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1999 Five Nations Championship
Rugby union competition
Rugby union competition
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1999 Five Nations Championship |
| date | 6 February – 11 April 1999 |
| countries | |
| champions | |
| count | 14 |
| matches | 10 |
| tries | 45 |
| top point scorer | WAL Neil Jenkins (64 points) |
| top try scorer | FRA Émile Ntamack |
| SCO Alan Tait (5 tries) | |
| previous year | 1998 |
| previous tournament | 1998 Five Nations Championship |
| next year | 2000 |
| next tournament | 2000 Six Nations Championship |
SCO Alan Tait (5 tries) The 1999 Five Nations Championship (sponsored by Lloyds TSB) was the 70th series of the rugby union Five Nations Championship. Including the previous incarnations as the Home Nations, this was the 105th series of the tournament. Ten matches were played over five weekends from 6 February to 11 April. The tournament was won by Scotland, who finished above England on points difference.
It was notable for the dramatic climax to the tournament, which was decided in the dying minutes of the final match. England were heavy favourites to beat Wales and win the tournament and the grand slam. With England leading the match by six points as the clock passed 80 minutes, Wales centre Scott Gibbs evaded a number of tackles to score a try from approximately 20 metres. Neil Jenkins successfully converted to claim victory for Wales by a single point and hand the championship to Scotland in one of the most memorable matches in the tournament's history. Scotland had staged their own remarkable upset the previous day, scoring five first-half tries to beat France in Paris for only the second time in 30 years.
Scotland's Gregor Townsend became only the fifth player in history to score a try against each other country in a single Five Nations tournament. He also became the second Scotsman to do so, following on from Johnnie Wallace in 1925. The others to achieve the feat were Carston Catcheside (England, 1924), Patrick Estève (France, 1983) and Phillipe Sella (France, 1986).
This was the last Five Nations Championship; in 2000, Italy joined the tournament, which became the Six Nations Championship. Italy played all of the Five Nations sides during the 1998–99 season, partly in preparation for joining the tournament the following year, albeit the game against England (at Huddersfield) was a World Cup qualifier. Italy lost all the five games.
Participants
| Nation | Venue | City | Head coach | Captain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Twickenham Stadium | London | Clive Woodward | Lawrence Dallaglio | |
| Stade de France | Saint-Denis | Jean-Claude Skrela | Raphaël Ibañez | |
| Lansdowne Road | Dublin | Warren Gatland | Keith Wood | |
| Murrayfield Stadium | Edinburgh | Jim Telfer | Gary Armstrong | |
| Wembley Stadium | London | Graham Henry | Rob Howley |
Squads
Table
Results
Week 1
Leslie S. Murray Tait Hodge Gibbs
Week 2
Luger Rodber Townsend
C. Quinnell Wood
Week 3
Castaignède C. Quinnell Charvis
Rodber
Week 4
Townsend Grimes
Week 5
Dominici Juillet Townsend Leslie (2)
Gibbs Hanley Hill
References
References
- Wales's home matches were played at Wembley due to the ongoing construction of the [[Millennium Stadium]]
- replaced by Jim Fleming ([[Scottish Rugby Union. Scotland]]), after 35 minutes
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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