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1991 Rugby World Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2nd Rugby World Cup
This article is about the men's tournament. For information about the women's tournament, see1991 Women's Rugby World Cup.

1991 Rugby World Cup
French:Coupe du monde de rugby 1991
Tournament details
Host nations England
 France
 Ireland
 Scotland
 Wales
Dates3 October – 2 November (31 days)
No. of nations16 (33 qualifying)
Final positions
Champions  Australia (1st title)
Runner-up  England
Third place  New Zealand
Tournament statistics
Matches played32
Attendance1,027,827 (32,120 per match)
Top scorer(s)IrelandRalph Keyes (68)
Most triesFranceJean-Baptiste Lafond
AustraliaDavid Campese
(6 tries each)
1987
1995

The1991 Rugby World Cup (French:Coupe du monde de rugby 1991) was the second edition of theRugby World Cup, and was jointly hosted by England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland and France: at the time, the five European countries who participated in theFive Nations Championship. This was the first Rugby World Cup to be staged in the northern hemisphere, with England the hosts of the final. Also for the first time, qualifying competitions were introduced as the number of entrants had increased, from 16 nations four years earlier, to 33 countries. The eight quarter-finalists from 1987 qualified automatically with the remaining eight spots contested through qualifiers by 25 countries. This resulted in only one new side qualifying for the tournament, Western Samoa replacingTonga. The same 16-team pool/knock-out format was used with just minor changes to the points system. South Africa was again not included because of sanctions imposed on the country by the International Rugby Board (IRB), due to the government'sapartheid policies.

The pool stages produced a major upset whenWestern Samoa, who were making their debut in the tournament, defeated the 1987 semi-finalists Wales 16–13 in Cardiff. Along with the other results in the group, this led to the elimination ofWales, who finished third in Pool 3. Also notable in pool play was thatCanada finished second in their pool to qualify for the quarter-finals, which remains their best performance in the World Cup. Fiji, as quarter-finalists four years earlier, had expected to occupy that position, but after the upset loss to Canada and a hammering by France, they lost even their final match against the unfancied Romanian team. Earlier, the opening match had pitted the holders New Zealand against the hosts England: New Zealand overturned a narrow half-time deficit to win the match and the pool, both teams qualifying for the quarter-finals with easy victories in their other matches. Scotland beat Ireland to top their pool, again both teams qualifying.

In the quarter-finals, neither Canada nor Western Samoa proved a match forNew Zealand orScotland, respectively.[1] Meanwhile,England knocked out 1987 finalistFrance in a bruising encounter.[2]Australia pippedIreland 19–18 in a thrilling match atLansdowne Road, with a last-gasp try from fly-halfMichael Lynagh coming after the Irish took an unexpected 18–15 lead. The semi-finals produced two tight matches: England overcame Scotland 9–6, a late drop goal deciding a tryless match in a torrential downpour atMurrayfield Stadium, and Australia defeated the defending champions New Zealand 16–6 at Lansdowne Road.[3][4]

Thefinal was played atTwickenham Stadium in London, and saw Australia win 12–6 against England, with a first-half try from propTony Daly.[5][6]

Qualification

[edit]
Main article:1991 Rugby World Cup qualifying

The following 16 teams, shown by region, qualified for the 1991 Rugby World Cup. Of the 16 teams, eight of those places were automatically filled by quarter-finalists from the 1987 World Cup and did not have to play any qualification matches. 25 nations competed in a qualification process designed to fill the remaining eight spots, bringing the total participation to 33 nations. In the event, there was only one change from the 1987 tournament, with Western Samoa appearing in place of Tonga.

AfricaAmericasEuropeOceania/Asia

Venues

[edit]
EnglandLondonScotlandEdinburghWalesCardiffIrelandDublinFranceParis
Twickenham StadiumMurrayfield StadiumNational StadiumLansdowne RoadParc des Princes
Capacity:60,000Capacity:67,800Capacity:53,000Capacity:49,250Capacity:48,712
FranceToulouseFranceGrenobleFranceVilleneuve d'AscqFranceBéziersEnglandLeicester
Stade Ernest-WallonStade LesdiguièresStadium Lille-MetropoleStade de la MéditerranéeWelford Road
Capacity:19,000Capacity:18,548*Capacity:18,185Capacity:18,000Capacity:16,815
FranceBriveFranceAgenFranceBayonneEnglandGloucesterIrelandBelfast
Parc Municipal des SportsStade ArmandieStade Jean DaugerKingsholmRavenhill
Capacity:16,000Capacity:14,000Capacity:13,500Capacity:12,500Capacity:12,300
WalesLlanelliWalesPontypoolWalesPontypriddEnglandOtley
Stradey ParkPontypool ParkSardis RoadCross Green
Capacity:10,800Capacity:8,800Capacity:7,200Capacity:7,500

Squads

[edit]
Main article:1991 Rugby World Cup squads

Referees

[edit]

Format

[edit]
Pool 1Pool 2Pool 3Pool 4

 New Zealand
 England
 Italy
 United States

 Scotland
 Ireland
 Japan
 Zimbabwe

 Australia
 Wales
 Western Samoa
 Argentina

 France
 Fiji
 Canada
 Romania

As in the1987 Rugby World Cup the 16 nations were divided into four pools of four nations, with each nation playing their other pool opponents once, every nation playing three times during the pool stages. Nations were awarded 2 points for a win, 1 for a draw and zero for a loss, the top two nations of every pool advanced to the quarter-finals. The runners-up of each pool faced the winners of a different pool in the quarter-finals. The winners moved on to the semi-finals, with the winners then moving onto the final, and the losers of the semi-finals contesting a third/fourth place play off.

  • Pool 1 was played in England
  • Pool 2 was played in both Scotland and Ireland, with matches played in both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland
  • Pool 3 was played in Wales
  • Pool 4 was played in France

Points system

The points system that was used in the pool stage was which was changed from1987 was as follows:

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

A total of 32 matches (24 in the pool stage and eight in the knock-out stage) were played throughout the tournament over 30 days from 3 October 1991 to 2 November 1991.

Pool stage

[edit]

Pool 1

[edit]
Team[7]PWDLPFPAPts
 New Zealand330095399
 England320185337
 Italy310257765
 United States3003241133
3 October 1991
England 12–18 New Zealand
Pen:Webb (3)
Drop:Andrew
Try:Jones
Con:Fox
Pen:Fox (4)
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 57,000
Referee:Jim Fleming (Scotland)

5 October 1991
Italy 30–9 United States
Try:Barba
Francescato
Vaccari
Gaetaniello
Con:Dominguez (4)
Pen:Dominguez (2)
Try:Swords
Con:Williams
Pen:Williams
Cross Green,Otley
Attendance: 7,500
Referee:Owen Doyle (Ireland)

8 October 1991
New Zealand 46–6 United States
Try:Wright (3)
Earl
Purvis
Timu
Tuigamala
Innes
Con:Preston (4)
Pen:Preston (2)
Pen:Williams (2)
Kingsholm,Gloucester
Attendance: 12,000
Referee:Efraim Sklar (Argentina)

8 October 1991
England 36–6 Italy
Try:Guscott (2)
Underwood
Webb
Con:Webb (4)
Pen:Webb (4)
Try:Cuttitta
Con:Dominguez
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 30,000
Referee:Brian Anderson (Scotland)

11 October 1991
England 37–9 United States
Try:Underwood (2)
Carling
Skinner
Heslop
Con:Hodgkinson (4)
Pen:Hodgkinson (3)
Try:Nelson
Con:Williams
Pen:Williams
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 45,000
Referee:Les Peard (Wales)

13 October 1991
Italy 21–31 New Zealand
Try:Cuttitta
Bonomi
Con:Dominguez (2)
Pen:Dominguez (3)
ReportTry:Brooke
Innes
Tuigamala
Hewett
Con:Fox (3)
Pen:Fox (3)
Welford Road,Leicester
Attendance: 15,711
Referee:Kerry Fitzgerald (Australia)

Pool 2

[edit]
Team[7]PWDLPFPAPts
 Scotland3300122369
 Ireland3201102517
 Japan310277875
 Zimbabwe3003311583
5 October 1991
Scotland 47–9 Japan
Try:S. Hastings
Stanger
Chalmers
White
Penalty try
Tukalo
G. Hastings
Con:G. Hastings (5)
Pen:G. Hastings (2)
Chalmers
ReportTry:Hosokawa
Con:Hosokawa
Drop:Hosokawa
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 40,000
Referee:Ed Morrison (England)

6 October 1991
Ireland 55–11 Zimbabwe
Try:Robinson (4)
Popplewell (2)
Geoghegan
Curtis
Con:Keyes (4)
Pen:Keyes (5)
ReportTry:Dawson
Schultz
Pen:Ferreira
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Attendance: 40,000
Referee:Keith Lawrence (New Zealand)

9 October 1991
Ireland 32–16 Japan
Try:Mannion (2)
O’Hara
Staples
Con:Keyes (2)
Pen:Keyes (4)
ReportTry:Hayashi
Kajihara
Yoshida
Con:Hosokawa (2)
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Attendance: 30,000
Referee:Laikini Colati (Fiji)

9 October 1991
Scotland 51–12 Zimbabwe
Try:Tukalo (3)
Turnbull
S. Hastings
Stanger
Weir
White
Con:Dods (5)
Pen:Dods (2)
Drop:Wylie
ReportTry:Garvey (2)
Con:Currin (2)
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 35,000
Referee:Don Reordan (United States)

12 October 1991
Scotland 24–15 Ireland
Try:Shiel
Armstrong
Con:G. Hastings (2)
Pen:G. Hastings (3)
Drop:Chalmers
ReportPen:Keyes (4)
Drop:Keyes
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 60,000
Referee:Fred Howard (England)

14 October 1991
Japan 52–8 Zimbabwe
Try:Yoshida (2)
Mashuho (2)
Kutsuki (2)
Horikoshi
Luaiufi
Matsuo
Con:Hosokawa (2)
Pen:Hosokawa (4)
ReportTry:Tsimba
Nguruve
Ravenhill,Belfast
Attendance: 9,500
Referee:René Hourquet (France)

Pool 3

[edit]
Team[7]PWDLPFPAPts
 Australia330079259
 Western Samoa320154347
 Wales310232615
 Argentina300338833
4 October 1991
Argentina 19–32 Australia
Try:Terán (2)
Con:Del Castillo
Pen:Del Castillo
Drop:Arbizu (2)
Try:Campese (2)
Horan (2)
Kearns
Con:Lynagh (3)
Pen:Lynagh (2)
Stradey Park,Llanelli
Attendance: 11,000
Referee:Dave Bishop (New Zealand)

6 October 1991
Wales 13–16 Western Samoa
Try:Emyr
Evans
Con:Ring
Pen:Ring
ReportTry:Vaega
Vaifale
Con:Vaea
Pen:Vaea (2)
Cardiff Arms Park,Cardiff
Attendance: 45,000
Referee:Patrick Robin (France)

9 October 1991
Australia 9–3 Western Samoa
Pen:Lynagh (3)Pen:Vaea
Pontypool Park,Pontypool
Attendance: 15,000
Referee:Ed Morrison (England)

9 October 1991
Wales 16–7 Argentina
Try:Arnold
Pen:Ring (3)
Rayer
Try:García Simón
Pen:Del Castillo
Cardiff Arms Park,Cardiff
Attendance: 35,000
Referee:René Hourquet (France)

12 October 1991
Wales 3–38 Australia
Pen:RingTry:Roebuck (2)
Slattery
Campese
Horan
Lynagh
Con:Lynagh (4)
Pen:Lynagh (2)
Cardiff Arms Park,Cardiff
Attendance: 54,000
Referee:Keith Lawrence (New Zealand)

13 October 1991
Argentina 12–35 Western Samoa
Try:Terán
Con:Arbizu
Pen:Laborde
Arbizu
Try:Tagaloa (2)
Lima (2)
Bunce
Bachop
Con:Vaea (4)
Pen:Vaea
Sardis Road,Pontypridd
Attendance: 8,500
Referee:Brian Anderson (Scotland)
Replaced byJim Fleming (Scotland) at halftime

Pool 4

[edit]
Team[7]PWDLPFPAPts
 France330082259
 Canada320145337
 Romania310231645
 Fiji300327633
4 October 1991
France 30–3 Romania
Try:Roumat
Lafond
Penalty try
Saint-André
Con:Camberabero
Pen:Camberabero (4)
Pen:Nichitean
Stade de la Méditerranée,Béziers
Attendance: 22,000
Referee:Les Peard (Wales)

5 October 1991
Canada 13–3 Fiji
Try:Stewart
Pen:Rees (3)
Drop:Serevi
Stade Jean Dauger,Bayonne
Attendance: 5,000
Referee:Kerry Fitzgerald (Australia)

8 October 1991
France 33–9 Fiji
Try:Lafond (3)
Sella (2)
Camberabero
Con:Camberabero (3)
Pen:Camberabero
Try:Naruma
Con:Koroduadua
Pen:Koroduadua
Stade Lesdiguières,Grenoble
Attendance: 18,548
Referee:Derek Bevan (Wales)

9 October 1991
Canada 19–11 Romania
Try:McKinnon
Ennis
Con:Wyatt
Pen:Wyatt (2)
Drop:Rees
Try:Lungu
Sasu
Pen:Nichitean
Stade Ernest-Wallon,Toulouse
Attendance: 10,000
Referee:Sandy MacNeill (Australia)

12 October 1991
Fiji 15–17 Romania
Pen:Turuva (2)
Drop:Rabaka (2)
Turuva
Try:Ion
Dumitras
Sasu
Con:Racean
Pen:Nichitean
Parc Municipal des Sports,Brive
Attendance: 8,500
Referee:Owen Doyle (Ireland)

13 October 1991
France 19–13 Canada
Try:Lafond
Saint-André
Con:Camberabero
Pen:Lacroix (2)
Camberabero
Try:Wyatt
Pen:Wyatt
Rees
Drop:Rees
Stade Armandie,Agen
Attendance: 15,000
Referee:Stephen Hilditch (Ireland)

Knockout stage

[edit]
 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
19 October –Edinburgh
 
 
 Scotland28
 
26 October –Edinburgh
 
 Western Samoa6
 
 Scotland6
 
19 October –Paris
 
 England9
 
 France10
 
2 November –London
 
 England19
 
 England6
 
20 October –Lille
 
 Australia12
 
 New Zealand29
 
27 October –Dublin
 
 Canada13
 
 New Zealand6
 
20 October –Dublin
 
 Australia16Third place
 
 Australia19
 
30 October –Cardiff
 
 Ireland18
 
 Scotland6
 
 
 New Zealand13
 

Quarter-finals

[edit]
19 October 1991
France 10–19 England
Try:Lafond
Pen:Lacroix (2)
ReportTry:Underwood
Carling
Con:Webb
Pen:Webb (3)
Parc des Princes,Paris
Attendance: 48,500
Referee:Dave Bishop (New Zealand)

19 October 1991
Scotland 28–6 Western Samoa
Try:Jeffrey (2)
Stanger
Con:Hastings (2)
Pen:Hastings (4)
ReportPen:Vaea
Drop:Bachop
Murrayfield Stadium,Edinburgh
Attendance: 54,000
Referee:Derek Bevan (Wales)

20 October 1991
Ireland 18–19 Australia
Try:Hamilton
Con:Keyes
Pen:Keyes (3)
Drop:Keyes
ReportTry:Campese (2)
Lynagh
Con:Lynagh (2)
Pen:Lynagh
Lansdowne Road,Dublin
Attendance: 54,500[8]
Referee:Jim Fleming (Scotland)

20 October 1991
Canada 13–29 New Zealand
Try:Tynan
Charron
Con:Rees
Pen:Wyatt
ReportTry:Timu (2)
McCahill
Brooke
Kirwan
Con:Fox (3)
Pen:Fox
Stadium Lille-Metropole,Villeneuve d'Ascq
Attendance: 30,360
Referee:Fred Howard (England)

Semi-finals

[edit]
26 October 1991
Scotland 6–9 England
Pen:G. Hastings (2)ReportPen:Webb (2)
Drop:Andrew
Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
Attendance: 54,000
Referee:Kerry Fitzgerald (Australia)

27 October 1991
Australia 16–6 New Zealand
Try:Campese
Horan
Con:Lynagh
Pen:Lynagh (2)
ReportPen:Fox (2)
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Attendance: 54,000
Referee:Jim Fleming (Scotland)

Third-place play-off

[edit]
30 October 1991
New Zealand 13–6 Scotland
Try:Little
Pen:Preston (3)
ReportPen:G. Hastings (2)
Cardiff Arms Park,Cardiff
Attendance: 47,000
Referee:Stephen Hilditch (Ireland)

Final

[edit]
Main article:1991 Rugby World Cup Final
2 November 1991
Australia 12–6 England
Try:Daly
Con:Lynagh
Pen:Lynagh (2)
ReportPen:Webb (2)
Twickenham Stadium, London
Attendance: 56,208[9]
Referee:Derek Bevan (Wales)

Statistics

[edit]
Main article:1991 Rugby World Cup statistics

The tournament's top point scorer was Ireland'sRalph Keyes, who scored 68 points.David Campese andJean-Baptiste Lafond scored the most tries, six in total.

Top 10 point scorers
PlayerTeamPositionPlayedTriesConv­ersionsPenal­tiesDrop goalsTotal points
Ralph Keyes IrelandFly-half40716268
Michael Lynagh AustraliaFly-half621112066
Gavin Hastings ScotlandFullback51913061
Jonathan Webb EnglandFullback51514056
Grant Fox New ZealandFly-half40710044
Didier Camberabero FranceFly-half3156032
Diego Dominguez ItalyFly-half3075029
Takahiro Hosokawa JapanFullback3182129
Mathew Vaea Western SamoaScrum-half4055025
David Campese AustraliaWing6600024
Jean-Baptiste Lafond FranceCentre66000

Broadcasters

[edit]

The event was broadcast in the United Kingdom byITV who took over the rights from theBBC.[10] 13 million people in the United Kingdom watched the final.[11] In Australia it was the second and the last (as of the 2023 tournament) Rugby World Cup to be broadcast on ABC television as, from 1995, the commercial networks 7, 9 and 10 would all take over the broadcast rights sometimes in partnership with pay and streaming broadcasters Fox and Stan.[citation needed] In New Zealand, it was broadcast by TVNZ.[citation needed] In France, it was broadcast by TF1 instead of France's traditional Rugby broadcastersAntenne2.[citation needed] In Ireland it was broadcast byRTÉ.[citation needed] ITV, TF1 and RTE were the host broadcasters broadcasting the pictures around the world as well to their own countries.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The stars of 1991".Sky Sports.
  2. ^"My favourite game: France v England, Rugby World Cup 1991 | Martin Pengelly".The Guardian. 17 March 2020.
  3. ^"BBC - A Sporting Nation - Scotland's Rugby World Cup 1991".www.bbc.co.uk.
  4. ^"Rugby World Cup Classic Moment: Tim Horan recalls David Campese's amazing pass in 1991 semi-final".Fox Sports. 17 August 2011.
  5. ^""We're taking Bill back home!" How the Wallabies won the 1991 Rugby World Cup".
  6. ^"Incredible impact of iconic Australian triumph".wwos.nine.com.au. 5 November 2021.
  7. ^abcdMorgan, Paul, ed. (2008). "Second Tournament: 1991 in Britain, Ireland & France".IRB World Rugby Yearbook 2009. Vision Sports Publishing. p. 18.ISBN 9781905326419 – via archive.org.
  8. ^"Lynagh silences Lansdowne Road".espnscrum. Retrieved5 September 2023.
  9. ^"1991 Rugby World Cup: how the Wallabies won the cup | Latest Rugby News | RUGBY.com.au".www.rugby.com.au. 29 October 2015.
  10. ^"ITV retains Rugby World Cup rights".BBC News. 28 July 2010.
  11. ^"Rugby World Cup: Pundits primed for the on-screen ruck and maul".The Independent. 26 September 1999.

External links

[edit]
External videos
video iconRugby World Cup 1991 Quarter-final France v England onYouTube
Stages
General
Champions
Runner-up
Third place
Fourth place
Quarter-finals
Pool stage
Tournaments
Warm-up matches
Qualifying
Knockout stages
Finals
Squads
Statistics
Overview
Overall records
Notes: There was no qualification for the 1987 World Cup as places were given by invitation only.
International
National
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