2007 Rugby World Cup

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Protection banner". Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The 2007 Rugby World Cup (Template:Langx) was the sixth Rugby World Cup, a quadrennial international rugby union competition organised by the International Rugby Board. Twenty nations competed for the Webb Ellis Cup in the tournament, which was hosted by France from 7 September to 20 October. France won the hosting rights in 2003, beating a bid from England. The competition consisted of 48 matches over 44 days; 42 matches were played in 10 cities throughout France, as well as four in Cardiff, Wales, and two in Edinburgh, Scotland.

The eight quarter-finalists from 2003 were granted automatic qualification, while 12 other nations gained entry through the regional qualifying competitions that began in 2004 – of them, Portugal was the only World Cup debutant. The top three nations from each pool at the end of the pool stage qualified automatically for the 2011 World Cup.

The competition opened with a match between hosts France and Argentina on 7 September at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, outside Paris. The stadium was also the venue of the final, played between England and South Africa on 20 October, which South Africa won 15–6 to win their second World Cup title.

File:DSCN0177.JPG
The opening ceremony of the 2007 Rugby World Cup

Bids

File:Coupe du monde rugby - tour Eiffel.JPG
The Eiffel Tower in Paris decorated with a giant rugby ball for the 2007 Rugby World Cup.

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Both England and France bid to host the tournament.[1][2] The tender document for the 2007 bidding process was due out on 31 October 2001. Both England and France were invited to re-submit their plans.[3] The International Rugby Board (IRB) stated that both countries must comply with tender document terms in one bid, but in their second option, could propose alternative ideas. The IRB said "England's original proposal contained three plans for hosting the tournament with a traditional, new and hybrid format all on offer... The French bid, while complying with the tender document in all other respects, fell outside one of the 'windows' in which the IRB wanted to stage an event".[3] England's bids included a two-tier tournament and altering the structure of the qualifying tournament and France had a bid in September/October.[3]

It was announced in April 2003 that France had won the right to host the tournament.[4] The tournament was moved to the proposed September–October dates with the tournament structure remaining as it was.[4] It was also announced that ten French cities would be hosting games, with the final at the Stade de France.[4] French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said that "this decision illustrates the qualities of our country and its capacity to host major sporting events...This World Cup will be the opportunity to showcase the regions of France where the wonderful sport of rugby is deeply rooted".[4] French Sports Minister Jean-François Lamour said that "The organisation of this World Cup will shine over all of France because ten French towns have the privilege of organising matches and to be in the world's spotlight."[4] French cities to host games were Bordeaux, Lens, Lyon, Marseille, Montpellier, Nantes, St. Etienne, Toulouse and Paris, and it was also announced that the final would be at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.[4]

Qualifying

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File:World Map 2007 RWC qualif.PNG
Nations participating in qualifying competition and those that have qualified automatically; Asia (purple), Africa (orange), Americas (green), Europe (blue) and Oceania (yellow). In total, over 90 nations took part.

The eight quarter-finalists from the 2003 World Cup all received automatic entry, with the other 12 nations coming from qualifying series around the world. Ten of the 20 positions available in the tournament were filled by regional qualifiers, with an additional two being filled by repechage qualification. The qualifying tournament was divided into five regional groups; Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania.[5] Qualifying matches began in 2004 and were completed in early 2007. Including the automatic qualifiers, over 90 nations were in qualifying contention for the final tournament.

In July 2005, both Samoa and Fiji were confirmed as the qualifiers from Oceania, as Oceania 1 and 2 respectively.[6] In July of the following year, Argentina qualified as Americas 1 by defeating Uruguay 26–0 in Buenos Aires.[7] Canada qualified as Americas 2 in August by defeating the United States 56–7 in Newfoundland.[8] The United States went on to qualify as Americas 3 after beating Uruguay in a two-legged tie in early October.[9] That month also saw Italy qualify as Europe 1 after defeating Russia 67–7 in Moscow, reaching the first place in its qualifying group; Romania defeated Spain 43–20 in Madrid, and also qualified for the World Cup as Europe 2.[10]

Namibia qualified for their third consecutive World Cup after they earned their spot in France by defeating Morocco over two legs in November.[11] In late 2006, it was announced that the IRB had withdrawn Colombo as the venue of the final Asian qualifying tournament due to security problems.[12] Japan won the only Asian allocation after the tournament was moved to Hong Kong.[13] Georgia was 14 points the better of Portugal over two legs to claim the last European place.[13] Tonga qualified through repechage after defeating Korea.[14] The final spot went to Portugal, joining Pool C after beating Uruguay 24–23 on aggregate. Portugal's qualification was the only change in the 20-team roster from the 2003 World Cup, replacing Uruguay, becoming the only wholly amateur team to qualify.

Africa Americas Europe Oceania/Asia

Venues

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File:RugbyWorldCup2007VenuesMap.JPG
The 2007 World Cup was hosted by France, with additional venues at Edinburgh and Cardiff.

France won the right to host the 2007 World Cup in 2003, Then it was announced that 6 games would be held abroad, at the request of their neighbouring countries. Four matches would be held in Wales, at Cardiff's 74,500-seat Millennium Stadium: two Pool B games involving Wales, the match between Fiji and Canada and a quarter-final. Ireland was to have hosted matches at Lansdowne Road, Dublin, but opted out because the stadium was being redeveloped.[15]

Two of Scotland's Pool C matches were played at Murrayfield Stadium in Scotland. The Scottish Rugby Union was reportedly having doubts in early 2006 about hosting these games and whether Scotland would generate enough market demand,[15][16] but confirmed in April 2006 that the games would be played at Murrayfield. In the end, the Scotland v. New Zealand match failed to sell out, and the stadium was less than half-full for the Scotland v. Romania match.

There was a substantial increase in the overall capacity of stadiums compared to the 2003 Rugby World Cup – the smallest venue at the 2007 tournament could seat 33,900 people. The French venues were the same as those used for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Around 6,000 volunteers helped to organise the competition.[17]

Although the 2007 tournament was the first to be hosted primarily by France, a number of matches during the 1991 and 1999 tournaments were played in France. In 1991, matches in Pool D (which included France) were played in Béziers, Bayonne, Grenoble, Toulouse, Brive and Agen, while Parc des Princes and Stadium Lille-Metropole each hosted a quarter-final. Similarly, in 1999, fixtures in Pool C (which included France) were played in Béziers, Bordeaux and Toulouse,[18] Stade Félix-Bollaert was the venue for one of the quarter-final play-offs, and the Stade de France hosted a quarter-final.[18]

Template:Flagicon Saint-Denis Template:Flagicon Cardiff Template:Flagicon Edinburgh Template:Flagicon Marseille
Stade de France Millennium Stadium Murrayfield Stade Vélodrome
Capacity: 80,000 Capacity: 74,500 Capacity: 67,144 Capacity: 59,500
File:07-01 France-Angleterre 02-03-2002.jpg File:Millennium Stadium RWC2015.jpg File:A pot of gold... - geograph.org.uk - 718806.jpg File:Vue du virage Depé.jpg
Template:Flagicon Paris Template:Flagicon Lens Template:Flagicon Lyon Template:Flagicon Nantes
Parc des Princes Stade Félix-Bollaert Stade de Gerland Stade de la Beaujoire
Capacity: 47,870 Capacity: 41,400 Capacity: 41,100 Capacity: 38,100
File:Paris-Parc-des-Princes.jpg File:Stade Bollaert (Coupe du Monde de Rugby 2007).jpg File:Stade-Gerland-RWC2007.JPG File:Stade de la Beaujoire.jpg
Template:Flagicon Toulouse Template:Flagicon Saint-Étienne Template:Flagicon Bordeaux Template:Flagicon Montpellier
Stadium de Toulouse Stade Geoffroy-Guichard Stade Chaban-Delmas Stade de la Mosson
Capacity: 35,700 Capacity: 35,650 Capacity: 34,440 Capacity: 33,900
File:Stadium de Toulouse.jpg File:Stade-GeoffroyGuichard-RWC2007.JPG File:Stade Chaban-Delmas.jpg File:Australie-Fidji.4.JPG

Tickets and sponsorship

File:Rugby World Cup 2007 Boutique Officielle.jpg
The official Rugby World Cup shop in Paris

Ticket sales for the Rugby World Cup were broken up into three phases. The first phase was released in November 2005, when members of the European rugby community, such as officials, players and so on were given the opportunity for various packages. Upon the release of the second phase ticketing scheme, more than 100,000 tickets were sold in the first ten hours of release.[19] The remaining tickets – individual tickets and tickets to the semi-finals – were released in phase three in November 2006. In June 2007, it was announced that 2 million of the 2.4 million tickets had been sold in advance of the tournament.[20]

The Worldwide partners for the tournament were Société Générale, GMF, Électricité de France, Peugeot, Visa and SNCF,[21] and official sponsors include Heineken, Vediorbis, Capgemini, Orange, Toshiba and Emirates.[22] Gilbert provided the tournament balls, with the Gilbert Synergie match ball used throughout the tournament. This continued Gilbert's involvement with the World Cup, the company having provided the Barbarian (1995), Revolution (1999) and Xact (2003) balls in the past.[23] Along with Gilbert, the official suppliers were Adidas, Coca-Cola, Clifford Chance, Goodyear and McDonald's.[24] The host broadcaster for the event was TF1.[25]

Squads

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Each country was allowed a squad of 30 players for the tournament. These squads were to be submitted to the International Rugby Board by a deadline of 14 August 2007.[26] Once the squad was submitted a player could be replaced if injured, but would not be allowed to return to the squad.

Match officials

The 2007 Rugby World Cup officials were appointed in late-April 2007, with 12 referees and 13 touch judges being chosen to officiate during the pool stage. In the knockout stage the 12 referees also acted as touch judges, with referee appointments being based on performance from previous matches and selection for neutrality. Referees came from seven different nationalities and three of them made their Rugby World Cup debut. The touch judges came from 10 countries. Tony Spreadbury of England officiated the opening game between France and Argentina at the Stade de France[27] and Irishman Alain Rolland refereed the final.

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Pool format

The competition was contested over 44 days between 20 different nations, over 48 fixtures. The tournament began on 7 September at the Stade de France with a match between the host nation, France, and Argentina. The tournament culminated at the same venue on 20 October for the final between England and South Africa.

Pool stage

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D

File:Flag of England.svg England[29]
File:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa
File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa[29]
File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga
File:Flag of the United States.svg United States

File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia[29]
File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada
File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji
File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan
File:Flag of Wales (1959–present).svg Wales[29]

File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy
File:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand[29]
File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal
File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania
File:Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland[29]

File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina
File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg France[29][30]
File:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia
File:IRFU flag.svg Ireland[29]
File:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia

Classification within each pool was based on the following scoring system:

  • four match points for a win;
  • two for a draw;
  • zero for a loss.[31]

Bonus points, contributing to a team's cumulative match-point score, were awarded in each of the following instances (one match point for each event):

  • a team scores four or more tries (regardless of the match result);
  • a team loses by seven points (a converted try) or fewer.[31]

At the end of the pool stage, teams were ranked from first to fifth based on cumulative match points, with the top two nations proceeding to the quarter-finals.

Tie-breaking criteria

If at the completion of the pool phase two or more Teams were level on Match points, then the following criteria would have been used in the following order until one of the Teams could be determined as the higher ranked:[31]

i. The winner of the Match in which the two tied Teams have played each other shall be the higher ranked;
ii. The Team which has the best difference between points scored for and points scored against in all its pool Matches shall be the higher ranked;
iii. The Team which has the best difference between tries scored for and tries scored against in all its pool Matches shall be the higher ranked;
iv. The Team which has scored most points in all its pool Matches shall be the higher ranked;
v. The Team which has scored most tries in all its pool Matches shall be the higher ranked;
vi. Should the tie be unresolved at the conclusion of steps (i) through (v), the Team that is higher ranked in the updated Official IRB World Rankings on 1 October 2007.

By elevating head-to-head results (rule i) above points difference (rule ii), a notable difference is created to other sports competitions, in which points difference usually determines rank for teams with the same number of match points (table points). These rules allowed the winners of Pools A, B and C to be determined by the results of the third pool matches on the weekend of 22 and 23 September.[32] Although other teams could theoretically draw level on table points with South Africa, Australia and New Zealand and exceed their points differences at the end of the pool stages, head-to-head results by that time ensured these teams could be declared winners of their respective pools, with a match to spare. This also illustrates the fact that the pool tables do not tell the whole story.

Knockout stage

From this stage onwards, the tournament adopted a knockout format comprising eight fixtures: four quarter-finals, two semi-finals, a bronze medal match, and the final. The winner and runner-up from each of the four pools advanced to the quarter-finals. Pool winners were drawn against opposite pool runners-up in the quarter-finals, e.g. the winner of Pool A faced the runner up of Pool B, and the winner of Pool B faced the runner-up of Pool A.

In the knockout stage, if a match resulted in a draw after 80 minutes of normal play, further periods would be played to determine an outright winner. Initially, there would be two periods of extra time, 10 minutes each way; if there was no winner after this, then play would proceed to a single 10-minute period of "sudden death". If the contest was unresolved after a total 110 minutes of open play, the winner would be determined by a placekicking competition.[31]

Effect on 2011 qualification

In a change from the format of the previous tournament, the top three teams in each pool would qualify for the 2011 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand;[33] previously, only the eight quarter-finalists gained an automatic place in the following tournament.

Pool stage

Qualified for the quarter-finals
Eliminated, automatic qualification for RWC 2011

All times French time (UTC+2)

Pool A

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8 September 2007 England File:Flag of England.svg 28–10 File:Flag of the United States.svg United States Stade Félix Bollaert, Lens
9 September 2007 South Africa File:Flag of South Africa.svg 59–7 File:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa Parc des Princes, Paris
12 September 2007 United States File:Flag of the United States.svg 15–25 File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga Stade de la Mosson, Montpellier
14 September 2007 England File:Flag of England.svg 0–36 File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa Stade de France, Saint-Denis
16 September 2007 Samoa File:Flag of Samoa.svg 15–19 File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga Stade de la Mosson, Montpellier
22 September 2007 South Africa File:Flag of South Africa.svg 30–25 File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga Stade Félix Bollaert, Lens
22 September 2007 England File:Flag of England.svg 44–22 File:Flag of Samoa.svg Samoa Stade de la Beaujoire, Nantes
26 September 2007 Samoa File:Flag of Samoa.svg 25–21 File:Flag of the United States.svg United States Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Saint-Étienne
28 September 2007 England File:Flag of England.svg 36–20 File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga Parc des Princes, Paris
30 September 2007 South Africa File:Flag of South Africa.svg 64–15 File:Flag of the United States.svg United States Stade de la Mosson, Montpellier

Pool B

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8 September 2007 Australia File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg 91–3 File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan Stade de Gerland, Lyon
9 September 2007 Wales File:Flag of Wales (1959–present).svg 42–17 File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada Stade de la Beaujoire, Nantes
12 September 2007 Japan File:Flag of Japan.svg 31–35 File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji Stadium de Toulouse, Toulouse
15 September 2007 Wales File:Flag of Wales (1959–present).svg 20–32 File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
16 September 2007 Fiji File:Flag of Fiji.svg 29–16 File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
20 September 2007 Wales File:Flag of Wales (1959–present).svg 72–18 File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
23 September 2007 Australia File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg 55–12 File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji Stade de la Mosson, Montpellier
25 September 2007 Canada File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg 12–12 File:Flag of Japan.svg Japan Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux
29 September 2007 Australia File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg 37–6 File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux
29 September 2007 Wales File:Flag of Wales (1959–present).svg 34–38 File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji Stade de la Beaujoire, Nantes

Pool C

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8 September 2007 New Zealand File:Flag of New Zealand.svg 76–14 File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
9 September 2007 Scotland File:Flag of Scotland.svg 56–10 File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Saint-Étienne
12 September 2007 Italy File:Flag of Italy.svg 24–18 File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
15 September 2007 New Zealand File:Flag of New Zealand.svg 108–13 File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal Stade de Gerland, Lyon
18 September 2007 Scotland File:Flag of Scotland.svg 42–0 File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
19 September 2007 Italy File:Flag of Italy.svg 31–5 File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal Parc des Princes, Paris
23 September 2007 Scotland File:Flag of Scotland.svg 0–40 File:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh
25 September 2007 Romania File:Flag of Romania.svg 14–10 File:Flag of Portugal.svg Portugal Stadium de Toulouse, Toulouse
29 September 2007 New Zealand File:Flag of New Zealand.svg 85–8 File:Flag of Romania.svg Romania Stadium de Toulouse, Toulouse
29 September 2007 Scotland File:Flag of Scotland.svg 18–16 File:Flag of Italy.svg Italy Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, Saint-Étienne

Pool D

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7 September 2007 France File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg 12–17 File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina Stade de France, Saint-Denis
9 September 2007 Ireland File:IRFU flag.svg 32–17 File:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux
11 September 2007 Argentina File:Flag of Argentina.svg 33–3 File:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia Stade de Gerland, Lyon
15 September 2007 Ireland File:IRFU flag.svg 14–10 File:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia Stade Chaban-Delmas, Bordeaux
16 September 2007 France File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg 87–10 File:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia Stadium de Toulouse, Toulouse
21 September 2007 France File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg 25–3 File:IRFU flag.svg Ireland Stade de France, Saint-Denis
22 September 2007 Argentina File:Flag of Argentina.svg 63–3 File:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
26 September 2007 Georgia File:Flag of Georgia.svg 30–0 File:Flag of Namibia.svg Namibia Stade Félix Bollaert, Lens
30 September 2007 France File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg 64–7 File:Flag of Georgia.svg Georgia Stade Vélodrome, Marseille
30 September 2007 Ireland File:IRFU flag.svg 15–30 File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina Parc des Princes, Paris

Knockout stage

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Quarter-finals

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Semi-finals

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Bronze final

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Final

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Statistics

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The tournament's top point scorer was South African Percy Montgomery, who scored 105 points. Bryan Habana scored the most tries, eight in total.

Points Name Team Pos Apps Tries Con Pen Drop
Script error: No such module "sort". Percy Montgomery File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa FB 7 2 22 17 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Felipe Contepomi File:Flag of Argentina.svg Argentina CE 7 3 11 18 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Jonny Wilkinson File:Flag of England.svg England FH 5 0 5 14 5
Script error: No such module "sort". Nick Evans File:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand FH/FB 4 2 20 0 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Jean-Baptiste Élissalde File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg France SH 7 1 12 6 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Chris Paterson File:Flag of Scotland.svg Scotland WG/FH 5 1 10 7 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Pierre Hola File:Flag of Tonga.svg Tonga FH 4 0 7 10 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Lionel Beauxis File:Flag of France (lighter variant).svg France FH 6 1 7 8 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Nicky Little File:Flag of Fiji.svg Fiji FH 3 0 9 8 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Dan Carter File:Flag of New Zealand.svg New Zealand FH 3 1 10 5 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Matt Giteau File:Flag of Australia (converted).svg Australia CE 4 3 8 3 0
Script error: No such module "sort". Bryan Habana File:Flag of South Africa.svg South Africa WG 7 8 0 0 0

See also

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References

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  29. a b c d e f g h Automatic qualifier (quarter-finalists in 2003).
  30. As well as being an automatic qualifier due to making the quarter-finals in 2003, France are the hosts.
  31. a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  32. rugbyworldcup.com/Fixtures/Knockout Stages. Template:Webarchive Retrieved 24 September 2007.
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External links

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