AustraliaFIJIRLMAWUmpiresSeventeen umpires from six countries officiated matches at the tournament.
| Nation | Umpire | Australiasort|Ayre|Rachael AyreTeamsQualificationSixteen teams contested the 2015 tournament. The home nation automatically qualified, along with the next five highest-ranked teams from the INF World Rankings. Qualification Tournaments The remaining ten teams were determined by regional qualifying tournaments, with two teams selected from each of the five international netball regions; Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania.
| Region | Host | Teams | Dates | Winner | Runner up | | Europe | Walesnb|Walesnb|ScotlandDrawThere was no draw for the tournament, instead the 16 qualified teams were allocated into four pools according to their INF World Rankings of 1 July 2014, as per following criteria:
- Pool A – teams seeded 1, 2, 9, 10
- Pool B – teams seeded 3, 4, 11, 12
- Pool C – teams seeded 5, 6, 13, 14
- Pool D – teams seeded 7, 8, 15, 16
- Subject to a maximum of two teams from the same region per pool, in case of a third team from the same region, they are switched with the closest ranked team from a different pool. After the original allocation, Sri Lanka and Uganda swapped pools to comply with this rule.
Rankings reflect the teams' rankings in July 2014.
FormatThe 2015 tournament consisted of 64 matches played over ten days from 7–16 August. It included three stages – a preliminary pool stage, a qualifying pool stage, and a knockout series of semi-finals and finals. The 16 participating teams were initially divided into four pools of four teams. During the preliminary pool stage, teams in each pool played each other once. In every pool match, two points were awarded to a winning team, while no points were given to a losing team. The qualification round consisted of two First Eight pools, which were formed from two teams with the highest number of points in each of the preliminary matches pools, and two Second Eight pools, formed from the bottom two teams in each of the preliminary matches pools. In this stage, teams in each pool played each other once. The two teams with the highest number of points in each of the two First Eight pools advanced to the semi-finals. The winners of the semifinals contested the final, while the losers played for the bronze medal. The bottom two teams in each of these pools entered a knockout stage to determine fifth to eighth place. The teams from the two Second Eight pools are similarly divided, eventually entering two knockout stages for 9th to 12th place and 13th to 16th place.Pool APool BPool CPool DQualification round matchesPool EPool FPool GPool HPlay-off matches5th to 8th 9th to 12th '''13th to 16th'''Placement matches5th place 7th place 9th place 11th place 13th place '''15th place'''Semi-finals and medal matchesAt the conclusion of qualifying pool play Australia, England, Jamaica and New Zealand advanced into the semi-finals. This was the fifth time in the last five tournaments that the world's top four ranked sides had reached the semi-final stage. New Zealand led England throughout the first semi-final, pulling away in the last fifteen minutes to post a 50 points to 39 win. In the other semi final Australia eased past Jamaica 67 to 56, outpointing them in three of the four-quarters. In the final Australia outplayed New Zealand in the first quarter to lead 16–7. Despite winning each of the next three-quarters New Zealand were unable to make up the difference. Australia extended their lead to 12 goals early in the second quarter, before New Zealand played their way back into the game. At half-time the score was 30 to 22 and at the start of the last quarter 43 to 37. With a minute remaining Australia led by just three goals, but were able to hold their nerve to record a 58 to 55 goal victory. The defensive work of captain Laura Geitz and Julie Corletto along with accurate goal shooting from Caitlin Bassett helped set up the Australian win. New Zealand goal attack Maria Tutaia said they were too complacent in the first quarter and could not handle the defensive pressure from Australia. Geitz praised her attackers for capitalising on every opportunity and also said that the "first quarter set us up nicely." The Australians shooters scored goals at a 91 percent success rate while their defenders held the New Zealanders to just 73 percent. Corletto retired after the game, ending a twelve-year career that includes 53 tests and three world titles. Australia has now won the World Cup three times in a row and eleven times in total. In the bronze medal match England beat Jamaica 66–44.Semi-finalsGold medal matchFinal placingsMedallists
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