1987 Rugby World Cup


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The 1987 Rugby World Cup was the first Rugby World Cup. It was co-hosted by New Zealand and Australia – New Zealand hosted 21 matches (17 pool stage matches, two quarter-finals, the third-place play-off and the final) while Australia hosted 11 matches (seven pool matches, two quarter-finals and both semi-finals). The tournament was won by New Zealand, who were the strong favourites and won all their matches comfortably. New Zealand defeated France 29–9 in the final at Eden Park in Auckland. The New Zealand team was captained by David Kirk and included such rugby greats as Sean Fitzpatrick, John Kirwan, Grant Fox and Michael Jones. Wales finished third, and Australia fourth, after conceding crucial tries in the dying seconds of both their semi-final against France and the third-place play-off against Wales.

1987 Rugby World Cup
Tournament details
Host nations New Zealand
 Australia
Dates22 May – 20 June (30 days)
No. of nations16
Final positions
Champions  New Zealand (1st title)
Runner-up  France
Third place  Wales
Tournament statistics
Matches played32
Attendance478,449 (14,952 per match)
Top scorer(s)New Zealand Grant Fox (126)
Most triesNew Zealand Craig Green
New Zealand John Kirwan
(6 tries each)

1991

Seven of the sixteen participating teams were the International Rugby Football Board (IRFB) members – New Zealand, Australia, England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales and France. South Africa was unable to compete because of the international sporting boycott due to apartheid. Invitations were given to Argentina, Fiji, Italy, Canada, Romania, Tonga, Japan, Zimbabwe and the United States. This left Western Samoa controversially excluded, despite their better playing standard than some of the teams invited. The USSR were to be invited but they declined the invitation on political grounds, allegedly due to the continued IRFB membership of South Africa.[1] There was no qualification process for the tournament.

The tournament witnessed a number of one-sided matches, with the seven IRFB members proving too strong for the other teams. Half of the 24 matches across the four pools saw one team score 40 or more points. The tournament was seen as a major success and proved that the event was viable in the long term.

Participating nations

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The tournament comprised the seven members of the IRFB, and nine teams invited by the IRFB; there was no qualification process for teams.

IRFB Member Nations Invited Nations
  Auckland   Wellington   Christchurch   Dunedin
Eden Park Athletic Park Lancaster Park Carisbrook
Capacity: 48,000 Capacity: 39,000 Capacity: 36,500 Capacity: 35,000
       
  Rotorua   Napier   Hamilton   Brisbane
Rotorua International Stadium McLean Park Rugby Park Ballymore Stadium
Capacity: 35,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 24,000
 
  Sydney   Invercargill   Palmerston North
Concord Oval Rugby Park Stadium Showgrounds Oval
Capacity: 20,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 20,000
     
Pool 1 Pool 2 Pool 3 Pool 4

  Australia
  England
  Japan
  United States

  Canada
  Ireland
  Tonga
  Wales

  Argentina
  Fiji
  Italy
  New Zealand

  France
  Romania
  Scotland
  Zimbabwe

  • Pool 1 was played in Australia
  • Pool 2 was played with five matches held in New Zealand and one in Australia
  • Pool 3 was played in New Zealand
  • Pool 4 was played in New Zealand

The inaugural World Cup was contested by 16 nations. There was no qualifying tournament to determine the participants; instead, the 16 nations were invited by the International Rugby Football Board to compete. The simple 16-team pool/knock-out format was used with the teams divided into four pools of four, with each team playing the others in their pool once, for a total of three matches per team in the pool stage. Nations were awarded two points for a win, one for a draw and none for a loss: teams finishing level on points were separated by tries scored, rather than total points difference (had it been otherwise, Argentina would have taken second place in Group C ahead of Fiji, although France would still have won Group D.) 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. A standard single-elimination tournament followed, with the losers of the semi-finals contesting an additional play-off match to determine third place.

A total of 32 matches (24 in the pool stage and eight in the knock-out stage) were played in the tournament over 29 days from 22 May to 20 June 1987.

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD T Pts Qualification
  Australia 3 3 0 0 108 41 +67 18 6 Knockout stage
  England 3 2 0 1 100 32 +68 15 4
  United States 3 1 0 2 39 99 −60 5 2
  Japan 3 0 0 3 48 123 −75 7 0





Team Pld W D L PF PA PD T Pts Qualification
  Wales 3 3 0 0 82 31 +51 13 6 Knockout stage
  Ireland 3 2 0 1 84 41 +43 11 4
  Canada 3 1 0 2 65 91 −26 8 2
  Tonga 3 0 0 3 30 98 −68 3 0





Team Pld W D L PF PA PD T Pts Qualification
  New Zealand 3 3 0 0 190 34 +156 30 6 Knockout stage
  Fiji 3 1 0 2 56 101 −45 6 2[a]
  Italy 3 1 0 2 40 110 −70 5 2[a]
  Argentina 3 1 0 2 49 90 −41 4 2[a]
  1. ^ a b c Fiji qualified for the highest number of tries (Fiji 6, Italy 5, Argentina 4)





Team Pld W D L PF PA PD T Pts Qualification
  France 3 2 1 0 145 44 +101 25 5[a] Knockout stage
  Scotland 3 2 1 0 135 69 +66 22 5[a]
  Romania 3 1 0 2 61 130 −69 6 2
  Zimbabwe 3 0 0 3 53 151 −98 5 0
  1. ^ a b France qualify as pool winner having scored three tries to Scotland's two in their drawn match.





Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
          
6 June – Christchurch
  New Zealand30
14 June – Brisbane
  Scotland3
  New Zealand49
8 June – Brisbane
  Wales6
  Wales16
20 June – Auckland
  England3
  New Zealand29
7 June – Auckland
  France9
  France31
13 June – Sydney
  Fiji16
  France30
7 June – Sydney
  Australia24 Third place
  Australia33
18 June – Rotorua
  Ireland15
  Wales22
  Australia21




Third-place play-off

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The tournament's top point scorer was New Zealand's Grant Fox, who scored 126 points. Craig Green and John Kirwan scored the most tries, six in total.

Top 10 point scorers
Player Team Position Played Tries Conversions Penalties Drop goals Total points
Grant Fox   New Zealand Fly-half 6 0 30 21 1 126
Michael Lynagh   Australia Fly-half 6 0 20 12 2 82
Gavin Hastings   Scotland Fullback 4 3 16 6 0 62
Didier Camberabero   France Fly-half 5 4 14 3 0 53
Jonathan Webb   England Fullback 4 0 11 7 0 43
Guy Laporte   France Fly-half 3 2 11 3 1 42
Paul Thorburn   Wales Fullback 6 0 11 5 0 37
Mike Kiernan   Ireland Centre 3 1 7 5 1 36
Severo Koroduadua   Fiji Fullback 4 0 4 9 0 35
Hugo Porta   Argentina Fly-half 3 0 3 9 0 33

The event was broadcast in Australia by ABC and by TVNZ in New Zealand as host broadcasters supplying their pictures to broadcasters around the world and in the United Kingdom by the BBC and in Ireland by RTÉ.[citation needed]

  1. ^ Fedorets, Alexander (31 July 2007). "Russians target 2011 World Cup". The M&G Online.
  2. ^ Australia vs England 1987 ESPN Scrum
  3. ^ Australia vs England 1987 World Rugby
  4. ^ Japan vs United States 1987 ESPN Scrum
  5. ^ Japan vs United States 1987 World Rugby
  6. ^ England vs Japan 1987 World Rugby
  7. ^ England vs Japan 1987 ESPN Scrum
  8. ^ Australia vs United States RWC 1987 Archived 15 April 2018 at the Wayback Machine ESPN Scrum
  9. ^ Australia vs United States RWC 1987 World Rugby
  10. ^ worldrugby.org. "World Rugby | world.rugby". www.world.rugby. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  11. ^ "England v United States of America". ESPN scrum. Retrieved 14 June 2019.
  12. ^ "Australia v Japan". ESPN scrum. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  13. ^ worldrugby.org. "World Rugby | world.rugby". www.world.rugby. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  14. ^ Canada vs Tonga 1987 ESPN Scrum
  15. ^ Canada vs Tonga 1987 World Rugby
  16. ^ Ireland vs Wales 1987 World Rugby
  17. ^ Ireland vs Wales 1987 ESPN Scrum
  18. ^ Tonga vs Wales 1987 World Rugby
  19. ^ Tonga vs Wales 1987 ESPN Scrum
  20. ^ Canada vs Ireland 1987 ESPN Scrum
  21. ^ Canada vs Ireland 1987 World Rugby
  22. ^ Canada vs Wales 1987 Scrum.com
  23. ^ Canada vs Wales 1987 Worldrugby.com
  24. ^ Ireland vs Tonga 1987 ESPN Scrum
  25. ^ Ireland vs Tonga 1987 World Rugby