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by Our Sports Desk
Joe Lydon will oversee the task of appointing coaches to run Great Britain’s Rugby Sevens men’s and women’s squads at the Rio Olympics.
The former England Sevens coach and England backs coach has been handed the role of performance manager for the newly created GB Sevens set-up.
The current head of international player development at the Rugby Football Union (RFU), Lydon is a former Wigan and Great Britain star.
The Welsh Rugby Union and Scottish Rugby Union have joined forces with the RFU to comprise the backbone of the new GB Sevens.
Stars of the 15-man code like Wales and British and Irish Lions wing George North could still take part at Rio but will have to commit to top-level sevens action in the build-up to the tournament.
Both England’s men’s and women’s sevens sides finishing inside the top four in the HSBC Sevens World Series cemented Great Britain’s Rio qualification.
“To have sevens at the Olympic Games is massive for the sport and we want to make sure we give GB Rugby Sevens the best chance to succeed next year in Rio,” said Lydon.
“The first step was to qualify this year and we are delighted that the England men and women have done that through the first route of the qualification process. It is a real testament to the hard work and attitude shown by all the players, coaches and management.”
A wider squad will begin the Rio build-up from June 2016, with a final squad of 12 players selected in July ahead of the August Olympics.
“The next step is to get the GB Rugby Sevens programme operational, particularly focusing around the appointment of the coaching teams and the recruitment of players, as we look ahead to the start of next season,” said Lydon.
 
     
     
     
    
