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Abby Gustaitis was a prominent player for her country in both the sevens and 15s codes. Photo: USA Rugby

Hong Kong Sevens showed how rugby ‘empowers women like no other sport’, ex-USA skipper Abby Gustaitis says

  • Watching former USA teammates compete on same stage as men at the Sevens was ‘cool’, Gustaitis says
  • Olympic inclusion has put ‘huge focus’ on growing sevens in United States, with 2028 LA Games a major draw for teenage girls, she adds

Former USA captain Abby Gustaitis said rugby empowers women to a degree “unmatched in other sports” after she marvelled at the latest evidence of it at the Cathay/HSBC Hong Kong Sevens.

Attending as an HSBC ambassador, Gustaitis praised the city’s showpiece event for its part in promoting equality by including a full women’s world series event for a second year running.

The 32-year-old, who co-captained her country’s sevens team to the quarter-finals of the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, and was a 2017 Rugby World Cup semi-finalist, contrasts that equal treatment with her experiences elsewhere. She was a high-school basketball star before joining the United States’ national rugby programme in 2015.

“Having the same size pitch, and the same rules as the men, along with the feeling of complete parity, drew me to rugby,” Gustaitis said.

Gustaitis at this year’s Hong Kong Sevens, where she was inspired by what she saw on the pitch. Photo: Sun Yeung

“I grew up playing basketball, and the three-point line for women was closer than in the men’s game. It was so frustrating, I always felt, ‘Do [administrators] not think I am capable?’

“I came into rugby and immediately appreciated the full-contact aspect of the sport, and the ability to take ownership of what we were doing. It felt like, ‘Anything [men] can do, I can do, too.’”

Men’s and women’s competitions coexist in the elite HSBC SVNS Series, and in the second-rung Challenger Series in which Hong Kong compete.

“It was so cool to see my former teammates running out onto the pitch in Hong Kong, and the crowd equally excited for the men’s and women’s games,” Gustaitis said. “There was no sense of, ‘The women are playing, let’s take a break.’ All eyes are continuously on the pitch.”

Gustaitis’ USA team finished second in the 2018-19 world series and reached the semi-finals of the previous year’s Rugby World Cup Sevens. But for its goals of entering the broader public consciousness and attracting investment, USA Rugby leans heavily on the Olympics, to be staged in Los Angeles in 2028.

“[Olympic inclusion] helped our programme become full-time, because we received funding and support from the United States Olympic Committee,” Gustaitis said.

“The Olympics are a massive draw and, for Americans, the pinnacle of sport. They have brought a lot of light to sevens.”

 

The US has yet to reach an Olympic podium since the sport’s 2016 debut, but its women were runners-up in Hong Kong this year, while the men finished seventh. They are fourth and eighth respectively in the series standings.

Gustaitis says her compatriots are “right there” as contenders for Paris, before LA provides an opportunity to transform sevens stateside.

USA Rugby is a partner in Premier Rugby Sevens, featuring men’s and women’s leagues, which broke the mould in North American rugby by awarding professional contracts to women.

“There will be a huge focus on rugby sevens, and the girls are already excited,” Gustaitis said. “I coach at the Naval Academy [in Maryland]; it is a bunch of 18-year-olds … and they have set their eyes on 2028.

“It will be here before we know it, so let’s go after it. Having it on home soil will heighten the experience, and drive the athletes vying for spots.”

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