1999 Rugby World Cup qualifying
| Tournament details | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 1995 – 1999 | 
| No. of nations | 71 | 
| ← 1995  2003 →  | |
The 1999 Rugby World Cup qualifying was held in several continental zones. Four countries qualified automatically—Wales as tournament hosts, South Africa as reigning champions, New Zealand as runners-up in the previous tournament, and France as winners of the third-place playoff in the previous tournament. Repechage was first introduced for the 1999 competition qualifying.[1][2][3]
Tournaments
- Africa Qualification
- European Qualification
- Americas qualification
- Asia qualification
- Oceania qualification
- Repechage
Qualified teams
| 
 | 
Automatic qualifiers
Only the tournament hosts, as well as the two finalists and the third-place winner from the previous Rugby World Cup, were automatically qualified for the 1999 Rugby World Cup.
 France (Third place) France (Third place)
 New Zealand (Runner-up) New Zealand (Runner-up)
 South Africa (Champion) South Africa (Champion)
 Wales (Host) Wales (Host)
Regional qualifiers
Africa
 Namibia (Africa 1) Namibia (Africa 1)
Europe
 England (Europe 1) England (Europe 1)
 Ireland (Europe 2) Ireland (Europe 2)
 Scotland (Europe 3) Scotland (Europe 3)
 Italy (Europe 4) Italy (Europe 4)
 Romania (Europe 5) Romania (Europe 5)
 Spain (Europe 6) Spain (Europe 6)
Asia
 Japan (Asia 1) Japan (Asia 1)
Americas
 Argentina (Americas 1) Argentina (Americas 1)
.svg.png) Canada (Americas 2) Canada (Americas 2)
 United States (Americas 3) United States (Americas 3)
 Uruguay (Repechage 2) Uruguay (Repechage 2)
Oceania
.svg.png) Australia (Oceania 1) Australia (Oceania 1)
 Fiji (Oceania 2) Fiji (Oceania 2)
 Western Samoa (Oceania 3) Western Samoa (Oceania 3)
 Tonga (Repechage 1) Tonga (Repechage 1)
References
- ^ "1999 World Cup Qualifiers". Sports Illustrated. CNN. 1 September 1996. Archived from the original on 3 May 2004.
- ^ "1999 Rugby World Cup Qualifier Results". ESPN Scrum. 1 September 1996.
- ^ "1999 Rugby World Cup Qualifier Points Tables". ESPN Scrum. 1 September 1996.