Sudamérica Rugby Women's Sevens

Sudamérica Rugby Women's Sevens
SportRugby sevens
Founded2004; 20 years ago (2004)
No. of teams10 (2021)
Countries Argentina
 Brazil
 Costa Rica
 Guatemala
 Uruguay
 Chile
 Colombia
 Panama
 Paraguay
 Peru
Most recent
champion(s)
 Argentina
(2024)
Most titles Brazil (21 titles)

The Sudamérica Rugby Women's Sevens (formerly known as the CONSUR Women's Sevens), is the regional championship for women's international rugby sevens in South America. It has been contested since 2004.[1] The tournament is held over two days, typically on a weekend. It is sanctioned and sponsored by Sudamérica Rugby.

The South America Women's Sevens Championship was first held in Venezuela in 2004.[2][3] Since then, the regional 7s championships has periodically served as pre-qualifying competitions for the Rugby World Cup Sevens, the Pan American Games and the Olympic Games.

Colombia won the 2015 tournament and Argentina won their first-ever title in 2023.[3] Brazil has dominated the Sudamérica Women's Sevens, winning 21 tournaments.[3][4]

Tournament History

[edit]

Results by year

[edit]
Year Host Champion Runner Up Third Fourth
2004 Venezuela Barquisimeto  Brazil  Venezuela  Colombia  Argentina
2005 Brazil São Paulo  Brazil  Argentina  Venezuela  Colombia
2007 Chile Viña del Mar  Brazil  Colombia  Venezuela  Argentina
2008 Uruguay Punta del Este  Brazil  Argentina  Venezuela  Uruguay
2009 Brazil São José dos Campos  Brazil  Argentina  Venezuela  Uruguay
2010 Argentina Mar del Plata  Brazil  Colombia  Uruguay  Argentina
2011 Brazil Bento Gonçalves  Brazil  Argentina  Chile  Uruguay
2012 Brazil Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  Colombia  Uruguay  Argentina
2013 Brazil Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  Argentina  Uruguay  Venezuela
2014 Chile Santiago de Chile  Brazil  Argentina  Uruguay  Colombia
2015 Argentina Santa Fe, Argentina  Colombia  Argentina  Venezuela  Uruguay
2016 Brazil Rio de Janeiro  Brazil  Argentina  Colombia  Venezuela
2017-1 Argentina Villa Carlos Paz  Brazil  Argentina  Colombia  Paraguay
2017-2 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Argentina  Peru  Paraguay
2018 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Argentina  Colombia  Peru
2019-1 Paraguay Asunción  Brazil  Argentina  Chile  Peru
2019-2[5] Peru Lima  Brazil  Colombia  Argentina  Peru
2019-3 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Argentina  Colombia  Paraguay
2020 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Paraguay  Colombia  Uruguay
2021 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Colombia  Argentina  Paraguay
2022 Brazil Saquarema  Brazil  Colombia  Argentina  Paraguay
2023-1 Uruguay Montevideo  Brazil  Argentina  Paraguay  Colombia
2023-2[2] Paraguay Asunción  Argentina  Brazil  Chile  Paraguay
2024 Peru Lima  Argentina  Brazil  Colombia  Uruguay

Notes:

Results by team

[edit]
Team Champions Runners-up Third Fourth
 Brazil 21 (list) 2 (2023-2, 2024)
 Argentina 2 (2023-2, 2024) 14 (list) 3 (2019-2, 2021, 2022) 4 (2004, 2007, 2010, 2012)
 Colombia 1 (2015) 6 (2007, 2010, 2012, 2019-2, 2021, 2022) 7 (2004, 2016, 2017-1, 2018, 2019-3, 2020, 2024) 3 (2005, 2014, 2023-1)
 Venezuela 1 (2004) 5 (2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2015) 2 (2013, 2016)
 Paraguay 1 (2020) 1 (2023-1) 6 (2017-1, 2017-2, 2019-3, 2021, 2022, 2023-2)
 Uruguay 4 (2010, 2012, 2013, 2014) 6 (2008, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2020, 2024)
 Chile 3 (2011, 2019-1, 2023-2)
 Peru 1 (2017-2) 3 (2018, 2019-1, 2019-2)

South American Tournaments

[edit]

2005 Rugby Valentin International Tournament

[edit]

This tournament took place on an unknown date although it appears sensible that it would have been prior to the South American tournament. Little is known apart from the finals

Final

  • Brazil A 31-7 Brazil B

Plate

  • Argentina A 27-0 Chile

Bronze

  • Argentina B 20-0 Uruguay A

Consolation

  • Charruas (Brazil) 19-0 Uruguay B

2009 South American Beach Games

[edit]

Venue/Date: 11–13 December 2009, Montevideo, Uruguay

Group Games

  • Brazil 5–2 Chile
  • Argentina 4–1 Paraguay
  • Uruguay 6–0 Venezuela
  • Argentina 3–4 Chile
  • Brazil 9–0 Venezuela
  • Uruguay 6–1 Paraguay
  • Brazil 8–0 Paraguay
  • Uruguay 2–3 Argentina
  • Chile 7–1 Venezuela
  • Uruguay 5–4 Chile
  • Venezuela 3–6 Paraguay
  • Brazil 5–2 Argentina
  • Paraguay 3–3 Chile
  • Venezuela 1–6 Argentina
  • Uruguay 3–2 Brazil

Classification Games

1st v 4th

  • Uruguay 3 - 2 Chile

2nd v 3rd

  • Brazil 5 - 3 Argentina

3rd place

  • Argentina 4 - 2 Chile

1st place

  • Brazil 3 - 1 Uruguay

2013 Valentín Martínez

[edit]

Date/Venue: November 9–10, 2013. Montevideo, Uruguay

POOL A

Nation Won Drawn Lost For Against
Brazil 3 0 0 114 0
Argentina Rojo 2 0 1 34 43
Uruguay Negro 1 0 2 33 76
Paraguay 0 0 3 14 76
  • Brazil 52-0 Uruguay Negro
  • Argentina Rojo 17-7 Paraguay
  • Brazil 33-0 Paraguay
  • Argentina Rojo 17-7 Uruguay Negro
  • Uruguay Negro 26-7 Paraguay
  • Brazil 29-0 Argentina Rojo

5th/8th Semi Finals

  • Paraguay 27-0 Invitacion Circulo de Tennis
  • Uruguay Negro 0-29 Chile
  • Uruguay 7-17 Argentina

7th Place

  • Invitacion Circulo de Tennis 15-12 Peru

5th Place

  • Chile 26-12 Paraguay

POOL B

Nation Won Drawn Lost For Against
Argentina Azul 3 0 0 87 5
Uruguay Celeste 2 0 1 76 27
Chile 1 0 2 50 57
Invitacion Circulo de Tennis 0 0 3 0 124
  • Argentina Azul 41-0 Invitacion Circulo de Tennis
  • Uruguay Celeste 33-5 Chile
  • Uruguay Celeste 43-0 Invitacion Circulo de Tennis
  • Argentina Azul 24-5 Chile
  • Chile 40-0 Invitacion Circulo de Tennis
  • Argentina Azul 22-0 Uruguay Celeste

Semi Finals

  • Brazil 43-0 Uruguay Celeste
  • Argentina Azul 36-0 Argentina Rojo

3rd Place

  • Uruguay Celeste 14-7 Argentina Rojo

Final

  • Brazil 26-17 Argentina Azul

2013 Bolivarian Games

[edit]

Date/Venue: November 17–19, 2013. Chiclayo, Peru

POOL

Nation Won Drawn Lost For Against
Venezuela 3 0 0 73 17
Columbia 2 0 1 98 22
Peru 1 0 2 38 61
Ecuador 0 0 3 15 124

Day 1 (17 November)

  • Peru 33-10 Ecuador
  • Venezuela 17-12 Colombia
  • Peru 5-34 Colombia

Day 2 (18 November)

  • Peru 0-17 Venezuela
  • Colombia 52-0 Ecuador
  • Venezuela 39-5 Ecuador

Day 3 (19 November)

3rd Place

  • Peru 40-7 Ecuador

Final

  • Colombia 12-7 Venezuela

2014 Valentín Martínez

[edit]

Date/Venue: November 8–9, 2014. Montevideo, Uruguay Pool games (where known)

  • Brazil 48-0 Peru
  • Brazil 46-0 Venezuela
  • Venezuela 35-0 Peru
  • Paraguay 10-5 Chile
  • Argentina 31-5 Paraguay
  • Argentina 43-0 Chile
  • Colombia 34-14 Uruguay

Semi Finals

  • Brazil 45-0 Venezuela
  • Argentina 19-0 Colombia

7th Place

  • Chile bt Paraguay

5th Place

  • Chile 12-10 Uruguay (celeste)

3rd Place

  • Venezuela 17-10 Colombia

Final

  • Brazil 25-10 Argentina Azul

Women's Sevens World Series

[edit]

Brazil was previously part of the World Rugby Women's Sevens Series for the 2013–14 and 2015–16 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series.

São Paulo

[edit]
Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup  Australia 24-12  New Zealand  Canada (Third)
 England
Plate  Spain 5-0  Russia  Japan (Seventh)
 Netherlands
Bowl  United States 21-0  Brazil  Ireland (Eleventh)
 Argentina

São Paulo

[edit]
Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup  New Zealand 17–10  Australia  Canada (3rd)
 France
Plate  England 14–5  United States  Russia (7th)
 Brazil
Bowl  Fiji 17–12  Spain  China (11th)
 South Africa

São Paulo

[edit]
Event Winners Score Finalists Semifinalists
Cup  Australia 29–0  Canada  New Zealand (3rd)
 United States
Plate  France 15–7  Fiji  England (7th)
 Brazil
Bowl  Russia 38–12  Japan  Spain (11th)
 Ireland

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Sudamérica Rugby" (in Spanish).
  2. ^ a b "Las Yaguaretés, campeonas del SAR 7s por primera vez". Sudamérica Rugby (in Spanish). 2023-10-01. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  3. ^ a b c "Brazil Lose South American Crown to Argentina for the First Time". Americas Rugby News. 2023-10-02. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  4. ^ "Las Yaguaretés hicieron historia y son campeonas Sudamericanas". ESPN.com.ar (in Spanish). 2023-10-02. Retrieved 2024-02-23.
  5. ^ "Sudamericano Femenino Sevens 2019" (in Spanish). Sudamérica Rugby. 22 May 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.