Kenya National Sevens Circuit

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{{Infobox sports league

| title = Kenya National Sevens Circuit

| current_season = 2015 Kenya National Sevens Circuit

| current_season2 =

| last_season = 2014 Kenya National Sevens Circuit

| Current_season = 2017 Kenya National Sevens Circuit

| logo = Kenya National Sevens Circuit Logo.png

| pixels = 300px

| caption = Kenya National Sevens Circuit

| Formerly =

| sport = Rugby union

| founded = 1998

| fame =

| motto =

| inaugural = 1999

| teams =

| country = Kenya

| venue =

| champion = Kenya Commercial Bank RFC 2014

| most_champs =

| qualification =

| folded =

| website =

| singles =

| owner =

| ceo =

| Director =

| President =

| TV =

| sponsor = Western Union

| related_comps =

| Founder =

| footnotes =

}}

First played in 1999, the Kenya National Sevens Circuit is an annual series of rugby sevens tournaments run by the Kenya Rugby Union in conjunction with host clubs featuring teams from across the country. Teams compete for the National Sevens Circuit title by accumulating points based on their finishing position in each tournament. The season’s circuit currently comprises 6 tournaments in 6 cities and towns across Kenya.

After a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the National Sevens Circuit will resume in May 2022.{{Cite web |date=2022-01-25 |title=National Sevens Circuit dates confirmed |url=https://www.kru.co.ke/news/national-sevens-circuit-dates-confirmed/ |access-date=2022-04-27 |language=en-US}}

2019 National Sevens Circuit Dates

20/21 July – Kakamega Sevens, Bull Ring Kakamega

27/28 July – Kabeberi Sevens, RFUEA Ground, Nairobi

3/4 August – BREAK

10/11 August – Dala Sevens, Mamboleo Showground, Kisumu

17/18 August – Prinsloo Sevens, Nakuru Athletic Club, Nakuru

24/25 August – BREAK

31 August/1 September – Christie Sevens, RFUEA Ground, Nairobi

7/8 September – Driftwood Sevens, Mombasa Sports Club, Mombasa

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|+

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! scope="col" style="width:5%;" |

! scope="col" style="width:19%;" |Christie Sevens

! scope="col" style="width:19%;" |Dala Sevens

! scope="col" style="width:19%;" |Driftwood Sevens

! scope="col" style="width:19%;" |Kabeberi Sevens

! scope="col" style="width:19%;" |Prinsloo Sevens

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! scope="row" | Hosts

|Kenya Harlequin F.C.

|Kisumu RFC

|Mombasa RFC

|Mwamba RFC

|Nakuru RFC

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! scope="row" | Venue

|RFUEA Ground
Nairobi

|Kisumu Polytechnic
Kisumu

|Mombasa Sports Club
Mombasa

|RFUEA Ground
Nairobi

|Nakuru Athletic Club
Nakuru

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! scope="row" | Notes

| The tournament is named after former Kenya Harlequin Chairman, Alex Christie (also Vice President of Wasps FC in London and President of the RFUEA) and is regarded as the longest running sevens tournament in Kenya, having been played every year since 1962.

| Kisumu is regarded by many Kenyans as home because many people in Nairobi either left Kisumu to find work in the capital or are descended from people who did. Dala means home in the Luo language that is spoken on the eastern shores of Lake Victoria.

| The Driftwood Beach Club, Malindi, donated the trophy (appropriately, a piece of driftwood shaped by the winds, waves and currents of the Indian Ocean) and asked that their sevens tournament from the early 1970s be revived.

| Named for of former Mwamba player George Mwangi Kabeberi who died in 1986.

| Named after Peter Walter Prinsloo, a rugby player from South Africa who - after moving to Nakuru - reignited interest in the game in the Rift Valley during the 1980s.

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! scope="row" | 2009

| 21–22 November

| 14–15 November

| 12–13 December

| 5–6 December

| 28–29 November

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! scope="row" | 2010

| 14–15 November

| 4–5 September

| 25–26 September

| 18–19 September

| 27–28 August

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! scope="row" | 2011

| 10–11 September

| 27–28 August

| 1–2 October

| 24–25 September

| 3–4 September

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! scope="row" | 2012

| 11–12 August

| 18–19 August

| 15–16 September

| 8–9 September

| 1–2 September

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! scope="row" | 2013

| 7–8 September

| 3–4 August

| 24–25 August

| 10–11 August

| 31 August–1 September

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! scope="row" | 2014

| 6–7 September

| 9–10 August

| 23–24 August

| 2–3 August

| 30–31 August

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! scope="row" | 2015

| 1–2 August

| 8–9 August

| 22–23 August

| 5–6 September

| 29–30 August

History of seven-a-side rugby in East Africa

=RAF Sevens=

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|+RAF Sevens Winners

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! scope="col" style="width:100px;"| Year

! scope="col" style="width:200px;"| Winners

colspan="2" | {{Inc-sport|date=October 2021}}
1937Nondescripts RFC
1938Nondescripts RFC
1939Nondescripts RFC
1940-46No tournaments during World War II
1947Nondescripts RFC
1948Nondescripts RFC
1949Ruiru RFC (Ruiru)
1950Nondescripts RFC
1951Nondescripts RFC
1952Mombasa RFC
1953Mombasa RFC
1954Nondescripts RFC
1955Londiani RFC (Londiani)
1956Kenya Harlequin F.C.
1957Kenya Police RFC
1958Nakuru RFC
19591st Battalion, The Cameronians
1960Impala RFC
1961
1962
1963

The first seven-a-side competition in Kenya was the 1937 RAF Sevens. The cup for this annual competition was presented by 223 Squadron, Royal Air Force and the competition was open to all clubs in East Africa (i.e. within Kenya Colony, Uganda Protectorate and Tanganyika Territory) and any other combination of players who wished to enter a team. The tournament was usually played over the August Bank Holiday weekend and was a very popular addition to the Kenya rugby and Nairobi social calendars.{{cite book |last=Campbell |first=M |author2=Cohen, E.J. |title=Rugby Football in East Africa 1909-1959|year=1960 |publisher=Rugby Football Union of East Africa }}

Incidentally 223 Squadron (The squadron was based at RAF Eastleigh - now Moi Air Base - Nairobi) were the first RAF squadron to field a rugby team in East Africa, though they were far from the first military team as Royal Navy vessels had been playing against the colonists since, at the latest, 1922. The "Royal Air Force (Kenya) RFC" first fielded a team in 1937 captained by a Corporal Clarke with Pilot Officer Roden as vice-captain and the team owed a lot to the behind-the-scenes work of Squadron Leader Pitcairn-Hill. In about 1955 the team changed its name to "United Services Eastleigh RFC" when captained by Flight Lieutenant Frielich with Corporal Freeman as vice-captain, with the administrative assistance of Squadron Leader Warren and Flight Officer Goodwin. Players of note during the club's early years include a three-quarter called Mickelthwaite, a fly-half called Cahou and another three-quarter, Tony Hale, all three of whom were on the cusp of selection for Kenya and/or East Africa.

=Nakuru Sevens=

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|+Nakuru Sevens Winners

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! scope="col" style="width:100px;"| Year

! scope="col" style="width:200px;"| Winners

colspan="2" | {{Inc-sport|date=October 2021}}
1949not known
1950not known
1951Nakuru RFC
1952Nondescripts RFC
1953Kenya Harlequin F.C.
1954not known
1955Old Cambrians (Impala) RFC
1956Nyeri Police (Nyeri)
1957Impala RFC
1958Nakuru RFC
1959Nakuru RFC
1960Impala RFC
1961Kenya Harlequin F.C.
1962
1963

The first Nakuru sevens were held in approximately 1949, usually being held fairly early in the season, attracting entrants from West Kenya and Central Province. The original cup was lost within a few years of the start of the tournament so early winners are uncertain. A replacement cup was kindly presented by Mr. HO Salt and was known as the Salt Cup.

=Nile Sevens=

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|+Nile Sevens) Winners

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! scope="col" style="width:100px;"| Year

! scope="col" style="width:200px;"| Winners

colspan="2" | {{Inc-sport|date=October 2021}}
1950Uganda Police
1951Mengo Commercials
1952Old Cambrians (Impala) RFC
1953Jinja Stallions
1954Jinja 'A'
1955Uganda Police
1956Kampala RFC
1957Kenya Police RFC
1958Kenya Police RFC
1959Kampala RFC
1960
1961

The first Nile Sevens were held in 1950 and were held annually for at least the next ten years. The winner is presented with a mounted silver rugby ball known as the Krell Trophy which was presented in 1951 for this purpose by Mr. Cecil Krell who had done valuable work for rugby union in East Africa in both Dar es Salaam and Mombasa.

Teams for the Nile Sevens could be entered by clubs or by any combination of players, hence the unfamiliar team names for some of the winners.

=Jones Cup (Sevens)=

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|+Jones Cup (Sevens) Winners

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! scope="col" style="width:100px;"| Year

! scope="col" style="width:200px;"| Winners

1952Kitale RFC
1953Combined Eldoret RFC & Kitale RFC team

The Jones Cup was named after MJU Stompie Jones, a former Eldoret player whose representative playing career spanned an astonishing 20 years. He played for Kenya against the touring Combined South African Universities team in 1930 and against the University of Stellenbosch in 1935 and finally for East Africa against the University of Cape Town in 1949/50.

Ironically, having been named for someone who had demonstrated unparalleled longevity, the Jones Cup was to have a remarkably short tenure as a seven-a-side trophy. In 1954, after just two years, it was redesignated as the trophy for the winner of the West Kenya zone of the Enterprise Cup.

Other sevens tournaments in Kenya

References