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Russia women's national rugby sevens team

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Russia
UnionRugby Union of Russia
Nickname(s)She-Bears (Медведицы)
Coach(es)Andrey Kuzin
Captain(s)Alena Mikhaltsova
Most capsBaizat Khamidova (163)
Top scorerBaizat Khamidova (500)
Team kit
Change kit
World Cup Sevens
Appearances2 (First in 2009)
Best result7th place, 2013
2017 Rugby Europe Women's Sevens champions

The Russian women's national rugby sevens team (Russian: Женская сборная России по регби-7) is a women's rugby team in Europe. Since 2013, it is dominating the European Championships, winning the trophy seven times. Internationally, Russia's best performance was in 2013, finishing in the quarterfinals.[citation needed] The team was runner-up at the 2015 Canada Women's Sevens, after defeating Australia in quarter-finals and France in semifinals.[citation needed]

Russia failed to qualify for the inaugural rugby sevens event in 2016 Summer Olympics; however, they qualified for the following Olympic Games in Tokyo.[1][2]

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, World Rugby and Rugby Europe suspended Russia from international and European continental rugby union competition. In addition, the Rugby Union of Russia was suspended from World Rugby and Rugby Europe.[3][4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • In-form Russian women prepare for home Rugby World Cup Sevens
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  • Russia Women`s Sevens - Olympic Dream
  • BIG and STRONG and FAST! | The Best of Russia 7s

Transcription

Tournament history

A red box around the year indicates tournaments played within Russia

Summer Olympics record

Olympic Games
Year Round Position Pld W L D
Brazil 2016 Not Qualified
Japan 2020 Quarterfinals 8th 6 1 5 0
Total 0 Titles 1/2 6 1 5 0

World Cup Sevens record

Rugby World Cup Sevens
Year Round Position Pld W L D
United Arab Emirates 2009 Knockout Stage 11th 5 2 3 0
Russia 2013 Quarterfinals 7th 5 2 2 1
United States 2018 Quarterfinals 8th 4 2 2 0
Total 0 Titles 3/3 14 6 7 1

World Sevens Series record

World Sevens Series
Year Position Pld W L D
2012–13 5th 18 12 5 1
2013–14 5th 30 15 13 2
2014–15 7th 35 12 23 0
2015–16 7th 28 13 15 0
2016–17 5th 30 16 14 0
2017–18 6th 28 12 16 0
2018–19 7th 36 13 21 2
2019–20 6th 40 6 13 0
Total 0 Title 245 99 120 5

Summer Universiade record

Summer Universiade
Year Round Pld W L D
Russia 2013 1st place, gold medalist(s) 7 7 0 0
Italy 2019 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 5 3 0 2
Total 1 Title 12 10 0 2

European Women's Sevens results

European Women's Sevens
Year Position Pld W L D
France 2005 1st[5] 7 7 0 0
France 2006 9th 6 4 2 0
France 2007 9th 5 1 3 1
France 2008 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 6 5 1 0
Germany 2009 7th 6 3 3 0
Russia 2010 6th 6 2 3 1
Romania 2011 4th 7 5 2 0
2012 4th 13 10 3 0
2013 1st place, gold medalist(s) 14 12 2 0
2014 1st place, gold medalist(s) 11 9 2 0
2015 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 14 13 1 0
2016 1st place, gold medalist(s) 14 11 3 0
2017 1st place, gold medalist(s) 13 13 0 0
2018 1st place, gold medalist(s) 13 12 1 0
2019 1st place, gold medalist(s) 12 11 1 0
2021 1st place, gold medalist(s) 12 12 0 0
Total 16/18 159 130 27 2

Current squad

ROC's roster of 12 athletes is as follows.[6]

Team management

  • Head Coach – Andrey Kuzin
  • Assistant Coach and Head of Performance - Graham Bentz

References

  1. ^ "Qualified Teams Prepare for Tokyo Olympic 7s Rugby". RugbyAsia247. 2021-06-25. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  2. ^ "Ireland, France and Russia claimed the three remaining sevens spots". Asia Rugby. 2021-06-21. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  3. ^ Gallan, Daniel (1 March 2022). "World Rugby joins other sports bodies by suspending Russia and Belarus". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 March 2022.
  4. ^ "Rugby Europe Statement – Russia and Belarus Suspension". Rugby Europe. Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  5. ^ Qualification Stage
  6. ^ "Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games: Women's sevens squads". World Rugby. 6 July 2021.

External links

This page was last edited on 27 September 2023, at 05:27
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