World_Cup_of_Pool

World Cup of Pool

World Cup of Pool

Annual tournament for nine-ball pool


The World Cup of Pool is an annual international single-elimination tournament for doubles teams in nine-ball pool competition. The Philippines holds the record in tournament wins, winning the event on four occasions. In 2023, they became the first country to win the cup by entering the event unseeded.[1][2]

Quick Facts Sport, Founded ...

History

The tournament is held annually, at various locations, and was first held in 2006 in Newport, Wales.[3] The tournament is hosted by Matchroom Pool.

Format

There are usually 32 participating teams, representing 31 nations (the host nation is represented by two teams, A and B) composed of two players each. The participating nations do not have to go through a qualifying tournament in order to join, as they are selected by the organizers. Sixteen teams are seeded; they will face the unseeded teams at the first round.

The individual matches are scotch doubles with alternating break, which are races to seven racks for Round 1 and 2, nine racks for the quarterfinals and semifinals, and eleven for the final. The rules used are World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA) World Standardized Rules for nine-ball, modified for scotch doubles play (players on a team alternate shots; no one shoots twice in a row, unless being asked to play again after pushing out).[4]

Results

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Statistics

Best performances by nation (as of 2023). Not shown is Great Britain (Quarterfinals in 2019). The home nations of the United Kingdom competed separately in other editions.

Performances by nation

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^ = Results include England from 2006 to 2023

Performance by Continent

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References

  1. Saldajeno, Ivan Stewart (July 3, 2023). "PH makes history as duo wins World Cup of Pool title". Philippine news agency. Retrieved 2023-07-31.
  2. Pool, Matchroom (2023-07-02). "THE PHILIPPINES CREATE WORLD CUP OF POOL HISTORY". Matchroom Pool. Retrieved 2023-07-31.
  3. "World Cup of Pool - Matchroom Pool". Matchroom Pool. Retrieved 2018-03-21.
  4. "World Cup of Pool". Matchroom Pool. Retrieved 2019-07-03.

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