
Sevens' financial future at stake, changes necessary for Olympics
World Rugby said the changes to its sevens competition were designed to secure the sport's financial future and grow its global reach ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
Advertisement
Confirming it was slashing the number of teams in the World Series from 12 to eight, and installing a six-team second division, the sport's governing body also said regular tournaments would be cut from three days to just two.
There was no word, however, on the format for the new World Championship Series, which will be played over three events and include the 12 best men's and women's teams.
In its statement, rugby bosses said they would launch a 'global host tender process' this month.
'The Cathay/HSBC Hong Kong Sevens is a globally renowned, iconic event for rugby sevens fans and we are committed to supporting World Rugby in delivering a sustainable and exciting new model of SVNS,' Hong Kong China Rugby said in a statement. 'Further details and event dates will be announced in due course.'
The Rugby Sevens structure for 2026
A stand-alone Challenger event, which the new structure suggests will take place before the start of the second-tier competition, would continue to provide a pathway for lesser sides to progress, World Rugby said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
New-look China women open Volleyball Nations League campaign in Beijing
China's women begin their road to volleyball redemption at home to Belgium on Wednesday, as the 2025 Nations League gets under way in Beijing. Advertisement Still smarting from a poor performance at the Paris Olympics, where they lost in the quarter-finals to Turkey, China have since overhauled an ageing squad and installed Zhao Young as head coach. More than half of the 18-strong squad will be making their international debuts this week, and at a pre-tournament press conference, Zhao said starting in from their own fans at the National Indoor Stadium brought both 'pressure and motivation'. 'But the motivation is greater. It has been years since a major international tournament was held in Beijing, and for this new generation of players, it is more of an encouragement,' said the 49-year-old, who took over from Cai Bin last month. 'All the athletes have shown great commitment and a strong desire to bring honour to the country and the team,' Zhao said. 'We hope to grow and improve through tough competition.' Advertisement Team captain Gong Xiangyu is among those in the squad who have tasted success, winning Olympic gold in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and the FIVB World Cup in 2019.


South China Morning Post
4 days ago
- South China Morning Post
How the Lady of the manor renovated her Cotswold property to be a home and business
In 2018, after 15 years in Hong Kong, Briton Alice Fortescue heard her ancestral roots calling when a perfect storm drew her, her husband, Robert Derry, and their two Hong Kong-born children back to the family estate, Ebrington Manor. 'The idea had always been to build a business [in Hong Kong] and sell it,' says Fortescue, who inherited the honorific 'Lady' from her father, Charles Fortescue, 8th Earl Fortescue. In fact, the couple, who moved to Hong Kong in 2003, had built two successful businesses in the events sector, selling both to the same buyer who offered Derry a job in Britain, where Fortescue could also continue her work in the rugby sevens-related events she'd started in Hong Kong. The 80-hectare grounds include a lake fed by a natural spring, a boathouse, rose gardens and an orchard. Photo: Nick Church Photography 'Rob's father was not well,' says Fortescue. 'My father was getting on as well, and he asked if we'd be interested in taking on the house.' Her parents, living in the main house at the time, would downsize into the (now renovated) old farm buildings on the estate. Having grown up in Ebrington since the age of three months, London-born Fortescue knew every inch of the three-storey Cotswold manor set on 80 hectares (of the original 800) near Chipping Campden, in Gloucestershire, southwest Britain, complete with summer house, lake house, ponds, orchards and rose gardens. 'Maintaining a house like this is hugely expensive,' says Fortescue. 'We always knew we'd have to incorporate some sort of commercial venture to make it work.'


South China Morning Post
4 days ago
- South China Morning Post
No world-class swimming pool in Hong Kong any time soon
A new swimming arena capable of hosting world-class competition was unlikely to be built in Hong Kong any time soon, sources have told the Post, with officials deciding there was no room for a pool near Kai Tak Sports Park. Sung Wong Toi Park, a thin strip of land sandwiched between two major roads in Kowloon, had reportedly been considered for the project, but was later deemed 'not big enough' for an Olympic-sized facility. A government source said while they could build something there 'for what we wish to have, we are not entirely sure we can fit everything – spectator stands and other facilities – in it'. The source added: 'We couldn't quite visualise it happening there for now; maybe we could try squeezing everything in, but there's no conclusion yet.' Hong Kong's leader John Lee Ka-chiu had mentioned the construction of a new pool in each of his past two policy addresses, after local swimming star Siobhan Haughey amassed four medals – two silver and two bronze – at the past two Olympic Games in Tokyo and Paris. Siobhan Haughey in action during swimming world championships qualification in Hong Kong. Photo: Edmond SO Despite the fact that a location had not yet been identified, the source confirmed that a new swimming arena remained a priority for the government.