Women's World Team 1989 | |||
---|---|---|---|
6th World Women's Team Championship | |||
Location | Warmond, the Netherlands | ||
Date(s) | March 14–19, 1989 | ||
Results | |||
Champions | England | ||
Runners-up | Australia | ||
Third place | New Zealand | ||
|
The 1989 Women's NCM World Team Squash Championships were held in Warmond, in the Netherlands from March 14 until March 19, 1989. The England team became champions for the third consecutive time, defeating the previous edition's runners-up Australia 3-0 in the final. [1] [2]
Date | Team One | Team Two | Score |
---|---|---|---|
Mar 14 | England | Canada | 3-0 |
Mar 14 | Ireland | Netherlands | 2-1 |
Mar 15 | England | Netherlands | 3-0 |
Mar 15 | Ireland | Canada | 3-0 |
Mar 16 | England | Ireland | 3-0 |
Mar 16 | Netherlands | Canada | 3-0 |
Pos | Nation | Team | P | W | L | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | England | Martine Le Moignan, Lisa Opie, Alison Cumings, Suzanne Horner | 3 | 3 | 0 | 6 |
2 | Ireland | Rebecca Best, Marjorie Croke (née Burke), Caroline Collins, Brona Conway | 3 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
3 | Netherlands | Babette Hoogendoorn, Hugoline van Hoorn, Marjolein Houtsma, Nicole Beumer | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
4 | Canada | Gail Pimm, Lori Coleman, Shelley Harvey, Amanda Paton | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
Pos | Nation | Team | P | W | L | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia | Vicki Cardwell, Danielle Drady, Robyn Lambourne, Liz Irving | 3 | 3 | 0 | 6 |
2 | New Zealand | Susan Devoy, Donna Newton, Joanne Williams, Fleur Townsend | 3 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
3 | Scotland | Alison Cruickshank, Shirley Brown, Joan Sutherland, Julie Nicol | 3 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
4 | West Germany | Beate Müller, Andrea Holbe, Sabine Schöne, Daniela Grzenia | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
Team One | Team Two | Score |
---|---|---|
Australia | Netherlands | 3-0 |
England | Scotland | 3-0 |
West Germany | Ireland | 2-1 |
New Zealand | Canada | 3-0 |
Team One | Team Two | Score |
---|---|---|
Australia | West Germany | 2-1 |
England | New Zealand | 2-1 |
Team One | Team Two | Score |
---|---|---|
New Zealand | West Germany | 3-0 |
England 3 | FINAL Warmond, the Netherlands 19 March 1989 | Australia 0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Cardwell conceded the third rubber*
The 1983 Women's Davies & Tate British Open Squash Championships was held at the Assembly Rooms in Derby from 6–14 April 1983. The event was won for the fourth consecutive year by Vicki Cardwell who defeated Lisa Opie in a repeat of the 1982 final. Vicki Cardwell made the shock announcement that she was going to retire after the 1983 World Open. The Australian was serving a two-year team events ban in her home country following misconduct in the 1981 Women's World Open Squash Championship.
The 1973 Men's World Team Amateur Squash Championships were held in Johannesburg, South Africa from 16 to 26 August 1973. Australia became the champions, and Great Britain the runners-up, for the fourth consecutive time.
The 1977 Men's World Team Amateur Squash Championships were held in Toronto and Ottawa in Canada and took place from September 12 to September 18, 1977.
The 1979 Men's Stellar World Team Amateur Squash Championships were held in Brisbane in Australia and took place from October 17 to October 28, 1979. This was the last World Amateur Championship before the game went open.
The 1981 Men's World Team Squash Championships were held in Sweden and took place from September 24 until October 3, 1981.
The 1985 Men's World Team Squash Championships were held in Cairo, Egypt and took place from November 27 until December 05, 1985.
The 1987 Men's ICI Perspex World Team Squash Championships were held in London, England and took place from October 17 until October 31, 1987. A record twenty-seven countries entered.
The 1989 Men's Singapore Airlines & Ascot Sport World Team Squash Championships were held in Singapore and took place from October 9 until October 16, 1989.
The 1991 Men's World Team Squash Championships were held in Helsinki, Finland and took place from November 12 until November 17, 1991.
The 1993 Men's World Team Squash Championships were held in Pakistan and took place from November 24 until November 30, 1993.
The 1995 Men's World Team Squash Championships were held in Egypt and took place from November 14 until November 18, 1995.
The 1979 Women's World Team Squash Championships were held in England and took place from March 15 until March 20, 1979.
The 1981 Women's W.I.S.R.F World Team Squash Championships were held in Canada and took place from October 25 until November 2, 1981.
The 1976 Women's World Open Squash Championship was the inaugural women's edition of the 1976 World Open, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players.
The 1983 Women's World Team Squash Championships were held in Perth, Australia and took place from October 31 until November 4, 1983. The home team became champions, defeating England 2-1 in the final, where the finalists, outcome and the final score were identical to the previous edition's.
The 1985 Women's Seven-Up World Team Squash Championships were held in Dublin, Ireland from 2 to 7 September 1985. The England team became the champions, defeating New Zealand 2-1.
The 1987 Women's Honda World Team Squash Championships were held in Auckland, New Zealand from October 7 to October 14, 1987. The England team, who were the defending champions, defeated Australia 2-1 in the final.
The 1990 Women's Mazda World Team Squash Championships were held in Sydney, Australia and took place from October 15 until October 21, 1990.
The 1992 Women's Silver Unicorn World Team Squash Championships were held in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and took place from October 12 until October 17, 1992.
The 1994 Women's World Team Squash Championships were held in Saint Peter Port, Guernsey and took place from October 10 until October 16, 1994.