Sports

Pacific Nations Cup rugby: Canada falls to U.S. in 5th-place game

AJ MacGinty scored a drop goal in the 80th minute Monday as the United States downed Canada 15-13 in the fifth-place game at the Pacific Nations Cup rugby tournament.

"We stopped playing a bit there," says men's rugby captain

Canada's Nick Blevins, left, runs for a try during the second half of the Pacific Nations Cup fifth place rugby match against The United States in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Canada would do just about anything for a victory in men's rugby at the moment.

AJ MacGinty scored a drop goal in 80th minute Monday as the United States downed Canada 15-13 in the fifth-place game at the Pacific Nations Cup.

The Canadians finished the six-team tournament with four losses, including back-to-back gut-wrenching results after Wednesday's 21-20 defeat to Samoa that also saw the winning points come in the dying seconds.

"Another disappointing loss for us. We gave a full performance," said Canadian captain Aaron Carpenter. "We stopped playing a bit there. We let them come at us and played scared a little bit because we've lost a couple tight games in the last couple outings."

MacGinty added a 4 for 4 performance on penalties for the Americans (2-2-0), who are ranked 16th in world.

Canadian substitute Nick Blevins scored the game's only try in the 71st minute on a lung-busting run down the right-hand side that gave No. 18 Canada a 13-12 lead after Liam Underwood's conversion before MacGinty snatched the victory for his team.

Canadian head coach Kieran Crowley has been attempting to implement new systems ahead of the Rugby World Cup in England, which begins on Sept. 18, and despite the losses, he's encouraged by his team's play over the last three weeks.

"We've built on everything as we've gone forward, but in the end we would have liked to get at least one result go our way," said Crowley. "A couple (close) losses. You've got to win those games and we didn't.

"There has been progress made, but it needs to get another step up."

Canada is just 2-11 over its last 13 test matches dating back to November 2013, with the only victories coming over No. 21 Namibia and No. 29 Portugal. The losses include No. 9 Samoa (twice), No. 11 Scotland, No. 12 Tonga, No. 13 Japan (twice), No. 14 Georgia, the U.S. (twice) and No. 17 Romania (twice). The record worsens when counting non-test losses to the New Zealand Maori and an English second-division all-star team.

Canada dropped a sloppy 20-6 loss Japan on July 18 to open the PNC, but played well for stretches of a 28-18 defeat to Tonga six days later before consecutive heartbreakers to Samoa and the U.S.

"They've played all these teams tough and haven't got results," said former national team member and current Canadian program manager Gareth Rees. "I don't have to state the obvious. We'll do anything to get a result right now."

Fiji beat Samoa 39-29 later Monday in the PNC final, while Tonga beat Japan 31-20 in the tournament's third-place game.