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2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship – Men's triples

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World Bowls Championship 2004
men's triples
10th World Outdoor Bowls Championships
LocationScotland Ayr, Scotland
Date(s)23 July – 7 August, 2004
CategoryWorld Bowls Championship

The 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship men's triples was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July to 7 August 2004.[1][2][3][4]

Jim McIntyre, Willie Wood and David Peacock of Scotland won the gold medal.[5]

Qualifying round

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Four sections, three teams from each section qualify for the championship round.[6][7][8][9]

Section 1

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts Diff
1 New Zealand Rowan Brassey, Sean Johnson, Gary Lawson 5 3 1 1 99 71 7 +28
2 Hong Kong Adam Poynton, Jimmy Chiu, Loy D'Souza 5 3 0 2 84 78 6 +6
3 Philippines Christopher Dagpin, Angelo Morales, Peter O'Donnell 5 2 1 2 92 75 5 +17
4 Israel Tzvika Hadar, Raymond Sher, Jeff Rabkin 5 2 0 3 90 103 4 -13
5 Canada David Anderson, Ryan Bester, Lyall Adams 5 2 0 3 78 94 4 -16
6 Namibia Sandy Joubert, John Shelley, Ewald Vermeulen 5 2 0 3 70 92 4 -22

Section 2

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts Diff
1 South Africa Eric Johannes, Michael Steyn, Neil Burkett 5 4 0 1 118 57 8 +61
2 Australia Steve Glasson, Kelvin Kerkow, Michael Wilks 5 3 0 2 81 70 6 +11
3 Eswatini Louis Erasmus, Derek James, William James 5 3 0 2 77 66 6 +11
4 United States Richard Broad, Jack Behling, Neil Furman 5 3 0 2 83 90 6 -7
5 Brazil Mercantonio Fabra, Fabo Melo, Ascendino Melo 5 2 0 3 77 87 4 -10
6 Samoa Talaimanu Keti, John Silva, Iremia Leautuli 5 0 0 5 51 117 0 -66

Section 3

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts Diff
1 Zimbabwe Denis Streak, Chinky Marillier, Richie Hayden 5 4 1 0 110 65 9 +45
2 Jersey Alan Shaw, Lee Nixon, David Le Marquand 5 3 1 1 116 72 7 +44
3 Scotland Jim McIntyre, Willie Wood, David Peacock 5 3 0 2 101 61 6 +40
4 Malaysia Ramble Dallan Rice-Oxley, Fairul Izwan Abd Muin, Mohamed Aziz Maswadi 5 2 0 3 85 99 4 -14
5 Spain Matt Tew, Stephen McManus, John Sullivan 5 1 0 4 63 98 2 -35
6 Japan Hiroyuki Oda, Stephen Wedge, Makoto Yamada 5 1 0 4 54 134 2 -180

Section 4

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts Diff
1 England Mervyn King, Robert Newman, Andy Thomson 5 4 0 1 123 67 8 +56
2 Jonathan Ross, Jeremy Henry, Neil Booth 5 4 0 1 98 49 8 +49
3 Kenya Andrew Jones, Kiernan Day, Ian Stamp 5 3 0 2 81 76 6 +5
4 Wales Neil Rees, Dai Wilkins, Will Thomas 5 2 0 3 108 79 4 +29
5 Fiji Shushil Deo Sharma, Rajnish Lal, Keshwa Goundar 5 2 0 3 73 105 4 -32
6 Norfolk Island Warren Cranston, Noel Rawlinson, Philip Billman 5 0 0 5 47 154 0 -107

Championship round

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Section 1

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts
1 New Zealand New Zealand 5 5 0 0 120 60 10
2 Ireland 5 4 0 1 84 71 8
3 South Africa South Africa 5 2 0 3 101 65 4
4 Philippines Philippines 5 2 0 3 76 96 4
5 Jersey Jersey 5 2 0 3 79 103 4
6 Kenya Kenya 5 0 0 5 58 123 0

Section 2

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Pos Player P W D L F A Pts
1 Scotland Scotland 5 5 0 0 90 55 10
2 England England 5 3 0 2 88 68 6
3 Zimbabwe Zimbabwe 5 3 0 2 87 81 6
4 Australia Australia 5 2 0 3 85 90 4
5 Eswatini Swaziland 5 1 0 4 87 100 2
6 Hong Kong Hong Kong 5 1 0 4 60 103 2

Bronze medal match

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England beat Ireland 23–10.

Gold medal match

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Scotland beat New Zealand 15–11.

Results

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References

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  1. ^ ""The Results Service." Times [London, England] 26 July 2004". The Times.
  2. ^ ""The Results Service." Times [London, England] 27 July 2004". The Times.
  3. ^ ""The Results Service." Times [London, England] 28 July 2004". The Times.
  4. ^ ""The Results Service." Times [London, England] 29 July 2004". The Times.
  5. ^ "Scotland win Leonard Trophy". BBC Sport. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
  6. ^ "Qualifying Triples Section 1". World Bowls. Web Archive. Archived from the original on 5 April 2005. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Qualifying Triples Section 2". World Bowls. Web Archive. Archived from the original on 5 April 2005. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  8. ^ "Qualifying Triples Section 3". World Bowls. Web Archive. Archived from the original on 5 April 2005. Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  9. ^ "Qualifying Triples Section 4". World Bowls. Web Archive. Archived from the original on 5 April 2005. Retrieved 12 June 2021.