Charlotte Caslick continues to prepared the ground as a pioneer of womenâs rugby with the Australia captain turning into the first-ever to achieve an unbelievable sevens milestone in Vancouver.
Hundreds of supporters had simply made their manner into BC Place Stadium on a cold Friday morning in Canada when the sevens world stopped to understand Caslickâs greatness.
With the Australia and Japan womenâs groups each lined up within the tunnel, the Olympic gold medallist let loose a smile earlier than working out onto the sector with out her teammates.
At that moment, Caslick became the first woman to reach 50 tournaments on the HSBC SVNS Series. Itâs a historic achievement for a player unanimously considered an all-time great.
Caslick, 28, stood alone in the centre of the Vancouver stadium as thousands let out a cheer. Of those who expressed their appreciation and admiration was Aussie teammate Teagan Levi who was among the first to greet her captain out in the middle.
âI was pretty embarrassed,â Caslick told RugbyPass. âI had to last year as well for my 250th game. I was running out on my own which is sort of embarrassing.
âItâs really nice. Iâve been playing for a long time. Back when I first started we had like four or five-max tournaments a year so to now have all of them alongside the men is pretty cool just to see how far the gameâs gone.
âThey made me shirts during the week and theyâre just such an awesome group of girls.
âIâve been so fortunate to go through with the Rio 2016 group and win that gold medal and then weâve inspired all these girls to play, and to still be a part of the team and their journey has been pretty special.
50 tournaments, 1 unstoppable legacy 💪@CharlieCaslick makes history by becoming the first woman to reach 50 #HSBCSVNS tournaments 👏#HSBCSVNSVAN pic.twitter.com/KbIRd32cDh
â HSBC SVNS (@SVNSSeries) February 23, 2024
âTeagan and Maddi (Levi) are my biggest fans. They always run out behind me and you can always see them with pure joy on their faces.
âItâs just great to see girls pumping up the girls and getting behind each other.â
Earlier this week, Caslick was at training in Vancouver when coach Tim Walsh pulled her aside for a âreally deep conversation.â But it was all a ruse.
Little did Caslick know that all of her teammates were wearing shirts that celebrated her 50th cap, as captured by the SVNS Seriesâ social media team earlier this week.
âI was like, âThis is weird. Weird timing to have this conversation.â Then all the girls ran over and I think I was scared of them at first,â Caslick said.
âIt took me a while to register what was happening. I thought they were just being rude and interrupting our conversation.
âTheyâve been wearing them ever since which is really cute.â
But itâs the recognition that Caslick deserves. Having played with the Australian sevens side for almost 10 years, and winning an Olympic gold in the process, sheâs helped inspire countless girls and women to chase their sporting dreams around the world.
The importance of that gold medal is not to be underestimated, either. It played a major role in the seismic shift in the Australian sporting landscape over the past decade.
Sports like NRLW, AFLW, netball, womenâs cricket and of course, womenâs rugby have taken the nation by storm, and Caslick has witnessed the change first-hand.
Caslick went to the same school as now-Australia teammate Bella Nasser. As the Aussie skipper reflected on âthe best partâ of the growth of womenâs sport, Caslick spoke about the difference in opportunities during their schooling days.
âWhen I was at school they wouldnât put a female team in so I trained with the boys in Year 12 and our teacher, Mr Sione, he was awesome and let me train with the First XV and learn rugby,â she added.
âOnce I finished, obviously girls like Bella were coming through so the school decided to put in rugby teams.
âI think just those little changes that weâve seen in Australia now, like girls can play rugby from six to all the way through to the open womenâs grades. That wasnât a thing when I was growing up.
âI think thatâs the biggest change and the best part about it.â
Caslickâs historic Friday in Vancouver was almost somewhat soured by what wouldâve been an all-time upset with Japan coming frightening close to a shock win.
Sakura Mizutani opened the scoring in the fifth minute, and while veterans Sharni Smale and Caslick both crossed soon after to give the SVNS Series leaders an advantage, another Japanese try made things very interesting.
Honoka Tsutsumi crossed for a decisive five-pointer in the 13th minute, but a missed conversation meant Australia still led by two. In the end, thatâs all they needed as they held on for a 12-10 win.
But considering the Aussies defeated Japan 66-nil in Dubai a few months ago, this is quite a stunning start to SVNS Vancouver.
âWe all had one or two errors each which when you add them all together, thatâs a lot of errors.
âJapan just played their little hearts out. We know against them out work rate has to be really good because theyâre bouncing around, theyâve got so much energy and theyâre so fit and fast.
âWe did do that. Our work rate was awesome, our defence was awesome. I think in attack we were really inpatient ant let out ourselves down a little bit.
âBut like you said, a winâs a win, it doesnât matter how you get them but it probably wouldâve been nice not to be so intense.â