NZ sevens captain DJ Forbe
New Zealand have won a fourth consecutive Commonwealth
Games sevens rugby gold medal after beating Australia 24-17 in
a thrilling final today.
A perfect record was maintained by Gordon Tietjens who has
been coach since sevens was introduced to the Games in 1998
and his team did him proud with a superb campaign in New
Delhi.
It was capped by a brilliant comeback display in the
20-minute trans-Tasman struggle, where New Zealand fought
back from 7-17 down with six minutes remaining, running in
three of their four tries in the closing stages.
With his team two points up, Kurt Baker -- arguably New
Zealand's star player at the 16-nation tournament -- scored
their last try in the final minute, prompting wild
celebrations from his teammates while the Australians
collapsed to the turf.
Other tries went to Lote Raikabula, to put his side up in the
fourth minute, and Sherwin Stowers and DJ Forbes when the New
Zealand team surged home late.
Australia produced a stern challenge, scoring their three
tries either side of halftime to rock a New Zealand side who
were down to six men late in the first half after Liam Messam
was sinbinned for a high tackle.
The New Zealanders celebrated with two shirtless haka in
front of a small but appreciative audience after receiving
their medals.
Tietjens said victory was built in the week spent training
and preparing in the heat of Dubai before arriving in Delhi.
"I look at all the hard work you do to win a gold medal," he
said.
"We smashed ourselves in Dubai to be fair. And when you turn
around and win a gold medal, all those hard trainings are
worth it.
Inspirational captain Forbes said nobody's heads dropped when
they trailed by 10 points.
"We knew that we were still in the hunt. They were still in
our reach," he said.
"It just shows a lot of character for the boys to guts it
out."
Wearing a gold medal around his neck meant a huge amount to
Forbes.
"I've had four years to prepare for this Comm Games. I was
disappointed to miss out four years ago but I was just a
young kid," he said.
"I've had four years of training to get it right. Tietj did a
good job nursing me into that role.
"And then we did a lot of time in Dubai working on the little
things."
Victory takes New Zealand's gold medal tally at the Games to
three.
South Africa, who were ousted 17-7 by Australia in the
semifinals, bounced back to win the bronze medal, beating
England 17-14.
Earlier, New Zealand started slowly before beating Wales
31-10 in the quarterfinals and hammering England 33-12 in the
semis.
The England win was especially impressive, with Forbes
grabbing the limelight courtesy of two first-half tries to
put his team 12-0 up at the break.
He and former skipper Liam Messam. led from the front as the
New Zealanders adopted a direct game plan, finding holes in
the middle of the park rather than going wide to the speed of
winger Hosea Gear.
It paid dividends in the fourth minute when Forbes backed up
a Lote Raikabula half-break to score, followed by his second
2min later when he dived over from a ruck.
Manawatu pair Raikabula and Tomasi Cama scored the three
second-half tries between, Cama's second from an astute chip
and chase.
Rocked onto the back foot early by Wales in their opening
game today, New Zealand broke out of their half for the first
time in the sixth minute to score through Baker and take a
7-5 lead into halftime.
An animated halftime message from coach Gordon Tietjens seem
to do the trick as the three-time defending gold medallists
bounced back to score four second-half tries.
World series champions Samoa were below their best here and
were eliminated by a 7-5 quarterfinal loss to England.
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