2015 Rugby Europe Sevens Grand Prix Series

The 2015 Rugby Europe Sevens Grand Prix Series was an Olympic qualification tournament for rugby sevens at the 2016 Summer Olympics which was held over three legs in the cities of Moscow, Lyon and Exeter.[1]

2015 Rugby Europe Sevens Grand Prix Series
Hosts Russia
 France
 England
Date6 June – 12 July
Nations12
Final positions
Champions France
Runners-up Spain
Third England
Series details
Matches played102
Tries scored525 (average 5.147 per match)
Top try scorerFrance Julien Candelon (17)
Russia Denis Simplikevich (17)
Top point scorerFrance Terry Bouhraoua (184)
2014

The top team qualified directly to the Olympic Games, whereas the runner-up qualified to the Final Olympic Qualification Tournament in 2016. France won the 2015 Rugby Europe Men's Sevens Championship, and qualified directly to the 2016 Summer Olympics. Spain finished second and qualified directly to the Final 2016 Men's Olympic Qualification Tournament, avoiding the Rugby Europe Repechage Tournament.[2][3]

Schedule edit

Date Venue Winner Runner-up Third
6–7 June   Moscow   France   Russia   Spain
13–14 June   Lyon   France   Spain   Belgium
11–12 July   Exeter   France   England   Spain

Standings edit

Legend
Qualified for the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Qualified for the Final Olympic Qualification Tournament.
Qualified for the Rugby Europe Repechage Tournament
Qualified for the Repechage Tournament and relegated to Division A for 2016.
Ineligible for Olympic Qualification – Already Qualified for Olympics

[4]

Rank Team Moscow Lyon Exeter Points
    France 20 20 20 60
    Spain 16 18 16 50
    England 14 12 18 44
4   Russia 18 10 10 38
5   Germany 10 14 14 38
6   Portugal 12 8 4 24
7   Wales 8 2 12 22
8   Belgium 3 16 1 20
9   Lithuania 6 3 8 17
10   Georgia 4 4 6 14
11   Italy 2 6 3 11
12   Romania 1 1 2 4

Note Russia finishes above Germany due to tiebreaker of highest single tournament finish.

Moscow edit

Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup   France 40–17   Russia   Spain (Third)
  England
Plate   Portugal 35–7   Germany   Wales (Seventh)
  Lithuania
Bowl   Georgia 14–12   Belgium   Italy (Eleventh)
  Romania

Lyon edit

Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup   France 20–7   Spain   Belgium (Third)
  Germany
Plate   England 26–14   Russia   Portugal (Seventh)
  Italy
Bowl   Georgia 20–17   Lithuania   Wales (Eleventh)
  Romania

Exeter edit

Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup   France 14–5   England   Spain (Third)
  Germany
Plate   Wales 14–10   Russia   Lithuania (Seventh)
  Georgia
Bowl   Portugal 26–12   Italy   Romania (Eleventh)
  Belgium

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Rugby Europe Grand Prix Series 7s final at Exeter". Archived from the original on 2015-06-04. Retrieved 2015-06-02.
  2. ^ "Rugby Europe official website". Archived from the original on 2015-07-13. Retrieved 2015-07-13.
  3. ^ "Ireland keep Rio dream alive on two fronts". World Rugby. 20 July 2015. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  4. ^ "Rugby Europe official website". Archived from the original on 2015-06-07. Retrieved 2015-06-08.