2019–20 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series

Only five of the originally scheduled eight tournaments were completed before the series was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[1] New Zealand was awarded the series title at the end of June 2020, on account of it leading by 16 points over the second-placed Australia.[2] The events planned for Hong Kong,[3] Langford and Paris were postponed,[4] before eventually being cancelled.[14] The tournaments planned for Hong Kong (3–5 April 2020), Langford (2–3 May 2020) and Paris (30–31 May 2020),[16] were ultimately cancelled due to health concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] Official standings for the 2019–20 series: Source: World Rugby Tallies of top four tournament placings during the 2019–20 series, by team: * 5th Place and Challenge Trophy not contested Updated: 4 February 2020 Updated: 4 February 2020 Notes Citations
2019–20 World Rugby Sevens SeriesUnited StatesUnited Arab EmiratesSouth AfricaNew ZealandAustraliaCanadaStacey FluhlerAlev Kelter2018–192021–22global circuitrugby sevensWorld RugbyCOVID-19 pandemicBrazilEnglandFranceIrelandRussiaWorld Series qualifierTokyo SevensOlympic SevensWorld SeriesInfinity ParkGlendaleDenverThe SevensCape Town StadiumCape TownWaikato StadiumHamiltonBankwest StadiumSydneyGlen­daleHamil­ton2019 USA Women's Sevens2019 Dubai Women's Sevens2019 South Africa Women's Sevens2019–20 World Rugby Women's Sevens Series squadsEllia GreenBianca FarellaEmma TonegatoGhislaine LandryTyla Nathan-WongCharlotte CaslickSéraphine OkembaMichaela BlydeShannon IzarCoralie BertrandKelly BrazierAna Maria NaimasiCamille GrassineauBaizat KhamidovaRugby sevens at the 2020 Summer Olympics2019–20 World Series core qualification2020 World Challenger SeriesWomen's Sevens SeriesSquadsWomen's SVNS2012–132013–142014–152015–162016–172017–182022–232023–242024–25NetherlandsWomen's IRB ChallengePerth Rectangular StadiumDignity Health Sports ParkBC PlaceHong Kong StadiumNational StadiumMetropolitano StadiumSevens Challenger SeriesRugby World Cup Sevens