stephen Tomasin
FranceJune 20194th4–2+33Carlin Isles (5)Madison Hughes (36)Madison Hughes
Totals2ndCarlin Isles (52)Madison Hughes (299)Stephen Tomasin (4)

U.S. vs Fiji

Fiji and the U.S. were the top two teams at the end of the Series and during the final rounds of the Series. The teams met during seven of the ten Series tournaments. All their matchups were during the knockout rounds; they never met during pool play. The U.S. won the first matchup, and Fiji winning all of the other six matches.

2018–19 U.S. vs Fiji
Leg Round Result
DubaiQuarterfinalWin: 24–12
South AfricaFinalLoss: 15–29
New ZealandFinalLoss: 0–38
Australia
United States
CanadaThird/FourthLoss: 14–24
Hong KongSemifinalLoss: 19–28
Singapore
EnglandSemifinalLoss: 10–17
FranceSemifinalLoss: 14–33

Player season statistics

The following table shows the leading players for the U.S. at the conclusion of the 2018–19 World Rugby Sevens Series. Carlin Isles led all players on the Series with 52 tries and 48 clean breaks. Madison Hughes ranked second in the Series with 299 points. Ben Pinkelman ranked third with 191 carries. Stephen Tomasin ranked fifth with 101 tackles.

Leading U.S. players (2018–19 Series)
PlayerPositionMatchesTacklesTries
Stephen TomasinForward6010129
Ben PinkelmanForward608416
Madison HughesHalfback598920
Carlin IslesBack554952
Folau NiuaHalfback55378
Martin IosefoBack534916
Matai LeutaForward524810
Kevon WilliamsHalfback523518
Maceo BrownBack47426
Brett ThompsonForward43376
Danny BarrettForward393812
Perry BakerBack252116

Source: World Rugby website.

Player and coach Series awards

Three U.S. players made the seven-man World Series Dream Team:

PlayerPosition
Stephen TomasinForward
Ben PinkelmanForward
Folau NiuaHalfback

2018–19 Coach of the World Series: Mike Friday, U.S. head coach.[4]

2019 USA Sevens

The United States won the 2019 USA Sevens by beating Samoa 27–0 in the final. This was the first second time that the United States won its home tournament (2018 was the first). USA's Ben Pinkelman was named Player of the Final.

2019 USA Sevens final:
U.S. starting lineup

References

  1. "USA Sevens rugby team beats Samoa to repeat in Las Vegas", Las Vegas Review-Journal, Doug Drowley, March 3, 2019.
  2. "USA Men's Eagles Sevens Shuts Out Samoa In 5th Straight Podium Finish", Team USA, Paul Bowker, March 3, 2019.
  3. "Olympic qualification pathway for rugby sevens confirmed for Tokyo 2020". World Rugby. 17 September 2018. Archived from the original on 20 November 2018.
  4. "Best in class celebrated at HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series Awards in Paris", World Rugby, 2 June 2019.
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