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England break Kenyan hearts

Wellington - Sam Edgerley scored a try in extra time to give England a 24-19 win over Kenya on Saturday in the final of the Wellington Sevens, the fourth round of the International Rugby Board's World Series.

England turned around a dismal season when they scored twice late in a tense final to deny Kenya their first ever victory in a World Series tournament.

Kenya, who shocked defending champion and World Series leaders New Zealand to reach the final, rallied from 12-0 down during the first half to lead England 19-12 with time up on the clock.

But, reduced to only five men by two yellow cards, Kenya conceded a try to Christian Lewis-Platt which tied the scores on full-time and was then denied by Edgerley's match-winner in overtime.

The final set the seal on a tournament punctuated by massive upsets. England set the tone when they beat New Zealand, first-placed in the world standings, in the opening round of pool play on Friday.

Hosts New Zealand managed to rally with wins over Spain and the United States to reach Saturday's quarter-finals of the top-tier Cup competition. But France and Fiji, respectively second and third in the world standings, both suffered two losses in pool play and were relegated to the consolation Bowl competition, Fiji for the first time in the 14-year history of the World Series.

Nor did Fiji's woes stop there. They were beaten 28-19 by Canada in the Bowl final to leave Wellington without any silverware and with their worst-ever result on the world circuit.

Upsets continued throughout Saturday of the tournament and the season came when Kenya beat New Zealand 19-14 in the Cup semi-finals, achieving their first-ever win over the world champions. England beat Samoa 21-19 to capture the other place in an unexpected final match-up.

England's momentum continued when they scored early tries through Dan Norton and Lewis-Pratt to claim a 12-0 lead as Kenya struggled in the unfamiliar final atmosphere.

But Kenya settled, then rallied, scoring tries through veteran Horace Otieno and Oscar Ouma to tie the scores 12-12. Rising star Willy Ambaka then broke away to score an outstanding solo try in the final minute of the first half and to give Kenya a 19-12 lead at the turnaround.

That score persisted through a second half which was notable for stifling defences and the obvious and growing fatigue of both teams.

Kenya were in sight of their first-ever tournament victory when their captain, Andrew Amonde was sin-binned for a professional foul, and Ouma followed Amonde only a minute later, leaving them with five men.

England couldn't help but capitalise on that numerical advantage and Lewis-Pratt scored to tie the match at 19-19, forcing it into extra time.

Kenya still had only six men in extra time and England took advantage for a second time when Edgerley, in only his fourth World Series tournament, scored the winning try.

"That was incredible," England captain Tom Powell said. "The atmosphere was incredible, the Kenyan team were incredible.

"The physical limits were pushed beyond today and it was amazing for the boys to come through like that after the year we've had. It just shows the determination and how we've pulled together as a team."

New Zealand beat Samoa 17-7 to finish in third place and retain their overall series lead ahead of next weekend's fifth-round in Las Vegas.

Results from the Wellington Sevens, fourth round of the International Rugby Board World Series:

Saturday:

Cup

Quarter-finals

England 31, Scotland 7
Samoa 31, Argentina 7
New Zealand 24, Australia 5
Kenya 21, South Africa 20

Semi-finals

England 21, Samoa 19
Kenya 19, New Zealand 14

Third-fourth playoff

New Zealand 17, Samoa 7

Plate

Semi-finals

Scotland 35, Argentina 5
Australia 28, South Africa 12

Final

Australia 22, Scotland 7

Bowl

Quarter-finals

Spain 26, Portugal 19
Canada 28, Tonga 5
Fiji 29, United States 12
France 33, Wales 12

Semi-finals

Canada 31, Spain 7
Fiji 19, France 17

Final

Canada 28, Fiji 19

Shield

Semi-finals

Tonga 17, Portugal 7
Wales 17, United States 15

Final

Wales 26, Tonga 21

Points standings after four of nine rounds:

New Zealand 77 points, Kenya 56, Samoa 54, France 51, Fiji 51, South Africa 51, Argentina 46, England 37, Wales 34, Australia 32.

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