'Like a World Cup' Walsh hungry for Aussie Sevens success in Dubai in hunt for sixth straight title

Tue, Nov 18, 2025, 5:00 AM
Nick Wasiliev
by Nick Wasiliev
Congratulations, Maddison Levi, your DEFENDER of the Year!

With tomorrow marking ten days until the start of the SVNS World Sevens, Women’s head coach Tim Walsh is chomping at the bit to hit the ground running, comparing the new nine-tournament format to that of a ‘World Cup.’

The hunger to get started is further bolstered by Dubai being a happy hunting ground for Australia, with the women’s side having won the last five consecutive titles there.

Watch the 2025-2026 HSBC SVNS Series live and on demand via Stan Sport.

“From my point of view, I always love going to Dubai to showcase what you've been doing in the pre-season," Walsh told Rugby.com.au

“It gives it some relevance and something to believe in. So, I think we're the best prepared team, to be honest. I think getting to Dubai is for all different reasons, but kicking off the season, we're always really well prepared.

“It's hard and fast. It's hot. It just suits us and everyone's just raring to go.”

Walsh is particularly excited to get stuck into the new format, which serves as an exciting change of pace in the tournament’s history and serves as a valuable finals-style format to fill the gap left by the sport's temporary omission from the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

“I think every World Series tournament, they're all pretty prestigious,” Walsh added.

“We want to go out there and win and nd the Comm Games, it'll return, which is great, but the World Series, the last three, is like a World Cup.

“It's a great opportunity for the team to have a benchmark goal for and continue on our growth as a program. 

"It's great having the World Series this year, up to nine tournaments, and then they've split it into the six [regular season] and the three [finals]. So from a coaching point of view, it's fantastic to have a healthy squad and a big squad, and an experienced squad.”

Walsh and the players have had a near-perfect preseason, with several tournaments in Fiji and Queensland, and the opportunity to play regularly against arch-rivals New Zealand, a clash that the head coach compares to a ‘sibling rivalry.’

With the likes of the USA, Fiji, and Japan also getting involved, Walsh believes the side is in a good place to hit the ground running when the first whistle blows at The Sevens Stadium on November 29th.

“It is very handy to be able to duck over to Fiji, New Zealand and vice versa,” he added.

“Then having Japan, USA, you know, they know to get better, they probably want to play against us. So, they jumped on a plane and came down here and played.

“Very diverse teams too, like Japan, USA, New Zealand, Fiji. [We’re] fortunate and great prep to play world-class teams, but of all different styles. 

“Australia and New Zealand are probably without doubt the leaders, in terms of numbers and stuff like that. Part of that is that we are neighbours and we play each other all the time so, it's a bit of a sibling rivalry, I guess.”

Share
Chancellor, Duck headline five experienced World Cup representatives signing new contracts
Ireland's depth stocks bolstered as Ringrose, Van der Flier declared fit for South Africa clash
Samoa are hunting for a spot in the 2027 Rugby World Cup in a winner-takes-all match with Belgium. Photo: World Rugby
Samoan pride, World Cup place at stake in Dubai
Nations Championship officially launches as 2026 fixtures, format unveiled