2000 World Outdoor Bowls Championship

The 2000 Men's World Outdoor Bowls Championship [1] was held at Marks Park Bowling Club, in Johannesburg, South Africa, from 1 to 15 April 2000.[2]

World Outdoor Championships 2000
9th World Outdoor Bowls Championships
LocationSouth Africa Johannesburg, South Africa (men's)
Australia Moama, Australia (Women's)
Date(s)1 April – 15 April 2000 (Men's)
8 March – 25 March 2000 (women's)
CategoryWorld Outdoor Championships
← 1996
2004 →

The 2000 Women's World Outdoor Bowls Championship was held at Moama Bowling Club in Moama, Australia, from 8 to 25 March 2000.[3][4]

Medallists

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Event Gold Silver Bronze Bronze
Men's singles
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Jeremy Henry
 
Steve Glasson
 
Jeff Rabkin
 
Tony Allcock
Men's pairs
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Alex Marshall
George Sneddon
 
Shaun Addinall
Gerry Baker
 
Brett Duprez
Mark Jacobsen
 
Russell Meyer
Paul Girdler
Men's triples
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Andrew Curtain
Rowan Brassey
Peter Belliss
 
Adam Jeffery
Steve Glasson
Rex Johnston
 
Robert Marshall
Jim McIntyre
Willie Wood
 
Martin McHugh
Ian McClure
Gary McCloy
Men's fours
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Mark Williams
Robert Weale
Stephen Rees
Will Thomas
 
Bruce Makkink
Bobby Donnelly
Shaun Addinall
Neil Burkett
 
Robert Marshall
George Sneddon
Jim McIntyre
Willie Wood
 
Russell Meyer
Paul Girdler
Rowan Brassey
Peter Belliss
Men's team  
Australia
 
Scotland
 
New Zealand
 
N/A
Women's singles
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Margaret Johnston
 
Rita Jones
 
Karen Murphy
 
N/A
Women's pairs
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Margaret Letham
Joyce Lindores
 
Karen Murphy
Arrienne Wynen
 
Jean Baker
Mary Price
 
N/A
Women's triples
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Sharon Sims
Anne Lomas
Patsy Jorgensen
 
Katherine Hawes
Jill Polley
Norma Shaw
 
Willow Fong
Margaret Sumner
Roma Dunn
 
N/A
Women's fours
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Jan Khan
Patsy Jorgensen
Sharon Sims
Anne Lomas
 
Julie Forrest
Betty Forsyth
Sarah Gourlay
Joyce Lindores
 
Willow Fong
Margaret Sumner
Roma Dunn
Arrienne Wynen
 
N/A
Women's team   England   Australia   Scotland  
N/A

Results

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[5]

W.M.Leonard Trophy (team)

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The W.M Leonard Trophy was awarded to the best overall performance calculated from all four disciplines.

Pos Team Total singles pairs triples fours
1   Australia 88
2   Scotland 86+
3   New Zealand 86+
4   South Africa 80
5   Wales 77
6   Ireland 77
7   England 65
8   Zimbabwe 62
9   Hong Kong 61
10   Israel 56
11   Malaysia 55
12   Canada 45
13   Jersey 42
14   Fiji 41
15   United States 38
16   Swaziland 34
17   Zambia 33
18   Namibia 27
19   Norfolk Island 25
20   Guernsey 16
21   Botswana 15
22   Argentina 13
23   Singapore 10

+ Scotland won bronze on shots 370.20 to 248.40

Taylor Trophy (team)

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The Taylor Trophy was awarded to the best overall performance calculated from points accumulated from the round-robin phase.

Pos Team Total singles pairs triples fours
1   England 111 28 27 30 26
2   Australia 110 28 30 26 26
3   Scotland 106 24 28 24 30
4   New Zealand 104 22 25 28 29
5   Wales 99 28 20 25 26
6   Jersey 98 26 18 26 28
7   South Africa 88 20 16 26 26
8   Ireland 86 26 17 24 19
9   Malaysia 85 18 20 20 27
10   Swaziland 79 24 22 20 13
11   Israel 73 20 14 20 19
12   Papua New Guinea 72 20 26 8 18
13   Guernsey 71 20 21 16 14
14   Norfolk Island 71 20 21 17 13
15   Canada 71 20 14 20 17
16   Zimbabwe 66 16 14 18 18
17   Fiji 65 18 22 12 13
18   Zambia 63 16 16 9 22
19   Namibia 61 16 18 14 13
20   Hong Kong 60 12 16 14 18
21   Spain 58 12 16 18 12
22   United States 58 10 24 8 16
23   Cook Islands 57 10 18 12 17
24   Kenya 46 20 4 11 11
25   Botswana 44 10 8 16 10
26   India 40 16 2 21 1
27   Brunei 39 10 6 9 14
28   Samoa 37 2 12 13 10
29   Singapore 36 10 9 7 10
30   Thailand 31 6 14 5 6
31   Argentina 31 10 6 6 9
32   Netherlands 27 6 10 8 3
33   Brazil 24 0 6 10 8
34   Japan 9 0 4 3 2

References

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  1. ^ "World Bowls Championships" (PDF). worldbowls.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  2. ^ "Games heroes aim for world domination". Coleraine Times. 22 March 2000. Retrieved 8 November 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  3. ^ "Scots start well". The Scotsman. 9 March 2000. Retrieved 8 November 2024 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. ^ "U.S Women at World Championships" (PDF). Bowls USA. Retrieved 9 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Times Archives". The Times. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017. Retrieved 7 March 2015.