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World Indoor Bowls Championships

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2a00:23c8:1d8b:1b00:8052:ec2f:f1dc:9983 (talk) at 22:51, 26 January 2021 (World Indoor Men's/Open Pairs Champions). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

World Indoor Bowls Championships
SportBowls
Founded1979
ContinentInternational (Professional Bowls Association / World Bowls Tour)
Most recent
champion(s)
2021 Open Singles
England Mark Dawes
2021 Women's Singles
Wales Laura Daniels
2021 Open Pairs
England Mark Dawes &
England Jamie Chestney
2021 Mixed Pairs
Scotland Stewart Anderson &
Scotland Julie Forrest
TV partner(s)BBC Two

The World Indoor Bowls Championship was first held in 1979 at Coatbridge in Scotland for men's singles only. The event was sponsored by Embassy in the early years and grew in stature. In 1988 the venue changed to Alexandra Palace and one year later Churchill Insurance took over the sponsorship when the championships were held at Preston Guild Hall. The Midland Bank and SAGA were two more sponsors during the Preston era. In 1999 Potters Holidays came in to take over the sponsorship and the event moved to Potters Resort in Hopton-on-Sea, where it is still held today. The BBC also show live coverage of the championships during the last week which includes all four competition finals.[1]

The men's pairs started in 1986, the women's singles in 1988 and the mixed pairs in 2004.[2] Both the men's singles and men's pairs changed to open singles and open pairs following the rule change which allowed women to compete in them. Alex Marshall from Scotland has won the singles event a record six times. Fellow Scot Paul Foster is one win behind with five successes.

World Indoor Men's/Open Singles Champions

Wins by individual (Open Singles only)

Name Titles Runners up Winning Years
Scotland Alex Marshall 6 1 1999, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2015
Scotland Paul Foster 5 1 1998, 2001, 2005, 2011, 2017
Scotland Richard Corsie 3 4 1989, 1991, 1993
England Andy Thomson 3 2 1994, 1995, 2012
England David Bryant 3 1 1979, 1980, 1981
England Tony Allcock 3 - 1986, 1987, 2002
Scotland Hugh Duff 2 1 1988, 1997
Scotland Stewart Anderson 2 1 2013, 2019
England Mark Dawes 2 - 2018, 2021
Wales John Price 1 3 1990
England Mervyn King 1 3 2006
Australia Ian Schuback 1 2 1992
England Greg Harlow 1 2 2010
England Robert Paxton 1 2 2020
Northern Ireland Jim Baker 1 1 1984
Scotland David Gourlay 1 1 1996
Wales Robert Weale 1 1 2000
England Nick Brett 1 1 2016
Scotland John Watson 1 - 1982
Scotland Bob Sutherland 1 - 1983
Wales Terry Sullivan 1 - 1985
England Billy Jackson 1 - 2009
Scotland Darren Burnett 1 - 2014

Performance by country (Open singles only)

Country Titles Runners up Winning Players
Scotland Scotland 22 11 9
England England 16 16 9
Wales Wales 3 7 3
Australia Australia 1 3 1
Northern Ireland Northern Ireland 1 2 1
Hong Kong Hong Kong - 1 -
Israel Israel - 1 -
New Zealand New Zealand - 1 -
Canada Canada - 1 -
Total 43 43 23

World Indoor Women's Singles Champions

World Indoor Men's/Open Pairs Champions

The Men's Pairs (now Open Pairs) allows women to compete, this is not to be confused with the Mixed Pairs. It was a men's only competition until 2012.

World Indoor Mixed Pairs Champions

World Indoor Open Under 25 Champions

Players with 5 or more titles

Name Nation Open singles Women's singles Open Pairs Mixed Pairs Total
Alex Marshall  Scotland 6 N/A 6 2 14
Paul Foster  Scotland 5 N/A 5 2 12
Tony Allcock  England 3 N/A 8 - 11
David Bryant  England 3 N/A 6 - 9
David Gourlay  Scotland /  Australia 1 N/A 3 3 7
Andy Thomson  England 3 N/A 3 - 6
Carol Ashby  England - 3 - 3 6
Richard Corsie  Scotland 3 N/A 2 - 5
Nick Brett  England 1 N/A 2 2 5

See also

References

  1. ^ "World Indoor Bowls Championships 2018: Schedule and BBC coverage". BBC Sport.
  2. ^ Newby, Donald (1989). Bowls Year Book 89. the Daily Telegraph. ISBN 0-330-31093-3.
  3. ^ "Wales' Laura Daniels wins World Indoor Bowls final". BBC. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Dawes And Chestney Win Second Open Pairs Title". Bowls International. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  5. ^ "Julie Forrest: Borders bowler wins world championships title". Peebleshire News. Retrieved 19 January 2021.