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The MCKK Premier 7s is an annual under 18 rugby seven tournament between the premier and international schools rugby sevens teams. The tournament was first held in 2011 .The winners are awarded the NJ Ryan Cup, named after the last foreigner headmaster that lift up the school rugby team in the past.
MCKK Premier 7's 2020 This page was last edited on 13 July 2022, at 06:31 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
The gulf of Asian rugby to Test playing nations was evident when Sekolah Sukan Tengku Mahkota Ismail, Malaysia's leading rugby lights and 2-time MCKK Premier 7's champion, had no answer for the rampant Scots College, the New Zealand Condor 7s runners-up 2013, [17] [18] who scooted to 43:0 final score in the first Cup semi-final.
The MCKK Premier 7's 2020 is the tenth edition of the annual, invitational Malay College Rugby Premier Sevens, which involved teams from Malaysia premier schools, states champions and international schools. It was scheduled from 28 February through 1 March 2020.
The MCKK Premier 7s 2011 was the first tournament of Malay College Rugby Premier Sevens, which involved teams from Malaysia premier schools and international schools (Vajiravudh College of Thailand). It were held from 26th till 27 February 2011.
The MCKK Premier 7's 2012 was the second tournament of the annual, invitational Malay College Rugby Premier Sevens, which involved teams from Malaysia premier schools, states champions and international schools (Vajiravudh College of Thailand). [1] It were held from 25th till 26 February 2012.
The MCKK Premier 7's 2013 was the third edition of the annual, invitational [1] Malay College Rugby Premier Sevens, which involved teams from Malaysia premier schools
The World Sevens, the world's premier sevens event while it operated, had two 7 minute halves up to and including the semi-finals with extra time played in the event of tie at the end normal time. [6] The final was longer with two 10-minute halves. In 2004, the World Sevens tackle limit was reduced from 6 to 4.