1999 Rugby World Cup

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:EngvarB Template:Infobox Rugby World Cup The 1999 Rugby World Cup (Template:Langx) was the fourth Rugby World Cup, the quadrennial international rugby union championship. It was the first Rugby World Cup to be held in the sport's professional era.<ref>The International Rugby Board opened the sport to professionals in August 1995, after the 1995 tournament had been completed.</ref>

Four automatic qualification places were available for the 1999 tournament; Wales qualified automatically as hosts, and the other three places went to the top three teams from the previous World Cup in 1995: champions South Africa, runners-up New Zealand and third-placed France. 63 nations took part in the qualification process, with 14 nations progressing directly to the tournament. the remaining two qualifiers were determined by a repechage, introduced for the first time in the tournaments history. This was also the first World Cup to feature 20 teams (expanded from 16).

The 20 teams were divided into five pools of four. The winner of each pool progressed to the last eight automatically, with the remaining quarter-finalists determined by three play-off matches, played between the runners-up from each pool and the best third-placed team. The tournament began with the opening ceremony in the newly constructed Millennium Stadium, with Wales beating Argentina 23–18, and Colin Charvis scoring the first try of the tournament. Australia won the tournament, becoming the first nation to do so twice and also to date the only team ever to win after having to qualify for the tournament, with a 35–12 triumph over France, who were unable to repeat their semi-final victory over pre-tournament favourites New Zealand.<ref name=semi>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=final>Template:Cite web</ref> The overall attendance for the tournament was 1.75 million.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Qualifying

Template:Main The following 20 teams, shown by region, qualified for the 1999 Rugby World Cup. Of the 20 teams, only four of those places were automatically allocated and did not have to play any qualification matches. These went to the champions, runners-up and the third-placed nations at the 1995 and the tournament host, Wales. A record 65 nations from five continents were therefore involved in the qualification process designed to fill the remaining 16 spots.

Africa Americas Europe Oceania/Asia

Venues

Wales won the right to host the World Cup in 1999. The centrepiece venue for the tournament was the Millennium Stadium, built on the site of the old National Stadium at Cardiff Arms Park at a cost of £126 million from Lottery money and private investment. Other venues in Wales were the Racecourse Ground and Stradey Park. An agreement was reached so that the other unions in the Five Nations Championship (England, France, Ireland and Scotland) also hosted matches.

Venues in England included Twickenham Stadium and Welford Road Stadium, rugby union venues, as well as Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol, which normally hosts football, and the McAlpine Stadium in Huddersfield, which normally hosts football and rugby league. Scottish venues included Murrayfield Stadium, the home of the Scottish Rugby Union; Hampden Park, the home of the Scottish Football Association; and the smallest venue in the 1999 tournament, Netherdale, in Galashiels, in the Scottish Borders. Venues in Ireland included Lansdowne Road, the traditional home of the Irish Rugby Football Union; Ravenhill Stadium; and Thomond Park. France used five venues, the most of any nation, including the French national stadium, Stade de France, which hosted the final of the 1998 FIFA World Cup, and would later go on to host the finals of both the 2007 and 2023 editions of the tournament.

Template:Flagicon Cardiff Template:Flagicon Wrexham Template:Flagicon Llanelli Template:Flagicon Saint-Denis
Millennium Stadium Racecourse Ground Stradey Park Stade de France
Capacity: 74,500 Capacity: 15,500 Capacity: 10,800 Capacity: 80,000
Template:Flagicon London Template:Flagicon Edinburgh Template:Flagicon Glasgow Template:Flagicon Dublin
Twickenham Stadium Murrayfield Stadium Hampden Park Lansdowne Road
Capacity: 75,000 Capacity: 67,500 Capacity: 52,500 Capacity: 49,250
Template:Flagicon Lens Template:Flagicon Bordeaux Template:Flagicon Toulouse Template:Flagicon Huddersfield
Stade Félix Bollaert Parc Lescure Stadium de Toulouse McAlpine Stadium
Capacity: 41,800 Capacity: 38,327 Capacity: 37,000 Capacity: 24,500
Template:Flagicon Bristol Template:Flagicon Béziers Template:Flagicon Leicester Template:Flagicon Limerick
Ashton Gate Stadium Stade de la Méditerranée Welford Road Stadium Thomond Park
Capacity: 21,500 Capacity: 18,000 Capacity: 16,500 Capacity: 13,500
Template:Flagicon Belfast Template:Flagicon Galashiels
Ravenhill Netherdale
Capacity: 12,500 Capacity: 6,000

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Pools and format

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D Pool E

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With the expansion of the Rugby World Cup from 16 to 20 teams an unusual and complex format was used with the teams split into five pools of four teams with each team playing each other in their pool once.

  • Pool A was played in Scotland
  • Pool B was played in England
  • Pool C was played in France
  • Pool D was played in the principal host nation Wales
  • Pool E was played in Ireland

Points system

The points system that was used in the pool stage was unchanged from both 1991 and 1995:

  • 3 points for a win
  • 2 points for a draw
  • 1 point for playing

The five pool winners qualified automatically to the quarter-finals. The five pool runners-up and the best third-placed side qualified for the quarter-final play-offs.

Knock-out stage

The five pool runners-up and the best third-placed team from the pool stage (which was Argentina) contested the quarter-final play-offs in three one-off matches that decided the remaining three places in the quarter-finals, with the losers being eliminated. The unusual format meant that two pool winners in the quarter-finals would have to play each other. From the quarter-final stage it became a simple knockout tournament. The semi-final losers played off for third place. The draw and format for the knock-out stage was set as follows.

Quarter-final play-offs draw

  • Match H: Pool B runner-up v Pool C runner-up
  • Match G: Pool A runner-up v Pool D runner-up
  • Match F: Pool E runner-up v Best third-placed team

Quarter-finals draw

  • Match M: Pool D winners v Pool E winners
  • Match J: Pool A winners v Play-off H winners
  • Match L: Pool C winners v Play-off F winners
  • Match K: Pool B winners v Play-off G winners

Semi-finals draw

  • Match J winners v Match M winners
  • Match L winners v Match K winners

A total of 41 matches (30 pool stage and 11 knock-out) were played throughout the tournament over 35 days from 1 October 1999 to 6 November 1999.

Squads

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Referees

Pool stage

The tournament began on 1 October 1999 in the newly built Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, with Wales beating Argentina in a hard-fought game 23–18 to get their campaign off to a positive start. The Pool stage of the tournament played out as was widely expected with the Tri Nations teams of New Zealand (who inflected a massive 101–3 win against Italy at the McAlpine Stadium in Huddersfield), South Africa and Australia all winning their pools easily without losing a single game. For the then Five Nations Championship teams who all played their pool matches in their own countries it was a case of mixed fortunes with France winning their pool without losing a game. Host Wales also won their pool, though they suffered 31–38 defeat at the hands of Samoa in front of a home crowd at the Millennium Stadium. However, as expected England, Ireland and Scotland all finished second in their pools and were forced to try to qualify for the quarter-finals via the play-offs alongside fellow runners-up Samoa and Fiji, and Argentina as the best third placed side from all five pools, having been the only third-placed side to win two matches (against Samoa and Japan). Indeed, Argentina had finished level with Wales and Samoa on 7 points each in the group stages, and could only be separated by "total points scored": playing and winning their final match against Japan, they had the chance to overtake either of Samoa or Wales, but were 14 points short of overtaking Samoa's total score and a further 18 points short of Wales.

Qualified for quarter-finals
Qualified for quarter-final play-offs

Pool A

Team P W D L PF PA Pts
Template:Ru 3 3 0 0 132 35 9
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 120 58 7
Template:Ru 3 1 0 2 42 97 5
Template:Ru 3 0 0 3 18 122 3

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Pool B

Team P W D L PF PA Pts
Template:Ru 3 3 0 0 176 28 9
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 184 47 7
Template:Ru 3 1 0 2 47 171 5
Template:Ru 3 0 0 3 35 196 3

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Pool C

Team P W D L PF PA Pts
Template:Ru 3 3 0 0 108 52 9
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 124 68 7
Template:Ru 3 1 0 2 114 82 5
Template:Ru 3 0 0 3 42 186 3

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Pool D

Team P W D L PF PA Pts
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 118 71 7
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 97 72 7
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 83 51 7
Template:Ru 3 0 0 3 36 140 3

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Pool E

Team P W D L PF PA Pts
Template:Ru 3 3 0 0 135 31 9
Template:Ru 3 2 0 1 100 45 7
Template:Ru 3 1 0 2 50 126 5
Template:Ru 3 0 0 3 52 135 3

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Ranking of third-placed teams

Qualified for quarter-final play-offs
Team W D L PF PA PD Pts
Template:Ru 2 0 1 83 51 32 7
Template:Ru 1 0 2 114 82 32 5
Template:Ru 1 0 2 42 97 -55 5
Template:Ru 1 0 2 50 126 -76 5
Template:Ru 1 0 2 47 171 -124 5

Play-off stage

The quarter-final play-offs were three one-off knock-out matches between the runners-up of each pool and the best third-placed side from all five pools to decide the remaining three places in the quarter-finals. The matches were played in mid-week between the completion of the pool stage and the start of the quarter-finals. The matches produced fairly easy wins for England, beating Fiji 45–24, and also for Scotland, beating Samoa 35–20. However, the final match produced the shock of the round where Argentina upset Ireland 28–24 in Lens.

Quarter-final play-offs

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Knockout stage

The winners from the quarter-final play-offs, who had played in mid-week, joined the pool winners, who had enjoyed a week long rest, in the quarter-finals. England, hosts Wales and Scotland were all knocked out, and France, who beat Argentina, were the only team left from the Northern Hemisphere.

The semi-finals, which were both played at Twickenham Stadium, produced two of the most dramatic matches of the tournament, with Australia beating South Africa 27–21 in extra-time after normal time ended with the scores locked at 18-18. The second semi-final between favourites New Zealand and underdogs France was an all-time classic, as France overturned a 24–10 deficit to win 43–31 and reach their second World Cup final. France and Australia met at the Millennium Stadium on 6 November 1999, with Australia winning 35–12 to become the first team to win the Webb Ellis Cup twice. The cup was presented by Queen Elizabeth II to Australian captain John Eales.<ref name=semi/><ref name=final/>

The overall attendance for the tournament was 1.75 million.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

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Quarter-finals

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Semi-finals

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Third-place play-off

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Final

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Statistics

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The tournament's top point scorer was Argentina's Gonzalo Quesada, who scored 102 points. Jonah Lomu scored eight tries, a Rugby World Cup record.

Top 10 point scorers
Player Team Position Played Tries ConvTemplate:Shyersions PenalTemplate:Shyties Drop goals Total points
Gonzalo Quesada Template:Ru Fly-half 5 0 3 31 1 102
Matt Burke Template:Ru Full-back 6 2 17 19 0 101
Jannie de Beer Template:Ru Fly-half 5 0 17 15 6 97
Andrew Mehrtens Template:Ru First five-eighth 5 0 11 19 0 79
Jonny Wilkinson Template:Ru Fly-half 4 1 8 16 0 69
Christophe Lamaison Template:Ru Fly-half 6 1 9 12 2 65
Silao Leaega Template:Ru Wing 4 2 11 10 0 62
Neil Jenkins Template:Ru Fly-half 4 0 12 11 0 57
Paul Grayson Template:Ru Fly-half 4 0 12 10 0 54
Kenny Logan Template:Ru Wing 4 0 9 11 0 51

Broadcasting

British television rights holders ITV acted as the host broadcaster for the tournament, with S4C also broadcasting matches in the Welsh language.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> with coverage shown in 209 countries, to an audience of 3.1 billion viewers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In Australia, the event was broadcast by Seven Network.

Broadcast UK history

  • ITV (1 October 1999 – 6 November 1999)
  • S4C (1 October 1999 – 6 November 1999)

References

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Template:External media

Template:1999 Rugby World Cup Template:1999 Rugby World Cup finalists Template:1999 Rugby World Cup venues Template:Rugby Union World Cup Template:Authority control