2010 World Team Championship
The 2010 World Team Championship (short WTC 2010) was the first edition of the World Team Championship which was sanctioned by the World Pool-Billiard Association, which ran from January 30, 2010, to February 6, 2010, in Hanover, Germany. A total prize fund of $398,000 was distributed, with the winning team receiving $100,000. The Great Britain 1 team of Darren Appleton, Daryl Peach, Imran Majid, Karl Boyes and Mark Gray won the event with a 4–1 victory over the Philippines.[1][2] It was the first iteration of the World Team Championship.
In the quarter-finals, the match between Britain 1 and China reached a playoff. After a "titanic struggle", the match reached a score of 27–25 in a race to 6 racks with the winning rack from Peach.[3][4]
Format
[edit]The World Team Championship consisteted of teams of 4-6 players for national teams. The event was organised and run by the World Pool-Billiard Association. Only one national team is allowed to compete per nation, with the exception of hosts Germany, Great Britain and Israel. The latter two were re-nominated after the teams from Nigeria and Brunei cancelled.[5][6]
The event featured three pool disciplines for each match: Eight-ball, Nine-ball and 10-Ball. Each match consists of six matches; two each in the respective disciplines. The 8-ball sets are played in doubles to 6 racks. The 9-ball and 10-ball sets are played in singles on a playout of 8 or 7 racks. If a match is tied 3-3, the winner is determined by a playoff.[7]
The tournament was contested as a Double-elimination tournament until 16 teams remained. In the final round of the last 16 will be in the Single-elimination tournament played, so every defeat leads to the immediate withdrawal from the tournament.[6]
Prize money
[edit]The event featured a prize fund totalling $398,000, with $100,000 for the winners of the event split between the participants.[8] A breakdown of the prize money is shown below:[8]
Placing | Prize money |
---|---|
Winner | $100,000 |
Runner-up | $50,000 |
Semi-finalists | $30,000 |
Quarter-finalists | $15,000 |
Last 16 | $10,000 |
17-24 Place | $6,000 |
Competing teams
[edit]Source:[9]
Nation | Player 1 | Player 2 | Player 3 | Player 4 | (Player 5) | (Player 6) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aruba | Richard Wolff | Aaron Franken | Ryan Rampersaud | Ditto Acosta | × | × |
Belgium | Serge Das | Noel Bruynooghe | Pascal Budo | Jan Dulst | × | × |
China | Li Hewen | Fu Jianbo | Liu Haitao | Dang Jinhu | × | × |
Denmark | Kasper Thygesen | Kasper Kristoffersen | Bahram Lotfy | Martin Larsen | × | × |
Germany I | Ralf Souquet | Andreas Roschkowsky | Thorsten Hohmann | Christian Reimering | Manuel Ederer | Nicolas Ottermann |
Germany II | Oliver Ortmann | Dominic Jentsch | Thomas Lüttich | John Blacklaw | Christian Musmann | × |
Estonia | Jüri Talu | Rainer Laar | Erki Erm | Denis Grabe | Reimo Simsalu | × |
Finland | Mika Immonen | Markus Juva | Aki Heiskanen | Petri Makkonen | × | × |
France | Stephan Cohen | Vincent Facquet | Lionel Vernedal | Laurant Bourdelles | × | × |
Greece | Nikos Ekonomopoulos | John Vassalos | Alexander Kazakis | Evangelos Vettas | Aristeidis Damoylakis | Christos Kokotis |
Iran | Takhti Zarakani | Farhad Shaverdi | Hadi Keyvan Ekbatani | Ali Khojasteh Anbaran | × | × |
Israel I | Noam Cohen | Dror Dobronski | Ben Gmach | Zion Zvi | × | × |
Israel II | Shai Eisenberg | Sagi Kortler | Valery Kostovesky | Dobronsky Osnat | × | × |
Italy | Bruno Muratore | Pietro Caperna | Gabriele Cimmino | Vittorio De Falco | Michele Monaco | Mauro Castriota |
Japan | Satoshi Kawabata | Yukio Akakariyama | Masaaki Tanaka | Naoyuki Ōi | × | × |
Canada | Alain Martel | Tyler Edey | Jason Klatt | Ron Wiseman | Erik Hjorleifson | × |
Croatia | Ivica Putnik | Robert Sudić | Božo Primić | Karlo Dalmatin | Tomislav Šušić | × |
Kuwait | Khaled al-Mutairi | Abdullah al-Yasef | Majed al-Azemi | Bader al-Awadhi | Tareq al-Mulla | Omar al-Shaheen |
Liechtenstein | Alessandro Banzer | Branko Kosic | Hans Jörg Dutler | Mario Wille | × | × |
Morocco | Amine Ouahbi | Samuel Saïd Arji | Yousri Kabbaj | Ameur Abdel Ati Riad | Mounir Al Honsali | × |
Netherlands | Niels Feijen | Nick van den Berg | Huidji See | Alex Lely | × | × |
Nigeria | Samuel Bamgbose | Shehu Bamidele | Adegbite Aderibigbe | Ayodele Ajibodu | Marins Abada | × |
Northern Cyprus | Ali Karanfiloglu | Huseyin Borankan | Onuc Altur | Berk Mehmetcik | × | × |
Norway | Vegar Kristiansen | Ronny Oldervik | Mats Schjetne | Malvin Boelland | × | × |
Peru | Christopher Tevez Ocampo | Juan Vega Enriquez | Jorge Llanos Bustillos | Jhon Lopez Roman | Luis Arias Chosek | Edson Damian Velasquez |
Philippines | Ronato Alcano | Lee Vann Corteza | Warren Kiamco | Antonio Lining | Marlon Manalo | Dennis Orcollo |
Poland | Radosław Babica | Tomasz Kapłan | Mateusz Śniegocki | Karol Skowerski | Adam Skoneczny | Mariusz Skoneczny |
Austria | Jasmin Ouschan | Albin Ouschan | Maximilian Lechner | Jürgen Jenisy | Martin Kempter | Mario He |
Russia | Konstantin Stepanov | Ruslan Chinakhov | Jegor Plischkin | Roman Pruchay | × | × |
Sweden | Marcus Chamat | Tomas Larsson | Jim Chawki | Andreas Gerwen | Jan Lundell | × |
Switzerland | Dimitri Jungo | Sascha Specchia | Ronny Regli | Marco Tschudi | × | × |
Serbia | Šandor Tot | Zoran Svilar | Andreja Klasović | Goran Mladenović | Miloš Verkić | × |
Slovakia | Jaroslav Polach | Milan Klobucnik | Zoltan Petrovic | Peter Leitman | Jakub Koniar | Rene Daubner |
Slovenia | Jožko Marinko | Matjaž Demšar | Rado Doroslovac | Mates Cretnik | × | × |
Spain | David Alcaide | Francisco Sánchez Ruíz | Jose L. Gonzales | Rafael Guzman | × | × |
South Korea | Jeong Young-hwa | Park K. Chan | Lee Gun Jea | Han Won Sik | × | × |
Hungary | Vilmos Földes | Mate Hazay | Attila Bezdan | Csaba Nagy | Bence Varga | Gabor Antal |
Czech Republic | Roman Hybler | Michal Gavenčiak | Lukas Krenek | Adam Houdek | Oto Zeman | × |
United States | Johnny Archer | Shane Van Boening | Óscar Domínguez | Corey Deuel | × | × |
United Arab Emirates | Muhammed Al Hosani | Hanni Al Howri | Mohammed Obaid | Khalid Sibaitah | × | × |
United Kingdom I | Darren Appleton | Imran Majid | Karl Boyes | Daryl Peach | Mark Gray | × |
United Kingdom II | Chris Melling | Craig Osborne | Adam Smith | Mick Hill | Michael Valentine | × |
Cyprus | Costas Konnaris | Prodromos Demosthenous | Yiannos Kitromilidies | Panicos Petrou | George Louka | × |
Results
[edit]Round of 16
[edit]After the double elimination round, a single elimination tournament featuring the last 16 teams was held. Below are the results from this stage:[10][11]
|
|
Quarter-finals
[edit]
|
|
Semi-finals
[edit]
|
|
Final
[edit]Team | 8-Ball | 9-Ball | 10-Ball | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 February 2010 | I | II | III | IV | V | VI | Score |
Philippines | 6 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 1 | × | 1 |
United Kingdom 1 | 1 | 6 | 8 | 8 | 7 | × | 4 |
External links
[edit]
References
[edit]- ^ "Team Great Britain, World Team Cup 2010 :: ProPool.info". propool.info. Archived from the original on 27 April 2018. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "Great Britain Wins World Team Championship". azbilliards.com. 7 February 2010. Archived from the original on 18 March 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "World Team Championship Final Four". azbilliards.com. 6 February 2010. Archived from the original on 20 March 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ a b "BBC Sport - Great Britain win WPA world pool title". BBC. 9 February 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "World Teams Championship 2010". azbilliards.com. 31 December 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ a b "Day One of the World Team Championships". azbilliards.com. 31 January 2010. Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ Regeln[dead link]
- ^ a b "WPA World Team Championship 2010". azbilliards.com. Archived from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "World Team Cup 2010 - match results :: ProPool.info". propool.info. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "World Team Cup 2010 - match results :: ProPool.info". propool.info. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "World Team Cup 2010 - match results :: ProPool.info". propool.info. Archived from the original on 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ "Philippines vs Great Britain for World Team Championship". azbilliards.com. 6 February 2010. Archived from the original on 18 March 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2019.