Bowling mixed doubles
at the 2009 World Games
VenueHappy Bowling Alley
Date20 July 2009
Competitors46 from 23 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Kong Byoung-hee
Gye Min-young
 South Korea
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Manuel Otálora
Anggie Ramírez
 Colombia
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Adrian Ang
Zatil Iman
 Malaysia

The mixed doubles event in bowling at the 2009 World Games took place on 20 July at the Happy Bowling Alley.[1][2]

Competition format

A total of 23 pairs entered the competition. Best three duets from preliminary round qualifies to the finals.

Results

Preliminary

Rank Athletes Nation Result Note
1Manuel Otálora
Anggie Ramírez
Colombia Colombia2605Q
2Kong Byoung-hee
Gye Min-young
South Korea South Korea2588Q
3Adrian Ang
Zatil Iman
Malaysia Malaysia2576Q
4Alejandro Cruz
Sandra Góngora
Mexico Mexico2534
5Osku Palermaa
Krista Pöllänen
Finland Finland2518
6Chester King
Liza del Rosario
Philippines Philippines2480
7Chris Barnes
Stefanie Nation
United States United States2454
8Darron Cundy
Zara Glover
United Kingdom Great Britain2445
9Remy Ong
Jennifer Tan
Singapore Singapore2445
10Wu Siu Hong
Chan Shuk Han
Hong Kong Hong Kong2429
11Fang Chin-nan
Wang Yu-ling
Chinese Taipei Chinese Taipei2387
12Kunaksorn Sithipol
Poungthong Benchawan
Thailand Thailand2382
13Achim Grabowski
Patricia Luoto
Germany Germany2345
14Tore Torgersen
Patcharin Torgersen
Norway Norway2312
15Jean-Marc Lebon
Katrien Goossens
Belgium Belgium2312
16Thomas Gross
Ivonne Gross
Austria Austria2300
17Andres Herrera
Sofía Rodríguez
Guatemala Guatemala2279
18François Sacco
Isabelle Saldjian
France France2266
19Suguru Muroi
Saori Kanno
Japan Japan2246
20Luis Olivo
Patricia de Faria
Venezuela Venezuela2231
21Checo Simon
Aumi Guerra
Dominican Republic Dominican Republic2184
22Guy Caminsky
Gaye Mack
South Africa South Africa2172
23Miguel Arevalo
Aida Granillo
El Salvador El Salvador2121

Finals

Semifinal Final
1 Colombia Manuel Otálora
Colombia Anggie Ramírez
710
3 Malaysia Adrian Ang
Malaysia Zatil Iman
391 2 South Korea Kong Byoung-hee
South Korea Gye Min-young
840
2 South Korea Kong Byoung-hee
South Korea Gye Min-young
421

References

  1. "Results preliminary". Archived from the original on 2013-02-12. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
  2. "Results final". Archived from the original on 2013-02-12. Retrieved 2020-07-05.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.