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World Singles Champion of Champions

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The World Singles Champion of Champions is an event inaugurated in 2003 that is contested annually between bowlers who have won their respective national singles title.[1]

The event was first held in 2003 at the Moama Bowling Club in Moama, Australia. Traditionally the competition favours the Southern Hemisphere players because the Northern Hemisphere players have to travel to the event and compete on faster greens.[2] No male player has won the title a second time and the only female to achieve two wins is Jo Edwards of New Zealand.

Past winners

[edit]

Men's singles

[edit]
Year Venue Winner Runner-up
2003 Moama, Australia [3] Namibia Douw Calitz Scotland Darren Burnett
2004 Warilla, Australia [4] New Zealand Ali Forsyth Scotland David Anderson
2005 Christchurch, New Zealand [5] England Mark Walton New Zealand Dwayne Cameron
2006 Christchurch, New Zealand [6] Scotland Darren Burnett Israel Jeff Rabkin
2007 Warilla, Australia [7] New Zealand Tony Grantham Eswatini Willie James
2008 Aberdeen, Scotland [8] Australia Leif Selby Wales Mark Weaver
2009 Ayr, Scotland [9] Australia Brett Wilkie Scotland Wayne Hogg
2010 Norfolk Island [10] Australia Aron Sherriff New Zealand Andrew Todd
2011 Hong Kong, China [11] Jersey Thomas Greechan Scotland Jonathan Ross
2012 Paphos, Cyprus [12] Malaysia Muhammad Hizlee Abdul Rais Hong Kong Stanley Lai
2013 Christchurch, New Zealand [13] England Tom Bishop Scotland Alistair White
2014 Christchurch, New Zealand Scotland Iain McLean Malaysia Fairus Jabal
2015 Brisbane, Australia [14] Neil Mulholland+ Malaysia Fairul Izwan Abd Muin
2016 Brisbane, Australia [15] Australia Scott Thulborn Wales Jonathan Tomlinson
2017 Sydney, Australia [16] Australia Aaron Teys New Zealand Dean Elgar
2018 Sydney, Australia [17] New Zealand Shannon McIlroy Hong Kong Tony Cheung
2019 Adelaide, Australia [18] Australia Lee Schraner Hong Kong Tony Cheung
2020 Adelaide, Australia [19] cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Naenae B.C., Wellington, New Zealand[20] cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2022 Naenae B.C., Wellington, New Zealand[21] England Sam Tolchard Malaysia Izzat Dzulkeple
2023 Club Robina, Gold Coast, Australia[22] Wales Daniel Salmon Scotland Darren Gualtieri
2024 Browns Bay BC, Auckland, New Zealand[23] Australia Lee Schraner New Zealand Aiden Takarua

Women's singles

[edit]
Year Venue Winner Runner-up
2003 Moama, Australia [3] Eswatini Liz James Guernsey Alison Merrien
2004 Warilla, Australia [4] Margaret Johnston+ Scotland Karen Dawson
2005 Christchurch, New Zealand [24] Malaysia Nor Iryani Azmi New Zealand Sharon Sims
2006 Christchurch, New Zealand [6] England Julie Saunders Australia Julie Keegan
2007 Warilla, Australia [25] Guernsey Alison Merrien Malaysia Siti Zalina Ahmad
2008 Aberdeen, Scotland [26] Wales Kathy Pearce Scotland Lorraine Malloy
2009 Ayr, Scotland [9] Australia Kelsey Cottrell Guernsey Lucy Beere
2010 Norfolk Island [10] New Zealand Jan Khan Scotland Joyce Lindores
2011 Hong Kong, China [27] New Zealand Jo Edwards Scotland Caroline Brown
2012 Paphos, Cyprus New Zealand Sandra Keith Zimbabwe Jane Rigby
2013 Christchurch, New Zealand [28] Australia Karen Murphy Scotland Lorna Smith
2014 Christchurch, New Zealand [29] Scotland Lorna Smith Netherlands Saskia Schaft
2015 Brisbane, Australia [30] Malaysia Emma Firyana Saroji South Africa Nicolene Neal
2016 Brisbane, Australia [15] Australia Natasha Scott Brunei Amalia Matali
2017 Sydney, Australia [16] Wales Laura Daniels Malaysia Emma Firyana Saroji
2018 Sydney, Australia [17] New Zealand Jo Edwards Malaysia Alyani Jamil
2019 Adelaide, Australia [18] Australia Kylie Whitehead New Zealand Debbie White
2020 Adelaide, Australia [19] cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 Naenae B.C., Wellington, New Zealand[20] cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2022 Naenae B.C., Wellington, New Zealand[21] New Zealand Tayla Bruce Australia Carla Krizanic
2023 Club Robina, Gold Coast, Australia[22] United States Anne Nunes Guernsey Lucy Beere
2024 Browns Bay BC, Auckland, New Zealand[23] Tonga Milika Nathan United States Anne Nunes

+Ireland competes as one nation

See also

[edit]

World Bowls Events

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "World Singles Champion of Champions". Bowls Scotland.
  2. ^ "Bowls in Australia – A Popular Sport". Bowls World.
  3. ^ a b "Calitz: first champ of champs". BBC Sport. 26 September 2003.
  4. ^ a b "Bowls: Forsyth takes out world title". NZ Herald.
  5. ^ "2005 November 19-26 Fendalton Bowling Club, Christchurch, New Zealand". Burnside Bowling Club.
  6. ^ a b "Champion of Champion finals". Burnside Bowling Club.
  7. ^ "Bowls: Grantham taking no chances now". Otago Daily Times. 24 October 2011.
  8. ^ "Helensvale a long shot to win bowls challenge". Courier Mail.
  9. ^ a b "Coast's Kelsey a world champion". Sunshine Coast Daily.
  10. ^ a b "The triumphant winners, Australia's Aron Sherriff and Jan Khan" (PDF). Official Bowls New Zealand Magazine.
  11. ^ "Jersey's Thomas Greechan 'overjoyed' at title win". BBC Sport. 15 November 2011.
  12. ^ "New Zealand And Malaysia Win Champion Of Champions". Bowls International.
  13. ^ "Student crowned bowls World Champion of Champions". Aston University.
  14. ^ "World Champion Neil". Irish Bowling Association.
  15. ^ a b "Wizards of Oz". World Bowls.
  16. ^ a b "Aaron Teys And Laura Daniels Win World Champion Of Champions". Bowls International.
  17. ^ a b "Edwards and McIlroy clinch World Bowls Champion of Champions titles". Inside the Games. 4 November 2018.
  18. ^ a b "World Singles Champion of Champions, Adelaide Bowling Club, South Australia". World Bowls.
  19. ^ a b "Champion of Champions called off". World Bowls.
  20. ^ a b "2021 World Singles Champion of Champions". World Bowls. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  21. ^ a b "Tolchard crowned World Champion of Champions champion". England Bowls. 25 November 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  22. ^ a b "Results". World Bowls Match Center. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  23. ^ a b "Auckland teacher Milika Nathan wins World Bowls Champion of Champions women's singles title for Tonga". RNZ. Retrieved 22 December 2024.
  24. ^ "2005 November 19-26 Fendalton Bowling Club, Christchurch, New Zealand". Burnside Bowling Club.
  25. ^ "Merrien thrashes British champ". Guernsey Press. 15 November 2007.
  26. ^ "Lorraine Malloy ready for Worlds title bid after finishing second two years ago". Daily Record. 4 November 2010.
  27. ^ "Champion of Champions report". The Courier and Advertiser.
  28. ^ "Bowls: British players dominant in New Zealand". Express. December 2013.
  29. ^ "Lorna Smith bowls them over in Christchurch". Stuff.co.nz.
  30. ^ "2015 World Champion of Champions – Results of Play on Day 7". World Bowls.com.