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Venice Cup

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Venice Cup is a biennial world championship contract bridge tournament for national teams of women. It is contested every odd-number year under the auspices of the World Bridge Federation (WBF), alongside the Bermuda Bowl (open), Wuhan Cup (mixed), and d'Orsi Bowl (seniors). Entries formally represent WBF Zones as well as nations, so it is also known as the World Zonal Women Team Championship, one of three World Zonal Team Championships.[1][2] It was first contested in 1974 as one long match between two teams and has been concurrent with the Bermuda Bowl from 1985.

The Venice Cup is also the name of the trophy awarded to the winning team. It was donated by Italy when Venice hosted the inaugural contest.[citation needed]

The most recent event took place in 2023 in Marrakech, Morocco.[3]

Structure

[edit]

See a description of the identical "Senior Bowl" structure or a detailed account of the 2011 event (below)

1937 world championships

[edit]
The 1937 world champion Austria ladies team. Top left, Rixi Scharfstein. Others from left: Marianne Boschan, Gertie Brunner, Ethel Ernst, Elizabeth Klauber, Gertie Schlesinger (seated).

Austria won the first world teams championships in both open and women categories, conducted 1937 in Budapest, Hungary.[4] They were organized by the International Bridge League, essentially the predecessor of both the European Bridge League (est. 1947) and the WBF (1958). World War II practically destroyed the IBL and its nascent world championship tournament series. With Austria the leading nation at the card table, the 1938 Anschluss of Germany and Austria was a great disruption. The leading bridge theorist and mentor, Paul Stern was an outspoken opponent of Nazism who fled to England that year.[citation needed]

Another 1938 refugee from Austria to England, Rixi Markus (born Erika Scharfstein) was a member of both the 1937 champions and the 1976 Great Britain team that was defeated by the United States for the second Venice Cup.[5][6]

Historical results

[edit]

China is the only bridge nation outside Europe and the United States to win the Venice Cup. Following its third-place breakthrough in 1991, China finished second in 1997 and 2003, and third in 2007, before winning in 2009.

Every Venice Cup tournament has run alongside the Bermuda Bowl except in 1978, which was not a Bermuda Bowl year. Before 1985, however, the Open tournament was more frequent; from that time they have run together in odd years.

United States teams won the first three championships and they have won 10 of 17 including six as one of two USA teams.[a]

The first two "tournaments" were head-on matches between representatives of North America and Europe, like the Bermuda Bowls of 1951 to 1957. The next two were open to one team from every WBF geographic zone. From 1985 the Venice Cup and Bermuda Bowl have run side-by-side in odd years, expanding together from 10 to 22.

Prior to the inaugural Venice Cup, there had been four Olympiad tournaments for women contested 1960 to 1972. The winners had been United Arab Republic, Great Britain, Sweden, and Italy. (After losing the first Venice Cup tournament in 1974, Italy would defend its Olympiad title in 1976 and lose the third Venice Cup in 1978.) (The United States won the first three Venice Cups 1974/76/78 but did not win any early Olympiad tournament.)

Year, Site, Entries Medalists
1974[7]

May 20–28

Venice, Italy

2 teams

1.  United States USA
Bette Cohn, Emma Jean Hawes, Dorothy Hayden Truscott, Betty Ann Kennedy, Marietta Passell, Carol Sanders
2. Italy Italy
Marisa Bianchi, Luciana Canessa, Rina Jabès, Maria Antonietta Robaudo, Anna Valenti, Maria Vittoria Venturini  
1976[8]

May 2–8

Monte Carlo, Monaco

2 teams

1. United States USA
Emma Jean Hawes, Dorothy Hayden Truscott, Betty Ann Kennedy, Jacqui Mitchell, Gail Moss, Carol Sanders
2. United Kingdom Great Britain
Charley Esterson, Nicola Gardener, Fritzi Gordon, Sandra Landy, Rixi Markus, Rita Oldroyd
1978[9]

June 17–30

New Orleans, USA
(separate from Bermuda Bowl) 

5 teams

1. United States USA
Mary Jane Farell, Emma Jean Hawes, Dorothy Hayden Truscott, Marilyn Johnson, Jacqui Mitchell, Gail Moss
2. Italy Italy
Marisa Bianchi, Luciana Capodanno, Marisa D'Andrea, Enrichetta Gut, Andreina Morini, Anna Valenti
3. Argentina Argentina
María Teresa de Díaz, Adriana C. de Martínez de Hoz, Maria Elena Iacapraro, Marta Matienzo, Clara Monsegur
1981[10]

October 19–30

New York City, USA

5 teams

1. United Kingdom Great Britain
Pat Davies, Nicola Gardener, Sandra Landy, Sally Sowter, (Maureen Dennison, Diana Williams)*
2. United States USA
Nancy Gruver, Edith Kemp, Betty Ann Kennedy, Judi Radin, Carol Sanders, Kathie Wei
3. Brazil Brazil
Agota Mandelot, Sylvia Mello, Elisabeth Murtinho, Suzy Powidzer, (Maria Lena Brito, Alice Saad)**
* Dennison–Williams in 1981 did not play enough boards to qualify for the title of World Champion[citation needed]
** Brito–Saad in 1981 did not play enough boards to qualify for third place[citation needed]

The third and fourth Venice Cup tournaments welcomed one team from each WBF geographic zone. On both occasions there were entries from Europe, North America, South America, and South Pacific; they were joined by Asia in 1978, Central America and the Caribbean in 1981. All of the entries were national teams, listed here by zone.

1978: Italy, USA, Argentina, Australia, Philippines[9]
1981: Great Britain, USA, Brazil, Australia, Venezuela[10]

Except for USA ahead of Italy in 1979, those were also the final standings. (Under the same rules, there were six teams in the 1979 Bermuda Bowl tournament because Asia and CAC both participated. A second team from Europe was added in 1981.)

1985

[edit]

The fifth Venice Cup was not until 1985, when the two tournaments were permanently joined side-by-side in odd years with the same structure (like the Olympiad tournaments established in 1960). Since then, the numbers of teams entered have been identical except once.

For 1985 the champion teams from Europe and North America were granted slots in the 4-team semifinal knockout. One representative from every other zone, the host country team, and second teams from Europe and North America, played round-robin for the other two semifinal slots. As for all three renditions under that format, five other zones participated (not yet Africa) and there were ten teams in the field.

1985 Venice Cup, final standings
  1. Great Britain (Europe 2)
  2. USA 1[a] (North America 1)
  3. France (Europe 1)
  4. Chinese Taipei (Pacific Asia)
  5. USA 2[a] (North America 2)
  6. Australia (South Pacific)
  7. Argentina (South America)
  8. Brazil (host country)
  9. Venezuela (Central America & Carib.)
  10. India (Asia & Middle East)
Year, Site, Entries Medalists
1985[11]

Oct 19–Nov 2

São Paulo, Brazil

10 teams

1.  United Kingdom Great Britain
Pat Davies, Sally Horton, Sandra Landy, Nicola Smith, (Michelle Brunner, Gillian Scott-Jones)*
2. United States USA 1[a]
Betty Ann Kennedy, Jacqui Mitchell, Gail Moss, Judi Radin, Carol Sanders, Kathie Wei
3. France France
Danièle Allouche, Véronique Bessis, Ginette Chevalley, Fabienne Pigeaud, Catherine Saul, Sylvie Willard
1987[12]

October 10–24

Ocho Ríos, Jamaica 

10 teams

1. United States USA 2[a]
Cheri Bjerkan, Juanita Chambers, Lynn Deas, Beth Palmer, Judi Radin, Kathie Wei
2. France France
Danièle Allouche, Véronique Bessis, Hélène Bordenave, Ginette Chevalley, Bénédicte Cronier, Sylvie Willard  
3. Italy Italy
Marisa Bianchi, Luciana Capodanno, Marisa D'Andrea, Carla Gianardi, Gabriella Olivieri, Anna Valenti
1989[13]

September 9–23

Perth, Australia

10 teams

1. United States United States
Kitty Bethe, Lynn Deas, Margie Gwozdzinsky, Karen McCallum, Beth Palmer, Kerri Shuman
2. Netherlands Netherlands
Carla Arnolds, Ellen Bakker, Ine Gielkens, Elly Schippers, Marijke van der Pas, Bep Vriend
3. Canada Canada
Francine Cimon, Dianna Gordon, Mary Paul, Sharyn Reus, Gloria Silverman, Katie Thorpe
1991[14]

Sep 29–Oct11

Yokohama, Japan

16 teams

1. United States USA 2[a]
Nell Cahn, Stasha Cohen, Lynn Deas, Sharon Osberg, Nancy Passell, Sue Picus
2. Austria Austria
Gabriele Bamberger, Maria Erhart, Doris Fischer, Terry Weigkricht, (Rosi Spinn, Britta Widengren)***
3. China China
GU Ling, LIU Yiqian, SUN Ming, ZHANG Yalan, (SHAOMIN Shi, WANG Liping)**

1991 to date

[edit]

After 1989, the championship fields were expanded from 10 to 16 teams. European and North American zones were granted four and three slots respectively, without special treatment for any. (The American Contract Bridge League allocated two places to United States teams and one to the winner of a playoff, if necessary.)

1991 Venice Cup participants by zone
Europe: Austria, Germany, Netherlands, Great Britain (1st to 4th in Europe)
North America: USA 1, USA 2, Canada
South America: Argentina, Venezuela
C. America & Carib.: Martinique
Asia & Middle E.: India
Pacific Asia: China, Chinese Taipei, Japan (host)
South Pacific: Australia
Africa: Egypt

All three teams from Pacific Asia advanced to the quarterfinal knockout stage, a very strong performance. China became the first team from outside Europe and the Americas to win a medal.

Through 1993, United States teams won seven and Great Britain two.

Year, Site, Entries Medalists
1993[15]

Aug 29–Sep 11

Santiago, Chile

16 teams

1.  United States USA 2[a]
Karen McCallum, Jill Meyers, Sharon Osberg, Sue Picus, Kerri Sanborn, Kay Schulle
2. Germany Germany
Daniela von Arnim, Karin Caesar, Marianne Mögel, Pony Nehmert, Waltraud Vogt, Sabine Zenkel
3. Sweden Sweden
Lisbeth Åström, Pyttsi Flodqvist, Linda Långström, Catarina Midskog, Bim Ödlund, Mari Ryman
1995[16]

Oct 8–20

Beijing, China

16 teams

1. Germany Germany
Daniela von Arnim, Sabine Auken, Pony Nehmert, Andrea Rauscheid, (Karin Caesar, Marianne Mögel)*
2. United States USA 1[a]
Karen McCallum, Kitty Munson, Sue Picus, Rozanne Pollack, Kerri Sanborn, Carol Simon
3. France France
Véronique Bessis, Claude Blouquit, Bénédicte Cronier, Catherine D'Ovidio, Colette Lise, Sylvie Willard
1997[17][18]

Oct 19–Nov 1

Hammamet, Tunisia

18 teams

1. United States USA 1[a]
Lisa Berkowitz, Mildred Breed, Marinesa Letizia, Jill Meyers, Randi Montin, Tobi Sokolow
2. China China
Gu Ling, Lu Yan, Sun Ming, Wang Wenfei, Zhang Yalan, Zhang Yu
3. United States USA 2[a]
Juanita Chambers, Lynn Deas, Irina Levitina, Beth Palmer, Kerri Sanborn, Kathie Wei
2000[19][20]

January 7–21

Southampton, Bermuda 

20 teams

1. Netherlands Netherlands
Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Martine Verbeek, Bep Vriend, Marijke van der Pas, Wietske van Zwol
2. United States USA 1[a]
Renee Mancuso, Jill Meyers, Randi Montin, Shawn Quinn, Janice Seamon-Molson, Tobi Sokolow
3. Denmark Denmark
Trine Bilde Kofoed, Dorte Cilleborg, Bettina Kalkerup, Kirsten Steen Møller, (Mette Drøgemüller, Charlotte Koch-Palmund)**  
2001[21][22]

Oct 21–Nov 3

Paris, France

18 teams

1. Germany Germany
Daniela von Arnim, Sabine Auken, Pony Nehmert, Andrea Rauscheid, (Katrin Farwig, Barbara Hackett)*
2. France France
Véronique Bessis, Bénédicte Cronier, Catherine D'Ovidio, Sylvie Willard, (Catherine Fishpool, Elisabeth Hugon)***
3. United States USA 2[a]
Mildred Breed, Petra Hamman, Joan Jackson, Robin Klar, Shawn Quinn, Kay Schulle
2003[23][24]

November 2–15

Monte Carlo, Monaco

18 teams

1. United States USA 1[a]
Betty Ann Kennedy, Jill Levin, Sue Picus, Janice Seamon-Molson, Tobi Sokolow, Kathie Wei-Sender
2. China China
Gu Ling, Wang Hongli, Wang Liping, Wang Wenfei, Zhang Yalan, Zhang Yu
3. Netherlands Netherlands
Carla Arnolds, Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Bep Vriend, Marijke van der Pas, Wietske van Zwol
2005[25][26]

Oct 22–Nov 5

Estoril, Portugal

22 teams

1. France France
Danièle Allouche-Gaviard, Bénédicte Cronier, Catherine D'Ovidio, Sylvie Willard, (Nathalie Frey, Vanessa Reess)*
2. Germany Germany
Anja Alberti, Daniela von Arnim, Sabine Auken, Barbara Hackett, Pony Nehmert, Mirja Schraverus-Meuer
3. Netherlands Netherlands
Carla Arnolds, Femke Hoogweg, Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Bep Vriend, Wietske van Zwol
2007[27][28]

Sep 29–Oct 13

Shanghai, China

22 teams

1. United States USA 1[a]
Jill Levin, Irina Levitina, Jill Meyers, Hansa Narasimhan, Debbie Rosenberg, JoAnna Stansby
2. Germany Germany
Anja Alberti, Daniela von Arnim, Sabine Auken, Barbara Hackett, Pony Nehmert, Mirja Schraverus-Meuer
3. China China
Gu Ling, Liu Yiqian, Sun Ming, Wang Hongli, Wang Wenfei, Zhang Yalan
2009[29][30]

Aug 29–Sep 12

São Paulo, Brazil

22 teams

1. China China
Dong Yongling, Liu Yiqian, Yan Ru, Sun Ming, Wang Hongli, Wang Wenfei
2. United States USA 1[a]
Lynn Baker, Lynn Deas, Irina Levitina, Karen McCallum, Beth Palmer, Kerri Sanborn
3. France France
Danièle Allouche-Gaviard, Véronique Bessis, Bénédicte Cronier, Catherine D'Ovidio, Elisabeth Hugon, Sylvie Willard  
2011[31][32]

October 15–29

Veldhoven, Netherlands  

22 teams

1. France France
Danièle Allouche-Gaviard, Véronique Bessis, Bénédicte Cronier, Catherine D'Ovidio, Joanna Neve, Sylvie Willard  
2. Indonesia Indonesia
Lusje Olha Bojoh, Fera Damayanti, Suci Amita Dewi, Kristina Wahyu Murniati, Liem Riantini, Julita Grace Tueje
3. Netherlands Netherlands
Carla Arnolds, Laura Dekkers, Marion Michielsen, Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Bep Vriend
2013[33]

September 17–29

Bali, Indonesia  

22 teams

1. United States USA 2[a]
Hjördis Eythorsdottir, Jill Levin, Jill Meyers, Janice Seamon-Molson, Jenny Wolpert, Migry Zur Campanile  
2. England England
Sally Brock, Fiona Brown, Heather Dhondy, Nevena Senior, Nicola Smith, Susan Stockdale
3. Netherlands Netherlands
Carla Arnolds, Marion Michielsen, Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Wietske van Zwol, Meike Wortel
2015[34]

September 26 – October 10

Chennai, India  

22 teams

1. France France
Deborah Campagnano, Bénédicte Cronier, Elisabeth Hugon, Vanessa Reess, Sylvie Willard, Joanna Zochowska  
2. United States USA 2[a]
Juanita Chambers, Lynn Deas, Joann Glasson, Beth Palmer, Janice Seamon-Molson, Tobi Sokolow  
3. England England
Sally Brock, Fiona Brown, Heather Dhondy, Catherine Draper, Nevena Senior, Nicola Smith  
2017[35]

August 12–26

Lyon, France  

22 teams

1. China China
Yan Huang, Yan Liu, Yan Lu, Qi Shen, Nan Wang, Wen Fei Wang, Jianxin Wang npc, Xiaojing Wang coach
2. England England
Sally Brock, Fiona Brown, Catherine Draper, Sandra Penfold, Nevena Senior, Nicola Smith, Derek Patterson npc, David Burn coach
3. Sweden Sweden
Pia Andersson, Kathrine Bertheau, Ida Grönkvist, Emma Ovelius, Cecilia Rimstedt, Sandra Rimstedt, Kenneth Borin npc, Carina Wademark coach
2019[36]

September 14–28

Wuhan, China  

24 teams

1. Sweden Sweden
Kathrine Bertheau, Sanna Clementsson, Ida Grönkvist, Jessica Larsson, Emma Ovelius, Cecilia Rimstedt, Kenneth Borin (npc), Carina Wademark (coach).
2. China China
Yan Liu, Yan Lu, Qi Shen, Nan Wang, Wen Fei Wang, Xiaoxue Zuo, Xiaojing Wang (npc), Xiaojing Wang (coach)
3. England England
Heather Dhondy, Catherine Draper, Gillian Fawcett, Nevena Senior, Nicola Smith, Yvonne Wiseman, David Gold (npc), David Burn (coach).
2022[37]

March 27 - April 9

Salsomaggiore Terme, Italy  

24 teams

1. Sweden Sweden
Kathrine Bertheau, Sanna Clementsson, Louise Hallqvist, Ylva Johansson, Jessica Larsson, Emma Ovelius, Tobias Törnqvist (npc), Carina Wademark (coach).
2. Turkey Turkey
Özlem Kandolu, Serap Kuranoğlu, Eren Özan, İrem Özbay, Hatice Özgür, Dilek Yavaş, Belis Atalay (npc), Halil Atalay (coach)
3. England England
Sally Brock, Fiona Brown, Heather Dhondy, Catherine Draper, Gillian Fawcett, Nevena Senior, David Burn (npc)
Poland Poland
Cathy Baldysz, Sophia Baldysz, Katarzyna Dufrat, Danuta Kazmucha, Anna Sarniak, Joanna Zaleswka, Miroslaw Cichocki (npc)
2023[38]

August 20 - September 2

Marrakech, Morocco  

24 teams

1. Israel Israel
Adi Asulin, Hila Levi, Adel Petelko, Ziv Roitman, Dana Tal, Noga Tal, Israel Yadlin (npc), Ron Pachtman (coach).
2. Turkey Turkey
Asli Acar, Tuna Elmas, Berrak Erkan, Özlem Kandolu, İrem Özbay, Hatice Özgür, M. Gokhan Yilmaz (npc)
3. China China
Yan Huang, Yan Liu, Jing Rong Ran, Xiuting Yu, Meiling Zhou, Xiaoxue Zuo, Yannang Wang (npc), Xin Li (coach)
* Brunner – Scott-Jones in 1985, Caesar–Mögel in 1995, Farwig–Hackett in 2001, and Frey–Reess in 2005 did not play enough boards to qualify for the title of World Champion[citation needed]
** Shaomin–Wang in 1991, and Drøgemüller – Koch-Palmund in 2000 did not play enough boards to qualify for third place[citation needed]
*** Spinn–Widengren in 1991 and Fishpool–Hugon in 2001 did not play enough boards to qualify for second place[citation needed]

2009

[edit]

Over 13 days in São Paulo, Brazil, beginning 30 August 2009, China became the first bridge nation outside Europe and North America to win the Venice Cup. Indeed, only China has won any gold, silver, or bronze medal in the tournament (see table, below).

The Chinese victory was decisive, culminating in a 220 to 148 IMP domination of USA1 in the two-day final match. Previously China led the seven-day 21-round-robin (France second) from which eight of 22 teams advanced to the knockout stage, then defeated Sweden 259–182 in the quarterfinal and France 245–221 in the semifinal. The 77-IMP and 72-IMP wins over Sweden and USA1 were the second and third biggest margins in the seven knockout matches.[39]

Bénédicte Cronier–Sylvie Willard of France were the high-scoring players on all 22 teams during the round-robin, playing 15 of 21 matches and scoring 0.93 IMP per board. Hongli Wang–Ming Sun of China were second at 0.81 in 15 matches and their teammate pairs (six players on a "Team-of-four") ranked third and eighth. [40]

2011

[edit]

France won the 2011 Venice Cup by 196 to 103 IMP in a two-day final match against Indonesia[41]

Indonesia  0 13 24 19 =56 38 9 103
France 0+ 46 41 39 =126 32 38 196+

France started with one-third IMP carryover from the 16-deal round-robin match, meaning Indonesia must score at least one IMP better on the 96 deals of the final. France scored consistently well during the first three segments, to lead overnight by 126+ to 56, and Indonesia conceded after two of three segments scheduled for the next day.

Notable performances

This is the second Venice Cup for France and the 7th medal in 14 Venice Cup tournaments from 1985 to date, the time of equality with the Bermuda Bowl. Silvie Willard has played for all seven medalists; Véronique Bessis, Bénédicte Cronier, and Catherine D'Ovidio (Saul) six; and Danièle Gaviard (Allouche) five. Following the tournament, D'Ovidio and Willard moved up current ranks one and two among Women Grand Masters and their three frequent teammates moved into the top twelve.[42]

The silver medal for Indonesia represents a sudden arrival among the stronger teams, having placed during the preceding decade no better than 9th (2009), just outside the knockout stage in the current format.[43]

Preliminary

There were 22 national teams in the field, who represented the eight WBF zones as follows.[44] The regular quota for Europe is six teams, seven at Veldhoven because the host country qualifies automatically.[45]

Europe: France, Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, England, Poland, Italy —ranks 1 to 7 in the European championship[46]
North America: Canada, USA 1, USA 2[a]
South America: Brazil, Venezuela
Asia & Middle East: India, Jordan
C. America & Carib.: Trinidad & Tobago
Pacific Asia: China, Indonesia, Japan
South Pacific: Australia, New Zealand
Africa: Egypt, Morocco

The first stage was a full round-robin scheduled in advance.[b] Every team played 21 short matches of 16 deals, three daily.

The women of France, Germany, and the Netherlands have been strong teams for about two decades but this year they waged a close fight for the last two slots in the knockout, Netherlands and France surviving with Germany 7 VP short.[47] The two USA teams[a] led the round-robin and selected quarterfinal opponents Indonesia, sixth, and Netherlands, seventh. England placed third and selected Sweden, fifth. That left defending champion China, fourth, to face France, eighth, a rematch of one 2009 semifinal.

In the quarterfinals, Indonesia and Netherlands both overcame 16-IMP carryovers (the maximum achievable head starts) to defeat the Americans by 33 and 28 IMP. England defeated Sweden to be the only preliminary leader who advanced, and France defeated China, 205+ to 197, in the only match that "went to the end".[48] France led by 15+ after five segments and extended the lead to 29+ IMP on the 84th deal (#20), but the champions yielded nothing more and cut the margin to 2+ on the 95th deal.[49] (The leader was known only to spectators, including local and internet commentators and presumably the third pair from each team.) Finally China defeated 3 one trick worth 50 points, while France doubled 4 and beat it two tricks, worth 300 points and a final margin of eight up from two IMP.[50]

In the semifinals, Indonesia outscored England by 18 IMP on 96 deals to overcome 10.5 carryover. France outscored Netherlands by 21 to overcome 0.5 carryover.[51]

While France won the Cup from Indonesia, the host Netherlands overcame 12 IMP carryover to beat England in 48 deals and win the bronze medal, 109 to 91.[41]

So the preliminary eight, seventh, and sixth place teams had finished one, two, three on the victory stand.

2013

[edit]

USA2 won the 2013 Venice Cup in Bali, Indonesia, defeating England by a score of 229 to 220.3 IMP.[52] The two-day final match of 96 deals was unusually close: the margin, a fraction less than 9 IMP, is frequently exceeded on a single deal; China and France had won the 2009 and 2011 Cups by more than 70 and 90 IMP.

USA2 was the second of two United States entries[a] in the field of 22: namely, Hjordis Eythorsdottir, Jill Levin, Jill Meyers, Janice Seamon-Molson, Jenny Wolpert, Migry Zur Campanile; Sue Picus npc. England was represented by the same team that won the 2012 World Mind Sports Games: Sally Brock, Fiona Brown, Heather Dhondy, Nevena Senior, Nicola Smith, Susan Stockdale; Jeremy Dhondy npc, David Burn coach.

The Netherlands won another close match for third place, defeating China by 152 to 139. The bronze medalists: Carla Arnolds, Marion Michielsen, Jet Pasman, Anneke Simons, Wietske van Zwol, Meike Wortel; Alex van Reenen npc, Hans Kelder coach.

Jill Meyers now has four Venice Cup wins (after 1993, 1997 and 2007), Levin three (2003, 2007) and Seamon-Molson two (2003). Meyers is the first to win six world titles for women, as Nicola Smith would have been with an England victory. She has won five medals in Venice Cup tournaments, as have the Dutch women Arnolds, Pasman, and Simons.[52]

2015

[edit]

In 2015 the Venice Cup was held in Chennai (formerly Madras), India. It was won by France, with USA2 taking silver. England beat the Netherlands in the bronze medal play-off.[53]

2017

[edit]

In 2017 the Venice Cup was held in Lyon, France. It was won by China, with England taking silver. Sweden beat Poland in the bronze medal play-off.[54][55]

2019

[edit]

In 2019 the Venice Cup was held in Wuhan, China. It was won by Sweden, with China taking silver. England beat Netherlands in the bronze medal play-off.[56]

2022

[edit]

The tournament was scheduled for 2021 but was held in Salsomaggiore, Italy in 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was won by Sweden, with Turkiye taking silver. England and Poland shared the bronze medal.[57]

2023

[edit]

The tournament was held in Marrakech, Italy in 2023. It was won by Israel, with Turkiye taking silver. China beat Norway in the bronze medal play-off.[58]

Medals (1974–2023)

[edit]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States (USA)116219
2 France (FRA)3238
3 China (CHN)2338
4 Germany (GER)2305
5 Great Britain (GBR)2103
6 Sweden (SWE)2024
7 Netherlands (NED)1146
8 Israel (ISR)1001
9 England (ENG)0235
10 Italy (ITA)0213
11 Turkey (TUR)0202
12 Austria (AUT)0101
 Indonesia (INA)0101
14 Argentina (ARG)0011
 Brazil (BRA)0011
 Canada (CAN)0011
 Denmark (DEN)0011
 Poland (POL)0011
Totals (18 entries)24242371

Hosts

[edit]

Zones and nations

[edit]
See the version at "Senior Bowl".

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Complete final standings for the entire history show double representation for the US from 1985 to date except 1989. Select "Venue" links at "World Team Championships to Date". WBF. Retrieved 2011-08-17.
  2. ^ Schedule of Play / Venice Cup. 2011. WBF.
    Given the full round-robin structure, the particular schedule should make no difference in the outcome of the first stage.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ World Championships Archived 2011-11-21 at the Wayback Machine. World Bridge Federation (WBF). Retrieved 2011-12-04.
  2. ^ 40th World Teams, Information.
  3. ^ [1]. 46th World Bridge Team Championships, WBF. Retrieved 2023-09-07.
  4. ^ Alan Truscott (1987-06-21). "BRIDGE: A Viennese Victory". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
  5. ^ Rixi Markus player record at the World Bridge Federation.
  6. ^ Rixi Markus (1910–1922) biography at the World Bridge Federation.
  7. ^ 20th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1974. WBF.
  8. ^ 22nd World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1976. WBF.
  9. ^ a b 24th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1979. WBF.
    The Venice Cup tournament whose standings are listed here was not conducted alongside the 1979 Bermuda Bowl as this source implies, but one year earlier as part of the "5th World Championships", as the meet is now known. (Select the name of any Venice Cup team.) That non-Olympic even-year series originated in 1962 as the "World Pairs Olympiad".
  10. ^ a b 25th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1981. WBF.
  11. ^ 27th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1985. WBF.
  12. ^ 28th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1987. WBF.
  13. ^ 29th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1989. WBF.
  14. ^ 30th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1991. WBF.
  15. ^ 31st World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1993. WBF.
  16. ^ 32nd World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1995. WBF.
  17. ^ 33rd World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 1997. WBF.
  18. ^ 1997 World Bridge Championships Archived 2012-04-12 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 1997. WBF.
  19. ^ 34th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2000. WBF.
  20. ^ Orbis World Bridge Championships Archived 2012-05-16 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2000. WBF.
  21. ^ 35th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2001. WBF.
  22. ^ World Bridge Championships Archived 2012-05-16 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2001. WBF.
  23. ^ 36th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2003. WBF.
  24. ^ World Bridge Championships Archived 2011-12-02 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2003. WBF.
  25. ^ 37th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2005. WBF.
  26. ^ World Team Championships Archived 2011-12-02 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2005. WBF.
  27. ^ 38th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2007. WBF.
  28. ^ 38th World Team Championships Archived 2011-12-02 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2007. WBF.
  29. ^ 39th World Team Championships: Results & Participants, 2009. WBF.
  30. ^ 39th World Team Championships Archived 2011-12-21 at the Wayback Machine contemporary coverage, 2009. WBF.
  31. ^ 40th World Team Championships: Results & Participants. WBF. Retrieved 2011-12-01.
  32. ^ 40th World Teams.
  33. ^ 41st World Team Championships: Results & Bulletins.
  34. ^ 42nd World Team Championships. WBF.
  35. ^ 43rd World Team Championships. WBF.
  36. ^ 44th World Team Championships. WBF.
  37. ^ 45th World Team Championships. WBF.
  38. ^ 46th World Team Championships. WBF.
  39. ^ 39th World Teams, Results (linked schedule), 2009. WBF.
    The schedule is linked to session-by-session and cumulative scores for 13 days of Venice Cup tournament play.
  40. ^ 39th World Teams, Results: Women Butler scores.
  41. ^ a b 40th World Teams, Results: Women final.
  42. ^ Women World Grand Masters Archived 2010-05-30 at the Wayback Machine. WBF. Retrieved 2011-12-10.
  43. ^ "World Team Championships to Date" Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine: Select annual "Venue" links.
  44. ^ 40th World Teams, Participants.
  45. ^ "Participation in the Bermuda Bowl, Venice Cup & D'Orsi Senior Bowl" (May 2011), General Conditions of Contest for all World Championships ..., Appendix 7. WBF. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
  46. ^ Results & Participants, 50th European Team Championships, 2010. European Bridge League.
  47. ^ Women round-robin match 21 and standings.
  48. ^ 40th World Teams, Results: Women quarterfinals.
  49. ^ 40th World Teams, Results: France–China final segment scorecard.
  50. ^ 40th World Teams, Results: France–China final deal bidding and play.
  51. ^ 40th World Teams, Results: Women semifinals.
  52. ^ a b Roll of Honour
  53. ^ 42nd World Team Championships results, www.worldbridge.org
  54. ^ 43rd World Team Championships results, www.worldbridge.org
  55. ^ 43rd World Bridge Teams Championships: the Winners
  56. ^ 44th World Team Championships results, www.worldbridge.org
  57. ^ 45th World Team Championships results, www.worldbridge.org
  58. ^ [2], www.worldbridge.org
Citations
  • 40th World Team Championships contemporary website. 2011. WBF. Retrieved 2011-12-10.
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