Wales won the right to host the World Cup in 1999. The centrepiece venue for the tournament was the
Millennium Stadium, built on the site of the old National Stadium at
Cardiff Arms Park at a cost of £126 million from Lottery money and private investment. Other venues in Wales were the
Racecourse Ground and
Stradey Park. An agreement was reached so that the other unions in the
Five Nations Championship (England, France, Ireland and Scotland) also hosted matches. Venues in England included
Twickenham Stadium and
Welford Road Stadium, rugby union venues, as well as
Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol, which normally hosts football, and the
McAlpine Stadium in Huddersfield, which normally hosts football and rugby league. Scottish venues included
Murrayfield Stadium, the home of the
Scottish Rugby Union;
Hampden Park, the home of the
Scottish Football Association; and the smallest venue in the 1999 tournament,
Netherdale, in
Galashiels, in the
Scottish Borders. Venues in Ireland included
Lansdowne Road, the traditional home of the
Irish Rugby Football Union;
Ravenhill Stadium; and
Thomond Park. France used five venues, the most of any nation, including the French national stadium,
Stade de France, which hosted the final of the
1998 FIFA World Cup, and would later go on to host the finals of both the
2007 and
2023 editions of the tournament. ==Pools and format==