Ninepin Bowling Classic Singles World Cup

The Ninepin Bowling Classic Singles World Cup was a biennial nine-pin bowling competition organized by the World Ninepin Bowling Association (WNBA NBC). The World Cup was started in 1989 and until 2003 took place every year. The next one was held in 2004 and take place biennially since then.[1][2]

Ninepin Bowling Classic
Singles World Cup
Statusinactive
Genresporting event
FrequencyUntil 2003 - annual
Since 2003 - biennial (odd years)
Location(s)various
Landvarying
Inaugurated1989
Most recent2023
Next eventdiscontinued
Organised byWNBA NBC
Websitewww.wnba-nbc.com

The formula of the competition has changed many times. Since 2003, it has been played in the KO system. Since 2005 games for the 3rd place were not played, but two bronze medals were awarded. Since 2009, the World Cup was held simultaneously with the U23 World Cup.

The 2023 edition was the last held. Due to changes in the WNBA-NBC calendar, the World Cup will be replaced with the European Championship.[3]

List of championships

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Edition Year City Land Women's winner Men's winner Notes
1st 1989 Steyr   Österreich   Antonia Škafar   Béla Csányi
2nd 1990 Eppelheim   Deutschland - - The competition was canceled due to an insufficient number of participants
3rd 1991 Budapest   Ungarn   Claudia Schumann   József Mészáros Combination:   Naděžda Dobešová;   József Mészáros
4th 1992 Tomaszów Mazowiecki   Polen   Naděžda Dobešová   Franc Kirbiš Combination:   Naděžda Dobešová;   Friedhelm Zänger
5th 1993 Zagreb   Kroatien   Biserka Perman   Leontin Popp Combination:   Biserka Perman;   Cvitan Vučak
6th 1994 Tramin   Italien   Cilly Ploner   Arpad Boroš
7th 1995 Blansko   Slowakei   Ágota Kovácsné Grampsch   Albin Juvančič
8th 1996 Vienna   Österreich (2)   Beate Schönerstedt   Uroš Stoklas
9th 1997 Kelsterbach   Deutschland (2)   Claudia Hoffmann   Nicolae Lupu
10th 1998 Bratislava   Slowakei (2)   Claudia Hoffmann   Petrut Mihalcioiu
11th 1999 Skopje   Mazedonien   Elda Sinovčić   Josef Sieder
12th 2000 Hallein   Österreich (3)   Claudia Hoffmann   Branislav Bogdanović
13th 2001 Budapest (2)   Ungarn (2)   Sanela Nović Suturović   Franc Kirbiš
14th 2002 Klagenfurt   Österreich (4)   Sandra Matešić   Branislav Bogdanović
15th 2003 Skopje (2)   Mazedonien (2)   Beata Włodarczyk   Uroš Stoklas
16th 2005 Celje   Slowenien   Beata Włodarczyk   Branislav Bogdanović
17th 2007 Klagenfurt (2)   Österreich (5)   Daniela Muntean   Matko Bulka
18th 2009 Rijeka   Kroatien (2)   Barbara Fidel   Mario Mušanić
19th 2011 Tallinn   Estland   Beata Włodarczyk   Ivan Čech
20th 2013 Zalaegerszeg   Ungarn (3)   Eva Sajko   Matko Bulka
21st 2015 Hirschau   Deutschland (3)   Nataša Ravnić Gašparini   Norbert Kiss
22nd 2017 Straubing   Deutschland (4)   Hana Wiedermannová   Vilmoš Zavarko
23rd 2019 Přerov   Tschechische Republik   Anita Méhész   Vilmoš Zavarko
- 2021 Schönebeck   Deutschland Cancelled due the COVID-19 pandemic
24th 2023 Rijeka (2)   Kroatien (3)   Anna Müller   Lukas Huber

Medal count

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Kroatien125825
2  Slowenien78520
3  Deutschland612422
4  Ungarn651324
5  Tschechische Republik53614
6  Rumänien45514
7  Polen33410
8  FR Yugoslavia3025
9  Serbien2259
10  Italien2002
11  Slowakei1348
12  Österreich1258
13  Yugoslavia1135
14  Mazedonien0112
15  Bosnien und Herzegowina0101
  Estland0101
17  Frankreich0022
18  West Germany0011
Totals (18 entries)535268173

List of hosts

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List of hosts by number of competitions hosted.

Times
hosted
Host Year(s)
5   Österreich 1989, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2007
4   Deutschland 1990, 1997, 2015, 2017, 2021
3   Kroatien 1993, 2009, 2023
3   Ungarn 1991, 2001, 2013
2   Mazedonien 1999, 2003
2   Slowakei 1995, 1998
1   Tschechische Republik 2019
1   Estland 2011
1   Italien 1994
1   Polen 1992
1   Slowenien 2005

References

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  1. ^ "WNBA history from official site".
  2. ^ "All medalists of nine-pin bowling Singles World Cups" (PDF).
  3. ^ "WNBA-NBC calendar by sport seasons" (PDF).