About: IRB Sevens World Series   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/-RUI_d-AURewnj5DPqwoJA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

The IRB Sevens World Series, known officially as the IRB Sevens before the 2006-07 season and also sometimes called the World Sevens Series, is a series of international rugby union sevens tournaments organised for the first time in the 1999-2000 season. The tournaments, run by the International Rugby Board, feature national sevens teams. The series was first formed to develop an elite-level competition series between rugby nations and develop the Sevens game into a viable commercial product of the IRB. In 2005-06, the tour received 1147 hours of air time, 530 of which was live, and was broadcast to 136 countries.[1]

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • IRB Sevens World Series
rdfs:comment
  • The IRB Sevens World Series, known officially as the IRB Sevens before the 2006-07 season and also sometimes called the World Sevens Series, is a series of international rugby union sevens tournaments organised for the first time in the 1999-2000 season. The tournaments, run by the International Rugby Board, feature national sevens teams. The series was first formed to develop an elite-level competition series between rugby nations and develop the Sevens game into a viable commercial product of the IRB. In 2005-06, the tour received 1147 hours of air time, 530 of which was live, and was broadcast to 136 countries.[1]
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foaf:homepage
dbkwik:rugby-union...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:rugbyunion/...iPageUsesTemplate
Current season
  • 2007(xsd:integer)
Logo
  • IRB_Sevens_logo.jpg
Champion
  • New Zealand
Country
  • Worldwide
Sport
pixels
  • 146(xsd:integer)
Teams
  • 24(xsd:integer)
Founded
  • 1999(xsd:integer)
abstract
  • The IRB Sevens World Series, known officially as the IRB Sevens before the 2006-07 season and also sometimes called the World Sevens Series, is a series of international rugby union sevens tournaments organised for the first time in the 1999-2000 season. The tournaments, run by the International Rugby Board, feature national sevens teams. The series was first formed to develop an elite-level competition series between rugby nations and develop the Sevens game into a viable commercial product of the IRB. In 2005-06, the tour received 1147 hours of air time, 530 of which was live, and was broadcast to 136 countries.[1] Teams compete for the Sevens World Series title by accumulating points based on their finishing position in each tournaments. The tournaments span the globe. In 2005-06, the most famous Sevens event, the Hong Kong Sevens, returned to the series after a one-year hiatus, in the 2004-05 season, for the IRB Rugby World Cup Sevens, which was held in Hong Kong in March 2005 and won by Fiji. Sevens is a stripped-down version of rugby union with seven players each side on a normal-sized field, rather than the normal fifteen. Games are much shorter, lasting only seven or ten minutes each half, and tend to be very fast-paced, open, affairs. Sevens is traditionally played in a two-day tournament format, with the Hong Kong Sevens (an anomaly as a three-day event) being the most famous. The game is quicker and higher-scoring than 15-a-side rugby and the rules are far simpler, which explains part of its appeal. It also gives players the space for superb feats of individual skill. New Zealand and Fiji are traditionally the strongest teams, although in recent years Argentina, Australia, England, France and South Africa have all won tournaments, and Samoa ran the two favourites very close for the World Series title in the 2006-07 season.
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