BC Place is ready to host its milestone 10th anniversary edition of HSBC SVNS rugby as the world’s premier sevens tournament returns to Vancouver from February 21-23, 2025. The three-day festival promises high-stakes rugby action featuring the world’s top 12 men’s and women’s teams in what has become one of the circuit’s most distinctive stops.
Tight race at the top
The competition arrives at a crucial juncture in the 2024-25 SVNS series. In the men’s standings, an unprecedented three-way tie sees Fiji, Argentina, and Spain all locked at 48 points, setting up a fascinating battle for supremacy.
In the women’s competition, Olympic champions New Zealand lead with 56 points, though they face strong pressure from Australia, who trail by just two points after their triumph in Perth. The Black Ferns will welcome back Olympic gold medallist Stacey Waaka from injury, while Michaela Brake needs just three more tries to surpass Portia Woodman-Wickliffe’s all-time record of 256 tries – fittingly at the venue where Woodman-Wickliffe scored a hat-trick in last season’s final.
Can the Aussies do it again without Levi?
Australia faces the unique challenges of Vancouver as they attempt to defend their Perth title without World Rugby Women’s Sevens Player of the Year Maddison Levi. The tournament’s distinctive indoor setting and synthetic surface at BC Place has prompted special preparation, with the team conducting training sessions at Eastern Suburbs’ Woolahra Oval to acclimate to the artificial turf conditions.
The scoring void left by Levi, who had amassed an impressive 30 tries in 14 SVNS matches this season, will need to be filled as they open their Vancouver campaign against hosts Canada in what promises to be a challenging Pool A alongside Brazil and Spain. Eyes will be on 19-year-old Heidi Dennis to continue her breakthrough after her Player of the Final performance in Perth.
Will Argentina build on Perth success?
Los Pumas Sevens enter Vancouver with momentum after claiming gold in Perth, following their bronze medal performance in Dubai. More ominously for their opponents, they’re on an 18-game unbeaten run at BC Place and are seeking their fourth straight victory in Vancouver. “In Perth we had a good tournament but there’s also things to improve,” said Argentina captain Santiago Mare. “Since then, we have focused on continuing to improve in the game and making winning a consequence of doing things right.”
The hosts have their eyes on the prize
The Canadian women return to BC Place with high expectations after capturing Olympic silver in Paris and bronze in Vancouver last year. The squad will be bolstered by the return of Olympic medallists Alysha Corrigan, Charity Williams, Fancy Bermudez, and Krissy Scurfield, bringing their total of Olympic medallists to nine.
“We travel the world and we see the most amazing places, but there’s nothing like playing at home,” said three-time Olympian Williams, who returns for her first SVNS appearance since Paris and sits one try away from her 100th international score. After finishing fourth in Perth, captain Piper Logan is confident about their chances: “I think our expectation this weekend is to get on a podium. We’ve never been able to win Vancouver sevens, so we have our eyes set on that, and we have a team that’s able to do that.”
Surprise packages look to continue rise
Spain has been the revelation of the men’s series, making history with three consecutive semi-final appearances. Having reached their first-ever final in Dubai and securing bronze in Cape Town, they could become the fourth different winner in four rounds. “Obviously we all grew up playing rugby in Spain, so having the opportunity to beat big teams like New Zealand, Ireland, Great Britain, for us, it’s incredible,” said Spanish wing Jeremy Trevithick. “We’re honestly living in a dream right now.”
Uruguay has also shown they can compete with anyone in their first SVNS campaign since promotion. After stunning Fiji and New Zealand in Perth’s pool stage, they’ll have another chance to upset the odds when they face Fiji in Vancouver’s opening match.
Tournament format
The action begins Friday at 11:18 local time (GMT-8) with pool matches, continuing through Saturday’s knockout rounds before Sunday’s finals day. In a progressive move, the women’s final will serve as the tournament’s grand finale at 17:41 on Sunday.
Women

VANCOUVER, BC – February 19: Women’s team captains pose for a photo in advance of the 2025 HSBC SVNS Vancouver at Sunset Beach on February 19, 2025 in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Photo by Alex Ho and Zach Franzen / World Rugby)
Pools
Pool A: Australia, Canada, Brazil, Spain
Pool B: New Zealand, China, Ireland, USA
Pool C: Fiji, France, Great Britain, Japan
Day One Schedule (Local time PST/GMT-8)
Morning session
14:00 – Japan vs Fiji (Pool C)
14:22 – France vs Great Britain (Pool C)
14:44 – USA vs China (Pool B)
15:06 – New Zealand vs Ireland (Pool B)
15:28 – Canada vs Brazil (Pool A)
15:50 – Australia vs Spain (Pool A)
Afternoon session
19:30 – Japan vs Great Britain (Pool C)
19:52 – France vs Fiji (Pool C)
20:14 – USA vs Ireland (Pool B)
20:36 – New Zealand vs China (Pool B)
20:58 – Canada vs Spain (Pool A)
21:20 – Australia vs Brazil (Pool A)
Men

VANCOUVER, BC – February 19: Men’s team captains pose for a photo in advance of the 2025 HSBC SVNS Vancouver at Sunset Beach on February 19, 2025 in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Photo by Alex Ho and Zach Franzen / World Rugby)
Pools
Pool A: Argentina, France, Great Britain, Kenya
Pool B: Australia, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa
Pool C: Fiji, Spain, Uruguay, USA
Day One Schedule (Local time PST/GMT-8)
Morning session
11:18 – Fiji vs Uruguay (Pool C)
11:40 – Spain vs USA (Pool C)
12:02 – South Africa vs New Zealand (Pool B)
12:24 – Australia vs Ireland (Pool B)
12:46 – France vs Great Britain (Pool A)
13:08 – Argentina vs Kenya (Pool A)
13:30 – Canada vs Trinidad & Tobago (FAST4)
Afternoon session
16:12 – Japan vs Trinidad & Tobago (FAST4)
16:45 – Fiji vs USA (Pool C)
17:07 – Spain vs Uruguay (Pool C)
17:29 – South Africa vs Ireland (Pool B)
17:51 – Australia vs New Zealand (Pool B)
18:13 – France vs Kenya (Pool A)
18:35 – Argentina vs Great Britain (Pool A)
18:57 – Canada vs Japan (FAST4)
Where to watch
Fans can watch the HSBC SVNS action wherever they are in the world, either via broadcaster partners or on http://www.RugbyPassTV. Following the blockbuster Olympic sevens competitions, an impressive roster of broadcast partners will bring the SVNS to a huge potential global audience.