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2003 European Women Sevens Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2003 European Women Sevens Championship
Host nationFrance France
Date23–24 May 2003
Cup
Champion Spain
Runner-up France
Plate
Winner Portugal
Runner-up Belgium
Bowl
Winner Czech Republic
Runner-up Bulgaria
2004

The 2003 European Women Sevens Championship is the first edition of the European Women's Sevens Championship. It took place on 24 May 2003 at Lunel.[1][2]

Spain took home the first European Women's Sevens Championship after defeating France 21–12 in the Cup final.[3]

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Transcription

Pool Stage

Key to colours in group tables
Teams that advanced to the Cup Semifinal
Teams advanced to the Plate Semifinal
Teams advanced to the Shield Final

Pool A

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 Spain 4 4 0 0 162 5 +157 12
  Switzerland 4 3 0 1 131 24 +107 10
 Belgium 4 2 0 2 31 79 -48 8
 Norway 4 1 0 3 12 112 -100 6
 Czech Republic 4 0 0 4 5 121 -116 4

Spain 45–0 Belgium



Spain 50–0 Norway




Belgium 12–0 Norway

Spain 19–5  Switzerland

Pool B

Teams Pld W D L PF PA +/− Pts
 France 4 4 0 0 165 5 +160 12
 Sweden 4 3 0 1 68 50 +18 10
 Portugal 4 2 0 2 90 39 +51 8
 Croatia 4 1 0 3 24 129 -105 6
 Bulgaria 4 0 0 4 5 129 -124 4
Croatia 19–5 Bulgaria

France 22–0 Portugal

Sweden 32–0 Croatia


France 40–5 Sweden

Portugal 40–5 Croatia

Sweden 19–0 Bulgaria

France 52–0 Croatia

Sweden 12–10 Portugal

France 51–0 Bulgaria

Source: [1][2]

Knockout stage

Bowl

24 May
Czech Republic 24–0 Bulgaria

Plate

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
24 May
 
 
 Portugal26
 
24 May
 
 Norway5
 
 Portugal14
 
24 May
 
 Belgium0
 
 Belgium7
 
 
 Croatia0
 
Third place
 
 
24 May
 
 
 Norway5
 
 
 Croatia7

Cup

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
24 May
 
 
 Spain49
 
24 May
 
 Sweden0
 
 Spain21
 
24 May
 
 France12
 
 France35
 
 
  Switzerland0
 
Third place
 
 
24 May
 
 
 Sweden0
 
 
  Switzerland5

Source: [1][2]

References

  1. ^ a b c "2003 Euro Sevens Championship". rugby7.com. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c "2003 Women's European Sevens Championship". www.rugbyarchive.net. Retrieved 28 January 2024.
  3. ^ "The Spanish women's team, the best in Europe also in Rugby 7" (in Spanish). ferugby.com. Archived from the original on 25 April 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
This page was last edited on 30 January 2024, at 03:15
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