1994 Women's Rugby World Cup

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1994 Women's Rugby World Cup
Cupa Cruinne Rugbaidh nam Ban 1994
Tournament details
Host nation Scotland
Dates1994-04-11 – 1994-04-24
No. of nations12
Champions Gold medal blank.svg England (1st title)
Tournament statistics
Matches played31
1991
1998

The 1994 Women's Rugby World Cup was the second world cup for women. It was originally scheduled to be held in Amsterdam, Netherlands (April 10–24) but was cancelled only weeks before. However, a replacement competition was organised around the same dates in Scotland. England beat the defending champions USA 38–23 in the final.

Background[]

The official reason for the cancellation was that the event organisers failed to get official endorsement of the event as the "Women's World Cup" from the International Rugby Board (IRB). The minutes of the 1993 Interim meeting of the IRB state the following about the "1994 Women's International Tournament":

"The Council agreed to defer consideration of participation by member unions in the tournament until such time as a formal request is received from the organizers."[1]

Hence not only was there uncertainty to whether it really was the "Women's World Cup" or not, but the IRB refused to endorse it regardless of its status – the "deferral" (above) was in practice a refusal to endorse as the next scheduled IRB meeting was only days before the event was due to start. It was not until 2009 that the IRB officially endorsed the event as a "world cup" when it published, for the first time, a list of previous winners.[2]

Because of this, the Unions of some countries decided not to pay team expenses (including New Zealand, where women's rugby was by now fully integrated in the national union, and ultimately others as well) or withdrew their entries. Several team members decided to go ahead and raised the money themselves, but the surrounding uncertainty of the event status and the financial risk from teams pulling out prompted the event organisers to (rather abruptly) cancel it.

The women who had trained so hard, and had gone to much trouble raising money etc., were so disappointed at the cancellation that an alternative tournament in Scotland was soon organised. despite the IRB threatening sanctions against unions taking part in this unendorsed event, it went ahead.

Officially it (and its predecessor in 1991) were never endorsed by the IRB the Scottish organisers did not pursue the issue. However, all of the participating teams regarded it as the "real" World Cup.

Eventually eleven of the original sixteen entrants took part – as well as New Zealand, Netherlands also withdrew from both participation as well as hosts, and Spain pulled out very late – after the groups had been drawn – and were replaced by a Scottish Students team. Italy and Germany were also notable absentees. The Soviet Union would have competed but due to their dissolution, they were replaced by Russia and Kazakhstan.

Once the event was underway proved to be a great success,[3] England exacting revenge for their 1991 defeat to USA, beating the defending champions 38–23 in the final.

Squads[]

Match Officials[]

J Fleming (Boroughmuir)[4]

Pool stages[]

Pool A[]

Team Won Drawn Lost For Against
 United States 2 0 0 232 0
 Japan 1 0 1 10 126
 Sweden 0 0 2 5 121
[92]
1994-04-11 Sweden  0–111  United States Melrose [10/15/1]
[95]
1994-04-13 Japan  10–5  Sweden Melrose [3/11/2]
[98]
1994-04-15 Japan  0–121  United States Melrose [4/16/1]

Pool B[]

Team Won Drawn Lost For Against
 England 2 0 0 92 0
 Scotland 1 0 1 51 26
 Russia 0 0 2 0 117
[93]
1994-04-11 England  66–0  Russia Boroughmuir [19/1/1]
[96]
1994-04-13 Scotland  51–0  Russia Boroughmuir [4/2/1]
[99]
1994-04-15 Scotland  0–26  England Boroughmuir [5/20/1]

Pool C[]

Team Won Drawn Lost For Against
 France 2 0 0 108 8
 Ireland 1 0 1 18 36
Scotland 0 0 2 13 95
[-]
1994-04-11 Scottish Students Scotland 8–77  France West of Scotland RFC [-/-/-]
[-]
1994-04-13 Scottish Students Scotland 5–18  Ireland West of Scotland RFC [-/-/-]
[100]
1994-04-15 France  31–0  Ireland West of Scotland RFC [26/3/1]

Pool D[]

Team Won Drawn Lost For Against
 Wales 2 0 0 40 13
 Canada 1 0 1 33 11
 Kazakhstan 0 0 2 8 57
[94]
1994-04-11 Canada  5–11  Wales Edinburgh Academicals RFC [16/10/3]
[97]
1994-04-13 Kazakhstan  8–29  Wales Edinburgh Academicals RFC [2/17/1]
[101]
1994-04-15 Canada  28–0  Kazakhstan Edinburgh Academicals RFC [11/3/1]

Plate competition[]

Round robin[]

Team Won Drawn Lost For Against Ladder
 Kazakhstan 3 0 0 83 12 9th
 Sweden 2 0 1 46 56 10th
 Russia 1 0 2 37 57 11th
Scotland Scottish Students 0 0 3 24 65 12th
[102]
1994-04-17 Russia  13–20  Sweden Kirkcaldy [3/12/1]
[-]
1994-04-17 Scottish Students Scotland 0–27  Kazakhstan Kirkcaldy [-/-/-]

[-]
1994-04-19 Scottish Students Scotland 12–14  Sweden Gala [-/-/-]
[107]
1994-04-19 Kazakhstan  25–0  Russia Gala [4/4/1]

[112]
1994-04-21 Kazakhstan  31–12  Sweden Stirling County [5/13/1]
[-]
1994-04-21 Scottish Students Scotland 12–24  Russia Stirling County [-/-/-]

Plate final[]

[115]
1994-04-23 Kazakhstan  29–12  Sweden Boroughmuir [6/14/2]

Championship[]

Bracket[]

Championship[]

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
17 April – Gala
 
 
 England24
 
20 April – Gala
 
 Canada10
 
 England18
 
17 April – Edinburgh
 
 France6
 
 France99
 
24 April – Edinburgh
 
 Japan0
 
 England38
 
17 April – Boroughmuir
 
 United States23
 
 United States76
 
20 April – Gala
 
 Ireland0
 
 United States56
 
17 April – Melrose
 
 Wales15 Third place
 
 Wales8
 
24 April – Edinburgh
 
 Scotland0
 
 France27
 
 
 Wales0
 

Shield[]

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
20 April – Melrose
 
 
 Canada57
 
23 April – Boroughmuir
 
 Japan0
 
 Canada5
 
20 April – Melrose
 
 Scotland11
 
 Ireland3
 
 
 Scotland10
 
Third place
 
 
23 April – Boroughmuir
 
 
 Ireland11
 
 
 Japan3

Quarter-finals[]

[103]
1994-04-17 United States  76–0  Ireland Boroughmuir [17/4/1]
[104]
1994-04-17 England  24–10  Canada Gala [21/12/2]
[105]
1994-04-17 France  99–0  Japan Edinburgh Academicals RFC [27/5/2]
[106]
1994-04-17 Scotland  0–8  Wales Melrose [6/18/2]

Championship semi-finals[]

[108]
1994-04-20 United States  56–15  Wales Gala [18/19/2]
[109]
1994-04-20 England  18–6  France Gala [22/28/3]

Shield semi-finals[]

[110]
1994-04-20 Canada  57–0  Japan Melrose [13/6/1]
[111]
1994-04-20 Scotland  10–3  Ireland Melrose [7/5/3]

Shield 3rd/4th (7th place)[]

[113]
1994-04-23 Ireland  11–3  Japan Boroughmuir [6/7/1]

Shield final (5th place)[]

[114]
1994-04-23 Scotland  11–5  Canada Boroughmuir [8/14/1]

Cup 3rd/4th place[]

[116]
1994-04-24 France  27–0  Wales Edinburgh Academicals RFC [29/20/1]

Cup final[]

[117]
1994-04-24 England  38–23  United States Edinburgh Academicals RFC [23/19/3]


 1994 Women's Rugby World Cup Winners 

England
First title

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.uiweb.uidaho.edu/clubs/womens_rugby/RugbyRoot/rugby/games/Sched94/womenswc.html. Retrieved 2009-06-25. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  2. ^ "IRB press release". Archived from the original on December 2, 2013.
  3. ^ "A History of the Women's World Cup". Users.ox.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2008-12-12. Retrieved 2012-08-07.
  4. ^ Hughson, John (2016-07-01), "The Cup tradition and England 1966", England and the 1966 World Cup, Manchester University Press, pp. 12–31, doi:10.7228/manchester/9780719096150.003.0002, ISBN 978-0-7190-9615-0, retrieved 2021-05-06

External links[]

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