Lawn bowls at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Men's triples

Lawn bowls at the
2010 Commonwealth Games
Singles   men   women  
Pairs   men   women  
Triples   men   women  

The men's triples competition began on 4 October 2010.[1] and finished on 10 October 2010. The gold medal was won by South Africa who won the final over Australia after a tie-break. The bronze medal was won by England, who only lost one match all tournament.

Results

[2][3][4]

Qualifying - Round Robin

Section A

Team Players P W L F A Pts Set Diff
South Africa Johann Pierre du Plessis, Wayne Perry, Gidion Vermeulen 108219211716+6
Australia Brett Wilkie, Wayne Turley, Mark Casey 107321511114+13
Wales Chris Blake, Andrew Fleming, Marc Wyatt 107317715314+4
Scotland Wayne Hogg, David Peacock, Willie Wood 107317213714+1
New Zealand Shannon McIlroy, Richard Girvan, Andrew Todd 106418012012+7
Canada Hirendra Bhartu, Steve McKerihan, Fred Wallbank 105516515610+1
Namibia Willem Esterhuizen, Steven Peake, Graham Snyman 105514317410–4
Brunei Yakup Amit, Md Ali Bujang, Haji Haji Ibrahim 10461361998–5
India Sunil Bahadur, Dinesh Kumar, Prince Mahto, Mahip Tirkey 10371611646–1
Malta Leonard Callus, Michael Debono, Joseph Saragozza 10281341874–8
Niue Vihekula Kanaihu, Ian McKenna, Kolonisi Polima 1019882452–20

Section B

Team Players P W L F A Pts Set Diff
England Mark Bantock, Robert Newman & Graham Shadwell 99018711518+14
Malaysia Mohammad Amir Yusof, Syed Mohamad Syed Akil, Azin Mohd Ariffin 9811899216+10
Guernsey Garry Collins, Dan De la Mare, Gary Pitschou 96315512412+6
Northern Ireland Paul Daly, Martin McHugh, Neil Booth 96317912812+9
Kenya Michael Bedan, Ngugi Njuguna, Martin Nyaga 95413016710–2
Norfolk Island John Christian, Tim Sheridan, Bazza Wilson 9361361516–7
Botswana Boitumelo Mosinyi, Gabatladiwe Motshidisi, Kitso Robert 9271361624–2
Cook Islands Vaine Henry, Ioane Ina Tou, Denis Tokorangi 9271181694–7
Jersey Derek Boswell, Allan Quemard, Cyril Renouf 9271321754–8
Papua New Guinea Harry Kaisa, Lucas Roika, Soling Tiba 9271061854–8

Jersey won 5 sets with a shot difference of -43 to finish ahead of Papua New Guinea who won 5 sets with a shot difference of -79.

Knockout Stages

Quarterfinals Semifinals Gold Medal Match
                                     
A1   South Africa    
 Bye    
  A1   South Africa 10 11    
  A3   Wales 7 9    
B3   Guernsey 6 3  
A3   Wales 8 12    
    A1   South Africa 9 4 4
  A2   Australia 6 8 3
B1   England    
 Bye    
B1   England 3 7 4
  A2   Australia 11 5 5     Bronze medal match
B2   Malaysia 1 8  
A2   Australia 14 10       A3   Wales 6 4
  B1   England 8 9

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.