Neha Patil (Editor)

Sri Lanka Sevens

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Sport
  
Rugby sevens

Most recent champion(s)
  
Hong Kong (2016)

Number of teams
  
24

No. of teams
  
24

Most titles
  
Japan (4 titles)

Sri Lanka Sevens httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen664Sri

Founded
  
1999 (Kandy) 2016 (re-est. Colombo)

The Sri Lanka Sevens is an annual international rugby sevens tournament held in Sri Lanka. Originally developed as the Singer Sri Lankan Airlines Rugby 7's, the event was founded in 1999 and has featured as a part of the Asian Sevens Series in past seasons.

Contents

For ten seasons from 1999 to 2008, the tournament was hosted by the Kandy Sports Club at the Bogambara Stadium in Kandy. National men's teams from Asia and Europe were regular competitors. The event moved to Colombo for the 2009 and 2010 seasons after the Sri Lanka Rugby Football Union formed a partnership with the Tharunyata Hetak youth organisation to organise the Sri Lanka Sevens tournament.

The international team format was replaced in 2011 by the Carlton Super Sevens series, a competition featuring ten domestic Sri Lankan franchises. After four seasons the international format was re-established for 2015 with the Dialog Colombo Sevens held in Colombo.

Singer Sri Lankan Sevens (1999–2008)

Initially the competition was part of the Kandy Sports Club's 125th anniversary celebrations in 1999. The first tournament was limited to ten Asian rugby playing countries. A schools event ran concurrently with the international competition, with sixteen schools competing.

The original naming rights sponsors of the tournament were Sri Lankan Airlines and Singer Sri Lanka. Other sponsors included Rolls Royce, Airbus Industries, SITA, Haesl, IAE International, CFM, John Keells Elephant House, Lion Brewery and Amaya Resorts.

The inaugural cup was won by South Korea in Kandy in 1999. The tournament was made an open event and expanded to 16 teams in 2000, with teams from Europe competing. In that year and the following, Chinese Taipei won the cup. Portugal won in 2002. In 2003 teams from Africa (Kenya, Morocco and the Arabian Gulf) and Oceania (Australia, New Zealand and the Cook Islands) competed and the Kenyan national team was the winner of the cup.

The 2004 tournament was played as the Asian qualifier for the 2005 Rugby World Cup Sevens, and was once again limited to the Asian rugby playing nations. The winner was Japan, with Chinese Taipei and South Korea (second and third respectively) also qualifying for the Rugby World Cup Sevens. The tournament was subsequently recognised by the International Rugby Board as an IRB satellite event. In 2005 Japan won the cup. South Korea and Hong Kong won in 2006 and 2007, respectively, however the Japanese team was conspicuous by its absence.

The winner of the cup in 2008 was Malaysia.

Carlton Sri Lanka 7s (2009–10)

Carlton Sports Club, the sports wing of Tharunyata Hetak (A Tomorrow for Youth), took over the running of the Sri Lanka Sevens in a partnership with the Sri Lanka Rugby Football Union in 2009. The tournament was moved to Colombo. It was officially recognised by the Asian Rugby Football Union (ARFU) in that year, and became the last event of the 2009 IRB Asian Sevens Series. Japan returned to play in the tournament and won the competition for a third time in 2009.

A number of non-official national sides competed in the 2010 tournament, with the Fiji Barbarians becoming the eventual winners. The 2010 event was also the last of the Carlton Sri Lanka Sevens under the international teams format due the introduction of the Carlton Super 7s series, featuring local Sri Lankan franchises for the 2011 season.

Carlton Super 7s series (2011–14)

In 2011, the Carlton Sri Lanka 7s was transformed into the Carlton Super 7s series; a domestic club competition comprising two tournaments hosted on consecutive weekends. This format continued until 2014, although additional selection tournaments for local players were included at the start of the final two seasons.b

Prominent players from around the world were contracted to join each local franchise to raise the standard of competition. The tournament events were held at various locations in Sri Lanka, including Kandy, Galle and Koggala. The final leg of the series for each season was hosted in Colombo.

The Carlton Super 7s series was contested by ten teams, representing the nine provinces of the country and the Jaffna region:

Colombo Sevens (2015-present)

Following a sponsorship deal with telecommunications company Dialog, the international teams format was re-established with the tournament hosted in Colombo, with the 2015 event becoming the third and final leg of the Asian Sevens Series. The tournament was contested by eleven international teams over two days in October, with Japan the eventual winner, Hong Kong runners-up and Sri Lanka in third position. In 2016 the tournament was again the final leg of the Asian Sevens Series and contested by eight teams. The tournament was won by Hong Kong, with runners-up South Korea and third place going to China.

References

Sri Lanka Sevens Wikipedia