1998 Women's Rugby World Cup final

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1998 Rugby World Cup Final
Event1998 Rugby World Cup
Date16 May 1998
VenueNRCA Stadium, Amsterdam
RefereeEd Morrison (England)[1]
1994
2002

The 1998 Women's Rugby World Cup Final was a rugby union match to determine the winner of the 1998 Women's Rugby World Cup. The match took place on 16 May 1998 in Amsterdam and was between New Zealand and the United States. New Zealand beat the United States 44–12 to claim their first World Cup title.[2]

Route to the final[edit]

New Zealand Round United States
Opponent Result Pool stage Opponent Result
 Germany 134–6 Match 1  Russia 84–0
 Scotland 76–0 Match 2  Spain 38–16
Team Won Drawn Lost For Against Ladder
 New Zealand 2 0 0 210 6 1st
 Scotland 1 0 1 37 84 7th
 Italy 1 0 1 42 42 11th
 Germany 0 0 2 11 168 15th
Final standing
Team Won Drawn Lost For Against Ladder
 United States 2 0 0 117 16 3rd
 Spain 1 0 1 44 56 6th
 Wales 1 0 1 101 35 9th
 Russia 0 0 2 7 167 16th
Opponent Result Knockout stage Opponent Result
 Spain 46–3 Quarter-finals  Scotland 25–10
 England 44–11 Semi-finals  Canada 46–6

New Zealand was pooled with Scotland, Italy and World Cup debutantes, Germany.[3] The United States were pooled with Spain, who missed the 1994 World Cup, along with Wales and Russia.[3] New Zealand thrashed Germany 134–6 to record their first 100 points in a World Cup.[4][5] They kept Scotland scoreless with 76–0 in their last pool game. The Black Ferns met Spain in their quarterfinal, they won 46–3 and went on to beat 1994 Champions, England, 44–11 to book their place in the Final.[6]

The United States beat Russia in their first pool match 84–0, and then beat Spain 38–16. In their quarterfinal, they defeated Scotland in a closely contested match 25–10. Canada only managed 6 points against the United States 46 points in their semifinal game.[7]

Match[edit]

16 May 1998
New Zealand 44–12 United States
Try: Cootes (4)
Palmer
Sheck
Wall
Con: Rush
Referee: England E. F. Morrison

Summary[edit]

Vanessa Cootes scored four of the Black Ferns eight tries in the Final.[Note 1][8][3] Farah Palmer, Regina Sheck and Louisa Wall scored a try each with Annaleah Rush making two successful conversions to give New Zealand their first World Cup title.[7]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The Black Ferns vs USA teamsheet on stats.allblacks.com and Cootes Black Ferns profile credits her as scoring five tries.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Hollie Davidson Appointed Referee for Rugby World Cup 2021 Final".
  2. ^ "Ten great Black Ferns moments". allblacks.com. 2018-07-12. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  3. ^ a b c "Women's Rugby World Cup: The story so far". www.rugbyworldcup.com. 2017-08-04. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  4. ^ "Black Ferns rout Hong Kong in 19-try romp at the Women's Rugby World Cup". Stuff. 2017-08-13. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  5. ^ "Women's Rugby World Cup can be record-breaking, says World Rugby's Bill Beaumont". BBC Sport. 8 August 2017. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  6. ^ "Black Ferns and England: A "love-hate relationship"". www.women.rugby. Retrieved 2022-03-05.
  7. ^ a b Wise, Chad (2017-03-23). "THROWBACK THURSDAY: A FINAL FINAL". USA Rugby. Retrieved 2022-03-06.
  8. ^ "Rugby's all-time greatest women's XV". Rugby World. 2020-09-18. Retrieved 2022-03-05.