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1975 Five Nations Championship
Date18 January - 15 March 1975
Countries  England
  Ireland
  France
  Scotland
  Wales
Tournament statistics
Champions  Wales (18th title)
Matches played10
Tries scored36 (3.6 per match)
Top point scorer(s) Ireland Billy McCombe (26)
Top try scorer(s) Wales Gerald Davies (3)
1974 (Previous) (Next) 1976

The 1975 Five Nations Championship was the forty-sixth series of the rugby union Five Nations Championship. Including the previous incarnations as the Home Nations and Five Nations, this was the eighty-first series of the northern hemisphere rugby union championship. Ten matches were played between 18 January and 15 March. It was contested by England, France, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. The championship was won by Wales, the team's eighteenth title (excluding another nine shared championships). [1]

The game between Scotland and Wales at the Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh on 1 March attracted a World Record rugby attendance of 104,000 fans. This record would not be broken until a Bledisloe Cup game between Australia and New Zealand attracted 107,042 to the Sydney Olympic Stadium in 1999. The attendance at Murrayfield remains the Championship's record crowd, the record attendance in Europe and the third highest rugby attendance in history. With Scotland winning 12-10 it was the only loss for the Welsh during the 1975 Five Nations.

Participants

The teams involved were:

Nation Venue City Head coach Captain
  England Twickenham London John Burgess Fran Cotton
  France Parc des Princes Paris Jean Desclaux Jacques Fouroux/ Claude Dourthe
  Ireland Lansdowne Road Dublin Roly Meates Willie John McBride
  Scotland Murrayfield Edinburgh Bill Dickinson Ian McLauchlan
  Wales National Stadium Cardiff John Dawes Mervyn Davies

Table

Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
1   Wales 4 3 0 1 87 30 +57 6
2   Scotland 4 2 0 2 47 40 +7 4
2   Ireland 4 2 0 2 54 67 −13 4
2   France 4 2 0 2 53 79 −26 4
5   England 4 1 0 3 40 65 −25 2
Source: [ citation needed]

Squads

Results

18 January 1975
France 10–25  Wales
Tries: Gourdon
Pen.: Taffary (2)
Tries: Cobner
Davies
Edwards
Fenwick
Price
Con.: Fenwick
Pen.: Fenwick
Parc des Princes, Paris
Attendance: 43,603
Referee: K. A. Pattinson (England)
18 January 1975
Ireland 12–9  England
Tries: Gibson
McCombe
Con.: McCombe (2)
Tries: Stevens
Con.: Old
Drops: Old
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Referee: F. Palmade (France)

1 February 1975
England 20–27  France
Tries: Duckham
Rossborough
Pen.: Rossborough (4)
Tries: Etchenique
Gourdon
Guilbert
Spanghero
Con.: Pariès (4)
Pen.: Pariès
Twickenham, London
Attendance: 70,000
Referee: T. F. E. Grierson (Scotland)
1 February 1975
Scotland 20–13  Ireland
Tries: Renwick
Steele
Pen.: Irvine (2)
Drops: McGeechan
Morgan
Tries: Dennison
Grace
Con.: McCombe
Pen.: McCombe
Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Referee: R. F. Johnson (England)

15 February 1975
Wales 20–4  England
Tries: Davies
Fenwick
J.J. Williams
Con.: Martin
Pen.: Martin (2)
Tries: Horton
National Stadium, Cardiff
Referee: Alan Hosie (Scotland)
15 February 1975
France 10–9  Scotland
Tries: Dourthe
Pen.: Pariès
Drops: Astre
Pen.: Irvine (3)
Parc des Princes, Paris
Attendance: 43,472
Referee: M. S. Lewis (Wales)

1 March 1975
Ireland 25–6  France
Tries: Ensor
Grace
McBride
Con.: McCombe (2)
Pen.: McCombe
Drops: McCombe (2)
Pen.: Pariès
Drops: Pariès
Lansdowne Road, Dublin
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: D. M. M. Lloyd (Wales)
1 March 1975
Scotland 12–10  Wales
Pen.: Morgan (3)
Drops: McGeechan
Tries: Evans
Pen.: Fenwick (2)
Murrayfield, Edinburgh
Attendance: 104,000 *Rugby Union World Record until 1999
Referee: J. R. West (Ireland)
  • Source - Quinn, Encyclopaedia of World Rugby

15 March 1975
Wales 32–4  Ireland
Tries: Bergiers
Davies
Edwards
Faulkner
J.J. Williams
Con.: Bennett (3)
Pen.: Bennett (2)
Tries: Duggan
National Stadium, Cardiff
Referee: J. Saint-Guillem (France)
15 March 1975
England 7–6  Scotland
Tries: Morley
Pen.: Bennett
Pen.: Morgan (2)
Twickenham, London
Referee: D. P. d'Arcy (Ireland)

References

  1. ^ "Wales 32 Ireland 4". Glasgow Herald (page 21). 17 March 1975. Retrieved 30 August 2013.

External links