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Canadian rugby women miss podium in Dubai

From desert metropolis to soggy Victoria suburb, the Canadian women鈥檚 rugby team gets back to training Wednesday at Westhills Stadium.
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John Tait at team practice: ññWe had our chances but didnÍt play our best."

From desert metropolis to soggy Victoria suburb, the Canadian women鈥檚 rugby team gets back to training Wednesday at Westhills Stadium. It does so feeling a sense of dissatisfaction with its fourth-place finish over the weekend in the 2017-18 World Series-opening Dubai Sevens.

鈥淲e had our chances but didn鈥檛 play our best on Day 2,鈥 said head coach John Tait of Mill Bay, after the team arrived back on the Island early Sunday.

鈥淲e are not pleased with fourth at all. But we had a short bench and ran out of gas.鈥

sa国际传媒, the 2016 Rio Olympics bronze-medallist, began strong with a 3-0 pool record with blow-out wins over Spain, Ireland and Fiji and a 24-19 overtime victory against France in the quarter-finals.

The 鈥渞unning out of gas鈥 part came in a 25-7 loss to Australia in the semifinals and a surprising 10-5 setback against Russia in the bronze-medal game.

The situation was worsened by an injury to Breanne Nicholas early in the tournament. That came with injured regulars Bianca Farella, Charity Williams, Kaili Lukan and Sara Kaljuvee already out of the lineup, necessitating the call-up of youthful newcomers Tausani Levale and Emma Chown. Meanwhile, veterans Jen Kish and Kayla Moleschi have only just returned from serious injuries.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a matter of getting [Kish鈥檚 and Moleschi鈥檚] form and fitness back,鈥 said Tait.

Mainstays Farella and Williams are expected back for the next World Series tournament next month in Sydney.

鈥淚f we had played well against Australia, we would have made the final,鈥 lamented Tait, of the Dubai results over the weekend.

鈥淚t was unfortunate because there was a real opportunity.鈥

There was a sense of deja-vu to all this. sa国际传媒 finished third overall in the World Series standings last season and was denied second place by a slender margin thanks to points lost in a similar under-achieving performance at the 2016 Dubai Sevens season-opener, in which it placed fifth.

The Aussies defeated the U.S. 34-0 in the 2017 Dubai final on the weekend after the Americans had stunned defending World Series-champion New Zealand in the semifinals.

Julia Greenshields of sa国际传媒 was named to the tournament Dream Team.

Meanwhile, tickets go on sale Thursday at 10 a.m. at canadasevens.com for the World Series sa国际传媒 Sevens to be played at Westhills Stadium for the fourth consecutive year, May 12-13. The other remaining women鈥檚 World Series stops are Sydney on Jan. 26-28, Kitakyushu, Japan, on April 21-22, and Paris on June 8-10. There will be two additional events for sa国际传媒 this season with the 2018 Commonwealth Games scheduled April 4-15 at Gold Coast, Australia, and the World Cup from July 20-22 at AT&T Park in San Francisco.

鈥淲e will have to manage that smartly,鈥 said Tait.

The Langford-based Canadian men鈥檚 team lost 28-21 to France in the consolation-side Challenge Trophy semifinals of the Dubai Sevens after beating the U.S. 10-5 in the Challenge quarter-finals thanks to the fine passing of Victoria鈥檚 Connor Braid for the winning try. sa国际传媒 went 1-2 in pool play after beating Uganda 22-17 but losing 29-15 to Kenya and 28-0 to Rio Olympics bronze-medallist South Africa, which went on to win the Dubai Sevens.

On the Canadian team are Pat Kay of Duncan, Mike Fuailefau and Braid, both of Victoria, University of Victoria Vikes products Nathan Hirayama, Lucas Hammond and Isaac Kaay, John Moonlight of James Bay, Phil Berna, Admir Cejvanovic, Justin Douglas, Matt Mullins, Liam Underwood and captain Harry Jones.

sa国际传媒 now travels to the Cape Town Sevens and opens Saturday in a pool with Fiji, Samoa and Wales.

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