PBs, tears and Rio memories drive retiring Du Toit

Dominique Du Toit is dreaming of winning Olympic gold before quitting Australia's sevens program. (Darren England/AAP PHOTOS)

Before the farewell tears, Dominique Du Toit has promised personal bests in Paris.

Du Toit's Australian women's rugby sevens captain Charlotte Caslick told the team of her retirement plans after they had beaten New Zealand to reach the world series final in June.

The media and communications graduate, who got into the sport after seeing Toowoomba schoolmate Emilee Cherry thrive, says she's undecided on what's next but hasn't ruled out a code switch.

"They've made me feel so loved. It's been nothing but amazing," the 27-year-old told AAP from pre-Olympic camp in Montpellier.

"I'm an emotional person anyway so it will be sad, but also just thinking how grateful I am to be able to do this for so long and the Olympics adds a new layer of emotions as the pinnacle event."

Dominique du Toit.
Dominique du Toit beats a Fiji defender en route to scoring a try during the Vancouver Sevens.

Keen to point out they beat Paris pool rivals South Africa in a training camp clash this week, Du Toit's retirement announcement hasn't diminished competitive drive.

"We're definitely keeping score and we did win," she said.

"It's my last one and it's making me push a bit harder; I want to go hard so I'm trying to get PBs in everything.

"I'm excited for what the Olympics will bring then I just want to kick my feet up for a while. It's time."

Du Toit, while still in year 12, won a Youth Olympics medal in 2015 before moving to Sydney to join the sevens program and be part of the sport's professional surge.

The Queenslander was part of the squad when Australia won gold at the sport's Rio 2016 debut, but as a travelling reserve never took the field because Tim Walsh's side went through unscathed.

A wide-eyed rookie, Du Toit didn't realise it at the time but ahead of another gold medal tilt recognises that golden moment as the power source of her 10-year toil.

"I was just so happy to be there," she said.

"It was cloud nine, but reflecting back I realised if I'd played it would have been the best thing to have ever happened to me.

"To see them win, it ignited the fire and it's honestly what's got me through all the hard days.

"I was that close but didn't get there and that's what I actually want to do."

Celebrating Australia women's rugby sevens players.
Australia's squad celebrate their gold medal triumph at the Rio Olympics in 2016.

Du Toit was in the side that copped a shock 14-12 Tokyo quarter-final loss to Fiji that saw them miss the medals.

They will return as confident world champions in a neck-and-neck fight for supremacy with defending Olympic champions New Zealand.

"What those girls did not just for women's rugby, but women's sport, after the Rio Olympics was absolutely massive," she said.

"And Paris is another opportunity like that."

Australia's men's sevens outfit will be among the first teams in action when they begin their campaign on July 24, two days before the opening ceremony.

The women's event will follow from July 29, Walsh's side to play South Africa, Great Britain and Ireland in a testing pool stage.

License this article

What is AAPNews?

For the first time, Australian Associated Press is delivering news straight to the consumer.

No ads. No spin. News straight-up.

Not only do you get to enjoy high-quality news delivered straight to your desktop or device, you do so in the knowledge you are supporting media diversity in Australia.

AAP Is Australia’s only independent newswire service, free from political and commercial influence, producing fact-based public interest journalism across a range of topics including politics, courts, sport, finance and entertainment.

What is AAPNews?
The Morning Wire

Wake up to AAPNews’ morning news bulletin delivered straight to your inbox or mobile device, bringing you up to speed with all that has happened overnight at home and abroad, as well as setting you up what the day has in store.

AAPNews Morning Wire
AAPNews Breaking News
Breaking News

Be the first to know when major breaking news happens.


Notifications will be sent to your device whenever a big story breaks, ensuring you are never in the dark when the talking points happen.

Focused Content

Enjoy the best of AAP’s specialised Topics in Focus. AAP has reporters dedicated to bringing you hard news and feature content across a range of specialised topics including Environment, Agriculture, Future Economies, Arts and Refugee Issues.

AAPNews Focussed Content
Subscription Plans

Choose the plan that best fits your needs. AAPNews offers two basic subscriptions, all billed monthly.

Once you sign up, you will have seven days to test out the service before being billed.

AAPNews Full Access Plan
Full Access
AU$10
  • Enjoy all that AAPNews has to offer
  • Access to breaking news notifications and bulletins
  • Includes access to all AAPNews’ specialised topics
Join Now
AAPNews Student Access Plan
Student Access
AU$5
  • Gain access via a verified student email account
  • Enjoy all the benefits of the ‘Full Access’ plan at a reduced rate
  • Subscription renews each month
Join Now
AAPNews Annual Access Plan
Annual Access
AU$99
  • All the benefits of the 'Full Access' subscription at a discounted rate
  • Subscription automatically renews after 12 months
Join Now

AAPNews also offers enterprise deals for businesses so you can provide an AAPNews account for your team, organisation or customers. Click here to contact AAP to sign-up your business today.

SEVEN DAYS FREE
Download the app
Download AAPNews on the App StoreDownload AAPNews on the Google Play Store