Canada endured another heartbreaker at the Hong Kong Sevens on Sunday, losing 19-14 in overtime to Russia in the consolation Shield final to finish 14th.

A tournament that started with Canada coming within two minutes of upsetting Series leader Fiji for only the third time in 43 matches ended with more disappointment as the Canadian men wasted a 14-7 halftime lead and ultimately fell victim to a Vladislav Lazarenko try.

Fiji, which rallied to beat Canada 19-17 on Friday, successfully defended its Hong Kong title by a 21-7 score in a scrappy, tight final Sunday against New Zealand.

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Canada remained 13th in the overall standings after seven stops on the 10-event rugby sevens circuit. Russia stands 15th.

After going 1-2 on the first two days of play, Canada stumbled out of the blocks Sunday in a 19-10 loss to Samoa. Trailing 19-0 at the half, Canada roared back on tries by Nathan Hirayama and Mike Fuailefau but fell short.

The two teams could well meet again at a last-ditch Olympic qualifier in Monaco in June.

Canada rebounded to beat Portugal 19-5 on tries by Fuailefau, Conor Trainor and captain John Moonlight. Fuailefau and Moonlight also scored in the loss to Russia.

The tournament final wasn't sealed until just over a minute was left when New Zealand, trailing 14-7, attacked into the Fiji 22 but was driven off ruck ball by Pio Tuwai. Amenoni Nasilasila passed launched the counterattack, and was the pivot in a loop around by Semi Kunitani, who ran 40 metres untouched to between the posts.

That's when Fiji started celebrating its record-extending 16th Hong Kong crown, and fourth in five years. New Zealand, second-best in Hong Kong with 11 wins, lost the final for a second straight year.

The top four in the world series made the semi-finals, leaving the race still open with three events to go. Fiji led by five points from New Zealand, which was one point ahead of South Africa. Australia was 23 points off the pace.

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Fiji's belief was boosted by last-second wins over Canada in the pool stage, and Kenya in the quarter-finals. Meanwhile, New Zealand beat South Africa in the semifinals only in the second period of extra time, when Kurt Baker's cross-kick was caught by an unmarked Regan Ware.

The next leg is in Singapore next weekend.

With files from the Associated Press