Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships: Difference between revisions
{{Bridge-game-stub |
m Dated {{Citation needed}} x 4. (Build p613) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Unreferenced |
{{Unreferenced|auto=yes|date=December 2009}} |
||
{{Orphan|date=June 2009}} |
{{Orphan|date=June 2009}} |
||
The '''Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships''' are held in conjunction with the [[Commonwealth Games]]. |
The '''Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships''' are held in conjunction with the [[Commonwealth Games]]. |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
==2002 Manchester== |
==2002 Manchester== |
||
The first Championships were held in [[Manchester]], [[England]]. The event was held at [[Whitworth Hall]], part of the [[University of Manchester]], 15–20 July 2002.{{ |
The first Championships were held in [[Manchester]], [[England]]. The event was held at [[Whitworth Hall]], part of the [[University of Manchester]], 15–20 July 2002.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} |
||
Canada defeated Wales for the gold medal. India captured the bronze medal. |
Canada defeated Wales for the gold medal. India captured the bronze medal. |
||
There were 28 entries.{{ |
There were 28 entries.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} |
||
* {{Flag|Antigua and Barbuda}} - Sydney Christian, Duncan Finch, Al James, Errol James and Junia Nibbs. |
* {{Flag|Antigua and Barbuda}} - Sydney Christian, Duncan Finch, Al James, Errol James and Junia Nibbs. |
||
Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
==2006 Murrumbeena== |
==2006 Murrumbeena== |
||
The second Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in [[Murrumbeena, Victoria]], [[Australia]], 7–12 March 2006.{{ |
The second Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in [[Murrumbeena, Victoria]], [[Australia]], 7–12 March 2006.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} |
||
==2010 Delhi== |
==2010 Delhi== |
||
The third Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in [[Delhi]], [[India]], November 2010.{{ |
The third Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in [[Delhi]], [[India]], November 2010.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} |
||
The Scotland Team winning the Gold medal was Brian Spears, John Murdoch, Derek Sanders, Derek Diamond, Irving Gordon and Sandy Duncan. |
The Scotland Team winning the Gold medal was Brian Spears, John Murdoch, Derek Sanders, Derek Diamond, Irving Gordon and Sandy Duncan. |
||
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2011}} |
|||
[[Category:Commonwealth sport |Bridge]] |
[[Category:Commonwealth sport |Bridge]] |
Revision as of 23:54, 11 July 2011
The Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships are held in conjunction with the Commonwealth Games.
2002 Manchester
The first Championships were held in Manchester, England. The event was held at Whitworth Hall, part of the University of Manchester, 15–20 July 2002.[citation needed]
Canada defeated Wales for the gold medal. India captured the bronze medal.
There were 28 entries.[citation needed]
- Antigua and Barbuda - Sydney Christian, Duncan Finch, Al James, Errol James and Junia Nibbs.
- Australia - Ishmael Del Monte, George Gasper, Paul Marston and Bob Richman.
- Barbados - Leslie Atherley, Colin Depradine, Michael Gill, Roglyn Hinds, Charles Hollingsworth and Alan Moss.
- Bermuda - John Glynn, Vera Petty, Roman Smolski, David Sykes and Sally Sykes.
- Canada - Keith Balcombe, Gordon Campbell, Judith Gartaganis and Nicholas Gartaganis.
- England - Michelle Brunner, David Burn, Brian Callaghan, Rhona Goldenfield, David Mossop and David Price.
- Guernsey - Margaret Allen, Mike Allen, Rudi Falla, Andy Hall, Dick Langham and Jill Morgan.
- Guyana - Amina Beepat, Dennis Beepat, Ramdat Rampersaud and Colin Yhap.
- India - C R Bandrinath, Sunit Choksi, R Krishnan, P Sridharen, S Sundarraman and K R Venkataraman.
- Isle of Man - Harry Beere, Andy Elliot, Robin Hicks, John Large, Tag O'Mahoney, John Stewart and Geoffrey Whittaker.
- Jamaica - Wayne Chai-Chong, Michael Coore, Rex James, David Levy, Tony Roberts and Calvin Wong.
- Jersey - David Friswell, Carl Harrison, David Hole, Marion Miles, Sue Rankin and Douglas Romain.
- Kenya - K V Bhatt, Rita Chandra, Sushil Chandra and R C Sharma.
- Malaysia - Siew Heng Chang, Siew Kwan Chang, Dr Teong Wah Lim and David Law.
- Malta - Oliver Clare, Francis Consiglio, Joan Consiglio, Mario Dix, Irene Naudi, Margaret Parnis and Albert Sacco.
- Mauritius - Farouk Ghaws, Balkrishna Gokulsing, Chabilal Gokulsing, Herve Govinden, Nandansing Hurpaul, Brigitte Ribet and Garry Lam Po Tang.
- Northern Ireland - Ceara Burns, Michael Coffrey, John Lavery, Ian Lindsay, John Murchan and Robert Plunkett.
- Pakistan
- Saint Lucia - Johnson Cenac, Dr George Forde, Hon Dr Walter Francois, Enrico Lewis, Hon Mario Michel and Dexter Theodore.
- Scotland - Charles Outred, Vi Outred, Les Steel and Willie Whittaker.
- Singapore - Changsong Chen, Steven Chi, Aik Koan Heng, Kuo Tang Liao, Feng Li and Likun Xing.
- South Africa - Alon Aptekter, Wayne Chu, Bernard Donde, Duggie Ettlinger, Craig Gower and Glen Holman.
- Sri Lanka - Y R Karunartne, Asabthade Mel, Fritz Penera and Anton Selvananyagam.
- Tanzania - Mahen Gandhi, Sulemanji Girnary, Sajal Rakhit, Sajjad Salehebai and Satiss Soochak.
- Trinidad and Tobago - David Clarke, Trevor Hart, Roger Mapp, Mohan Seepersad and Dean Seeteram.
- Uganda - Joseph Almeida, Rajan Dixit, V Mohan, Bharti Popat and Suru Popat.
- Wales - Adam Dunn, Peter Goodman, Dafydd Jones, Gary Jones, Jim Luck, Filip Kurbalija and Tim Rees.
- Zimbabwe - Michael Bourdillon, Andrew Brooke, Gail Cameron, Leif-Erik Stabell and Vanessa Vos.
2006 Murrumbeena
The second Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in Murrumbeena, Victoria, Australia, 7–12 March 2006.[citation needed]
2010 Delhi
The third Commonwealth Nations Bridge Championships were held in Delhi, India, November 2010.[citation needed]
The Scotland Team winning the Gold medal was Brian Spears, John Murdoch, Derek Sanders, Derek Diamond, Irving Gordon and Sandy Duncan.