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Hogan-Rochester helps Canada rugby sevens women finish third in season finale

CARSON — Asia Hogan-Rochester scored three tries as the Canadian women's rugby sevens team rallied from an early deficit Sunday to defeat the U.S. 27-7 and earn bronze at the HSBC SVNS World Championship.
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Canada's Alysha Corrigan, left, runs with the ball in a women's Pool D match at the 2025 HSBC SVNS World Championship in Carson, Calif., in a Saturday, May 3, 2025, handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-World Rugby, Alex Ho, *MANDATORY CREDIT*

CARSON — Asia Hogan-Rochester scored three tries as the Canadian women's rugby sevens team rallied from an early deficit Sunday to defeat the U.S. 27-7 and earn bronze at the HSBC SVNS World Championship.

The Canadians, silver medallists at the Paris Olympics, had also finished third in Hong Kong and Singapore, the two events preceding the season finale on the top-tier HSBC SVNS circuit

Canada finished fourth in last season's finale in Madrid in June, beaten 26-14 by No. 1 New Zealand in the bronze-medal game.

New Zealand defeated No. 2 Australia 31-7 in the women's final, completing a dominant season.

No. 4 South Africa downed No. 3 Spain 19-5 in the men's championship game. Before Sunday, Spain had made it to just two HSBC SVNS finals compared to 75 for South Africa (winning 42).

No. 7 New Zealand pocketed the men's bronze, defeating No. 1 Argentina 38-17.

Twelve men's and 12 women's teams contested the first six events of the season, which produced HSBC SVNS league champions in the Argentina men and New Zealand women.

Argentina won events in Perth (Australia), Vancouver and Hong Kong while finishing third in Dubai and Singapore.

The New Zealand women won in Cape Town, Vancouver, Hong Kong and Singapore, while Australia triumphed in Dubai and Perth. New Zealand and Australia went a combined 11-0-0 against Canada on the season.

The final event of the season saw the top eight men's and women's sides compete in the winner-take-all world championship at Dignity Health Sports Park, which will host rugby sevens at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

The Canada women, fourth after the first six events of the season, defeated No. 5 Japan 26-0 and No. 8 Britain 26-17 before falling 41-5 to New Zealand in group play. The women lost 33-7 to Australia earlier Sunday in semifinal play with Hogan-Rochester accounting for the Canadian points with a converted try and Faith Nathan scoring three tries for Australia.

That set up the third-place game against the sixth-ranked U.S., who lost 34-9 to New Zealand in the other semifinal

Sariah Ibarra sliced through the Canada defence for an early 7-0 U.S. lead. But poor discipline cost the Americans with Ibarra sent to the sin bin for an infraction soon after, reducing the U.S. to six players for the next two minutes.

Canada took advantage, pulling ahead 10-7 on tries via Charity Williams and Carissa Norsten with Ibarra off the field. Hogan-Rochester added another try on the eve of halftime for a 15-7 Canada lead.

Hogan-Rochester added two more tries in the second half, boosting her career total to 39.

There was no joy for the Canadian men, relegated from the top tier last June. They had hoped to earn their way back into the HSBC SVNS field via a promotion/relegation tournament held in conjunction with the World Championship.

But World Rugby changed the playing field, announcing on the eve of the tournament a revamped format to the sevens circuit next season.

Instead of promotion, the best the Canadian men could do was make the new Division 2 next season, with a chance to then earn promotion to the revamped eight-team top tier. And that slipped through their fingers Sunday in a 24-5 loss to Kenya in a playoff final.

In the first year of an Olympic quadrennial, the Canadian women have improved as the season wore on, with coach Jocelyn Barrieau managing a stream of new talent while players cycle between the sevens and 15s sides.

The Canadian women finished eighth to open the current season in Dubai, before placing fifth in Cape Town, fourth in Perth, seventh in Vancouver and third in both Hong Kong and Singapore.

While the top eight teams vied for the world championship, teams nine through 12 in the HSBC SVNS faced the top four teams from the second-tier Challenger Series — including the Canadian men — in the playoff bracket.

That was slated to be a promotion/relegation playoff until World Rugby changed the rules.

Now the Canadian men find themselves starting over at the bottom again. They will have to win the Rugby Americas North Sevens to make Division 3, which consists of a standalone Challenger event with eight men's and eight women's teams.

And then they will have to win their way back into Division 2, which will features six men's and six women's teams competing in three events.

James Thiel scored a consolation try, his first for Canada, against Kenya with time winding down.

The Canadians finished second in Group B behind Uruguay, beating Ireland 19-12 and Germany 22-17, losing 24-7 to the South Americans.

Uruguay, the U.S., Kenya and Germany will compete in the new Division 2 next season.

Uruguay and the U.S. qualified by virtue of winning their pools. The second- and third-place teams in the two groups crossed over for playoff games to decide who joined them with Kenya and Germany, which blanked Samoa 31-0, getting the job done.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 4, 2025.

The Canadian Press

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