Tournament information | |
---|---|
Sport | Bowls |
Location | Various |
Established | 2005 |
Defunct | 2019 |
Administrator | World Bowls |
World Cup Singles
editThe World Cup Singles was an event inaugurated in 2005 by the organisation known as World Bowls and was held until 2019. It was contested annually between bowlers from national bowls organisations. The competition was seen as the Southern Hemisphere equivalent of the World Indoor Bowls Championships held annually in the United Kingdom and organised by the World Bowls Tour.[1]
The event was first held from 3-10 April 2005, at the Hong Kong Football Club indoor bowling green and Ap Lei Chau Sports Centre in Hong Kong[2] but eventually took place every year at the Warilla Bowls Club in New South Wales, Australia.
Although players from both hemispheres were able to compete, travelling restricted the entries and the majority of the leading indoor players from the Northern hemisphere did not take part.[3]
In 2019, World Bowls came to an agreement with the International Indoor Bowls Council (IIBC), formerly the WIBC. The agreement was to merge their two international indoor championships, the World Cup Singles and the IIBC Championships. The new event would be called the World Bowls Indoor Championships.[4][5]
Past winners
editMen's singles
editYear | Winner | Runner-up |
---|---|---|
2005 | Mark Casey[2] | Terence Lee |
2006 | Neil Speirs[6] | Safuan Said |
2007 | Kelvin Kerkow[7] | Jeremy Henry |
2008 | Safuan Said | Ali Forsyth |
2009 | Leif Selby | Safuan Said |
2010 | Leif Selby | Anthony Kiepe |
2011 | James Talbot[8] | Graeme Archer |
2012 | Jeremy Henry | James Talbot |
2013 | Jeremy Henry[9] | Tony Grantham |
2014 | Jeremy Henry[10] | Tony Wood |
2015 | Iain McLean[11] | David Holt |
2016 | Jeremy Henry[12] | Andrew Kyle |
2017 | Jeremy Henry[13] | Muhammad Soufi Rusli |
2018 | Jeremy Henry[1] | David Ferguson |
2019 | Gary Kelly[14] | Brendan Aquilina |
Women's singles
editYear | Winner | Runner-up |
---|---|---|
2005 | Grace Chu[2] | Litia Tikoisuva |
2006 | Shirley Choy[6] | Doreen Hankin |
2007 | Judy Nardella[7] | Lorna Trigwell |
2008 | Alison Merrien[15] | Val Smith |
2009 | Jo Edwards[16] | Karen Murphy |
2010 | Jo Edwards | Karen Murphy |
2011 | Jo Edwards[8] | Alison Merrien |
2012 | Alison Merrien | Jo Edwards |
2013 | Jo Edwards[9] | Alison Merrien |
2014 | Caroline Brown[10] | Alison Merrien |
2015 | Siti Zalina Ahmad[11] | Julie Forrest |
2016 | Carmen Anderson[12] | Siti Zalina Ahmad |
2017 | Jo Edwards[13] | Lucy Beere |
2018 | Lucy Beere[1] | Rebecca Van Asch |
2019 | Jo Edwards[14] | Lucy Beere |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "Bowls World Cup to begin in Warilla". Inside the Games. 5 March 2018.
- ^ a b c "International Events". Hong Kong Lawn Bowls Association.
- ^ "Past results" (PDF). World Bowls.com.
- ^ "Preview a new World Championship" (PDF). Bristol Indoor Bowls. Retrieved 12 April 2022.
- ^ "World Bowls Indoor Championships". World Bowls. Retrieved 12 April 2022.
- ^ a b "Past results". The Telegraph. 29 April 2006.
- ^ a b "Nardella, Kerkow win world bowls titles". Sydney Morning Herald. 4 May 2007.
- ^ a b "Results". Irish Examiner.
- ^ a b "Henry Crowned Again". Bowls Australia.
- ^ a b "Scot conquers world en route to the Commonwealth Games". The Herald. 17 April 2014.
- ^ a b "2015 World Cup Singles Warilla Bowls Club, NSW, Australia, Day 9, Results". World Bowls.
- ^ a b "World Cup glory for Jeremy and Carmen". World Bowls.
- ^ a b "Edwards, Henry win fifth World Cup Bowls crown at Warilla". Bowls New Zealand.
- ^ a b "World Cup indoor singles – Day 9". Bowls International.
- ^ "Merrien conquers Indoor World Cup". BBC Sport. 18 April 2008.
- ^ "Jo Edwards (possibly) bows out in style". Radio NZ. 2 April 2009.