
The 2nd World Cup in 1991 was hosted by England with assistance from France and the Celtic nations. There was only one debutante, Samoa, who supplanted Tonga. & it was the Samoans who would set this tournament alight, stunning Wales and thumping Argentina to reach the quarters (at the expense of both). Similarly impressive were Canada, who overcame Fiji and Romania to book their place in the last 8 against NZ. Other memorable performances were Japan's 52-8 demolition of Zimbabwe, Romania's upset win over Fiji and Italy's much improved effort against NZ, losing 21-31. Australia needed a last minute try from Lynagh to edge Ireland in the quarters, but Campese magic saw them eliminate hitherto unbeaten NZ in the semis. Australia beat England 12-6 in the final.
The 3rd World Cup in 1995 was hosted solely by South Africa, where Apartheid was over. In came SA, Tonga & Ivory Coast, out went Fiji, Zimbabwe and the US. Tries had been increased to 5 points. SA beat Australia on debut and Samoa again reached the quarters with wins over Argentina and Italy. But the early stages were memorable mostly for giant teenager Lomu's storming runs on the wing for NZ, scoring 4 tries and creating more. NZ, without Lomu, racked up the the event's first ton, 145-17 v Japan with Ellis running in 6 tries. Wales were again eliminated, while Ivory Coast had an unhappy time, losing 0-89 to Scotland on debut, before real tragedy struck when winger Brito was paralyzed during the loss to Tonga. England flyhalf Andrew was knighted after his winning drop-goal v Australia in the quarters. But England were then taken apart by NZ's Lomu, who charged across for 4 tries. SA held on v France in torrential rain in the other semi. In an enthralling finale, though one which was devoid of tries, Stransky kicked the winning drop-goal for the hosts late into extra time. President Mandela was on hand to award the trophy to his countrymen.
The 4th World Cup in 1999, the first of the professional era, returned to Britain, with hosts Wales assisted by France and the remaining Home Unions. It was expanded to 20 teams, with 5 groups of 4 leading to 3 repechages for the quarters. In came Fiji, America, Uruguay, Spain & Namibia, out went Ivory Coast. Samoa again stunned Wales, though the hosts returned to the quarters nonetheless. NZ & England registered tons v Italy & Tonga, respectively, while Italy's misery on the eve of their 6 Nations inclusion was compounded by defeat to Tonga. England & Scotland eliminated Fiji & Samoa, respetively, in the repechages, while Argentina held on against Ireland to reach the last 8 for the first time. De Beer kicked a record 5 drop-goals to help SA thump England in the quarters. The semis were full of drama, with Larkham's drop-goal clinching victory for Australia deep into extra-time against hitherto unbeaten SA, and France coming from behind to shock favorites NZ 43-31, despite a Lomu double. SA consigned NZ to 4th in the playoff at the new Millenium Stadium (I wuz there

The 5th World Cup in 2003, the first of the new millenia, was held entirely in Australia after NZ were axed as co-hosts. The format was changed to 4 groups of 5, removing the repechages. The solitary debutante was Georgia, who have qualified for every tournament since. Out went Spain. The group stages were predictable, with only Fiji and Tonga threatening the established order in narrow losses to Scotland & Wales, respectively. The hosts, having put 90 points on Romania, broke records with a 142-0 annihilation of Namibia, & England got a ton v Uruguay. The only upset of the tournament was Australia's 22-10 victory over perennial favorites NZ in the semis. In a riveting final, league converts Tuqiri and Robinson touched down for Australia and England, before Wilkinson's drop-goal deep into extra time saw a Northern Hemisphere team prevail for the first & only time.
The 6th World Cup in 2007 was staged in France with assistance from Wales and Scotland (the 3rd time these 3 nations had been involved as hosts). In came Portugal, out went Uruguay, giving Europe 9/20 teams. In contrast to the previous edition, there was drama aplenty, with Argentina stunning France in the opener then comfortably eliminating Ireland to top their group. Meanwhile, Fiji ran up a big lead & held on for a 38-34 win over Wales, who failed to make the quarters for the 3rd time. Tonga upset Samoa and pushed SA all the way in a 25-30 loss, SA demolished the defending champs 36-0, Georgia gave Ireland a huge fright, before grabbing their first RWC win, 30-0 v Namibia, NZ registered a ton against debutantes Portugal, and Scotland just scraped through against 6 Nations nemesis Italy. The drama continued in the quarters, with Argentina making the semis for the first time after a tense win over Scotland, and NZ failing to reach that stage for the 1st and only time after an 18-20 defeat to France. A much-improved England overcame the hosts in the semis, but succumbed to SA in another tryless final, a result which saw the winners join Australia as 2-time champs.
The 7th World Cup in 2011 was staged solely in NZ, though the nation's 2nd biggest stadium was ruled out after a devastating earthquake had killed 185 people earlier that year. Again there was only one debutante, Russia, supplanting Portugal. Tonga recorded an astonishing upset over France in the group stages, though France went through regardless, with Tonga missing out due to an earlier defeat by Canada. Argentina returned to the last 8 courtesy of a 13-12 win over Scotland, while Wales hammered a Fijian side unable to bring its military players (owing to a political coup) 66-0. The US beat Russia 13-6 in a battle of the old Cold War foes, for its first win since 87. There was a further repeat of history with the same 4 teams lining up in the semis as 87. Wales came agonizingly close to its first final but were pipped 9-8 by France, a red card to Warburton not helping their cause. In a similarly tense final the hosts held on for an 8-7 win over luckless France (1 try apiece) to join their SANZAR counterparts as 2-time champs.
The 8th World Cup in 2015 returned to Britain with England being assisted by Wales, co-hosting for the 4th time. For the first time ever there was no debutante at the event, Uruguay returning in place of Russia (who they beat on aggregate in the repechage final). There was a massive shock in the opening round when Japan defeated two-time champion South Africa with a late try; arguably the biggest upset in international rugby history. It was only Japan's second win after eight World Cup appearances, and they followed it up with two more, versus Samoa and the US, though a solitary defeat to Scotland prevented them progressing on aggregate; the first time a team with three wins failed to do so. There was further drama with England becoming the first host nation in tournament history to be eliminated at the pool stages, after losses to Wales and Australia. New Zealand battered France in the quarters, Argentina crushed Ireland to reach the last 4 for the second time, and Australia pipped Scotland with a controversial late penalty - setting up an all Southern Hemisphere semis with SA also through. New Zealand and Australia duly progressed to the final, where the former comfortably prevailed to become the first three-time champion and back-to-back winner.