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2015 Rugby World Cup

2015 Rugby World Cup
2015 Rugby World Cup.svg
Tournament details
Host nation  England
Dates 18 September – 31 October (44 days)
No. of nations 20 (96 qualifying)
Final positions
Champions Gold medal blank.svg  New Zealand
Runner-up Silver medal blank.svg  Australia
Third-place Bronze medal blank.svg  South Africa
Tournament statistics
Matches played 48
Attendance 2,477,805 (51,621 per match)
Top scorer(s) Argentina Nicolás Sánchez (97)
Most tries New Zealand Julian Savea (8)
2011
2019

The 2015 Rugby World Cup was the eighth Rugby World Cup, the quadrennial rugby union world championship. The tournament was hosted by England from 18 September to 31 October. Of the 20 countries competing in the World Cup in 2011, there was only one change: Uruguay replaced Russia. This was the first World Cup with no new teams to the tournament.

Reigning champions New Zealand won the cup and defended their title by defeating Australia in the final 34–17; South Africa defeated Argentina to take third place. This was the first Rugby World Cup where no Northern Hemisphere team got beyond the quarter-finals. New Zealand were the first team to retain their title, and the first to win for a third time.

The highly contested match between Japan and South Africa in the opening weekend, which Japan scored the winning try in the added minutes over heavily-favoured South Africa, was widely considered as the "biggest shock" or "biggest upset" in the history of rugby. As a result, much media attention was drawn right from the beginning of this tournament. Hosts England were eliminated at the pool stage, after defeats by Wales and Australia; this was the first time in the tournament's history that a solo host nation failed to progress to the knockout stages.

The International Rugby Board (IRB) requested that any member unions wishing to host this tournament or the 2019 Rugby World Cup should indicate their interest by 15 August 2008. This would be purely to indicate interest; no details had to be provided at this stage. A record ten unions indicated formal interest in hosting the 2015 and/or the 2019 events: Australia, England, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Russia, Scotland, South Africa and Wales. Argentina had been reported in early 2008 as having given preliminary consideration to bidding, but did not ultimately formally indicate an interest in bidding.


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