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Heaslip Score Nominated For IRPA Try Of The Year Award

Seven shortlists for World Rugby Awards have been announced ahead of the ceremony in London on Sunday, November 13, including the IRPA Try of the Year award for which Ireland number 8 Jamie Heaslip is nominated.

World Rugby has unveiled the shortlists for seven top accolades, including the Men’s and Women’s Sevens Players of the Year, to be presented at the World Rugby Awards 2016 dinner at the Hilton London Metropole on Sunday, November 13.

The World Rugby Awards will celebrate an historic year of rugby which saw Sevens make a hugely successful debut at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games, where Australia’s Women and Fiji’s Men added a gold medal to their World Series crowns.

Australia’s Olympic gold medallist Charlotte Caslick is one of three players nominated for the World Rugby Women’s Sevens Player of the Year award (in association with HSBC), alongside 2015 winner Portia Woodman of New Zealand – the top try scorer on the 2015/16 HSBC World Rugby Women’s Sevens Series – and Emily Scarratt, the England and Great Britain captain.

Osea Kolinisau led Fiji to their first ever Olympic medal in Rio and is joined on the shortlist for the World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year award (in association with HSBC) by France’s Virimi Vakatawa and South Africa’s Seabelo Senatla, who crossed for 66 tries in the 2015/16 series.

Fiji’s Sevens stars also feature on the shortlist for World Rugby Team of the Year alongside Six Nations Grand Slam winners England and Rugby Championship winners New Zealand, who equalled Lithuania’s record of 18 consecutive Test match victories by defeating Australia at Eden Park earlier this month.

These three nations also provide the three nominees for the World Rugby Coach of the Year with Ben Ryan, who stepped down after leading Fiji to series and Olympic success in 2016, joined by England coach Eddie Jones and Steve Hansen, the All Blacks coach who is already a three-time recipient of this award from 2012 to 2014.

The three players nominated for the Breakthrough Player of the Year award have all come through the World Rugby Under-20 Championship in recent years, with England’s 2014-winning captain Maro Itoje joined by new All Blacks Ardie Savea and Anton Lienert-Brown. 

In order to be eligible for this award, won by New Zealand’s Nehe Milner-Skudder in 2015, players must have played less than one year of senior international rugby, with former players George Gregan and Felipe Contepomi among the panellists selecting the shortlist.

The IRPA (International Rugby Players’ Association) Try of the Year shortlist features two tries that began deep in the scoring side’s own 22 with Jamie Heaslip’s try for Ireland in their Six Nations encounter with Italy and Kaito Shigeno’s effort for Japan against Scotland in June. The third, by TJ Perenara, came direct from an Argentina restart, the All Black scrum half fielding the kick himself before the ball was spread wide and through the hands for Ben Smith to feed Perenara for the run-in.

Head to www.twitter.com/worldrugby and cast your vote for IRPA Try of the Year by tweeting #Heaslip, #Shigeno or #Perenara.

The final shortlist announced on Tuesday is for the World Rugby Referee award with Jérôme Garcès of France and Spain’s Alhambra Nievas nominated for a second year running. They are joined on the shortlist by two South Africans in Rasta Rasivhenge and Jaco Peyper.

World Rugby Chairman Bill Beaumont said: “The World Rugby Awards celebrate excellence in rugby, honouring the world’s greatest players, coaches and teams as well as those who have given so much to the sport.

“The past year has produced some amazing performances by all the best Men’s and Women’s teams, in both 15s and Sevens, so voting for the 2016 awards has been especially close and hard-fought. Each person on the various shortlists thoroughly deserves their nomination. 

“This has been a special year in the history of our game as Sevens made its Olympic Games debut in Rio. I have no doubt that the Sevens Player of the Year awards will be a particularly difficult one to decide, given how many world class performers we have seen throughout the year. For me, I am looking forward to a great evening of reflection on another fantastic 12 months for rugby.”

The shortlists for the prestigious World Rugby Player of the Year and World Rugby Women’s Player of the Year for 2016 will be announced next Monday (November 7).

Since its inception in 2001, the World Rugby Awards have recognised and celebrated the achievements of those involved at the highest level of the game, as well as acknowledging excellence in the areas of development and administration by those who demonstrate the values so integral to rugby.

For more details on the panel members for each of the World Rugby Awards, visit www.worldrugby.org/awards/voting-panel. For more information on the World Rugby Awards, visit www.worldrugby.org/awards.

Tickets are available to attend the World Rugby Awards 2016, priced at £195 per person or £150 per person for delegates attending the World Rugby Conference and Exhibition at the same location on November 14-15. A table of 10 guests is available for £1,500. To purchase tickets, click here. 

2016 WORLD RUGBY AWARDS SHORTLISTS:

World Rugby Women’s Sevens Player of the Year in association with HSBC –

Charlotte Caslick (Australia)
Emily Scarratt (England)
Portial Woodman (New Zealand)

World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year in association with HSBC –

Osea Kolinisau (Fiji)
Seabelo Senatla (South Africa)
Virimi Vakatawa (France)

World Rugby Team of the Year –

England 
Fiji Sevens
New Zealand

World Rugby Coach of the Year –

Steve Hansen (New Zealand)
Eddie Jones (England)
Ben Ryan (Fiji Sevens)

World Rugby Breakthrough Player of the Year –

Maro Itoje (England)
Anton Lienert-Brown (New Zealand)
Ardie Savea (New Zealand)

IRPA Try of the Year –

Jamie Heaslip (Ireland v Italy)
Kaito Shigeno (Japan v Scotland)
TJ Perenara (New Zealand v Argentina)

World Rugby Referee Award –

Jérôme Garcès (France)
Alhambra Nievas (Spain)
Jaco Peyper (South Africa)
Rasta Rasivhenge (South Africa)
 

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