Wuhan Cup

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The Wuhan Cup is a biennial world championship contract bridge tournament for national mixed teams. It is contested every odd-number year under the auspices of the World Bridge Federation (WBF), alongside the Bermuda Bowl (Open), d'Orsi Bowl and Venice Cup and was inaugurated in 2019. The event took the name of the City of Wuhan which presented the trophy and will provide replicas for future editions. [1]

Contents

Winners

2019 Wuhan, China

Russia won the inaugural World Mixed Teams Championship 175-170 in a match that was close throughout the two-day final. During the event, the WBF confirmed the trophy would be named the Wuhan Cup in perpetuity. [2]

YearParticipantsRank
2019  241.Flag of Russia.svg  Russia
Alexander Dubinin, Alexej Gerasimow, Andrey Gromow, Anna Gulevich, Tatiana Ponomareva,Olga Vorobeychikova
2.Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Cheri Bjerkan, Allan Graves, Christal Henner, Uday Ivatury, Jill Meyers, Howard Weinstein, Joe Stokes (npc)
3.Flag of Romania.svg  Romania
Mihaela Balint, Marius Ioniţă, Bogdan Marina, Geta Mihai, Radu Mihai, Marina Stegaroiu

2022 Salsomaggiore, Italy

Tournament scheduled for 2021 but held in 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. France and the United States claimed the two top places in the round-robin. Both teams won close quarterfinal matches and had comfortable semifinal victories. France triumphed 199-163 in the final to claim the title. Restrictions due to Covid-19 meant that the bronze medal match was not played, and Germany and Italy shared third place. [3]

YearParticipantsRank
2022  241.Flag of France.svg  France
Bénédicte Cronier, Philippe Cronier, Vanessa Reess, Pierre Schmidt, Lionel Sebbane, Joanna Zochowska, Laurent Thuillez (npc), François Combescure (coach)
2.Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Dana Berkowitz, Eldad Ginossar, Debbie Rosenberg, Andrew Rosenthal, Chris Willenken, Migry Zur Campanile, Jeff Aker (npc)
3.Flag of Germany.svg  Germany
Marie Eggeling, Anne Gladiator, Michael Gromöller, Paul Grünke, Helmut Häusler, Daniela Von Arnim, Max Weiss (npc), Monika Luy (coach)
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy
Dario Attanasio, Irene Baroni, Leonardo Cima, Barbara Dessi, Alessandro Gandoglia, Gabriella Manara, Luigina Gentili (npc)

2023 Marrakech, Morocco

The third iteration of the Wuhan Cup saw a repeat of the 2022 final, with France and the United States again competing for the title. France led after the first day, but a 60-0 fourth set saw the United States take the lead and win the title in a final score of 189-180. [4]

YearParticipantsRank
2023  241.Flag of the United States.svg  United States
Amber Lin, Debbie Rosenberg, Michael Rosenberg, Andrew Rosenthal, Chris Willenken, Migry Zur Campanile, Jeff Aker (npc)
2.Flag of France.svg  France
Benedicte Cronier, Philippe Cronier, Vanessa Reess, Pierre Schmidt, Laurent Thuillez, Joanna Zochowska, Nicolas Dechelette (npc)
3.Flag of Romania.svg  Romania
Andreea-Magdalena Boboc, Marius Ioniţă, Bogdan Marina, Geta Mihai, Radu Mihai, Marina Stegaroiu

Medals (2019-2023)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1Flag of the United States.svg  United States  (USA)1203
2Flag of France.svg  France  (FRA)1102
3Flag of Russia.svg  Russia  (RUS)1001
4Flag of Romania.svg  Romania  (ROM)0022
5Flag of Germany.svg  Germany  (GER)0011
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy  (ITA)0011
Totals (6 entries)33410

Hosts

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References

  1. "The Wuhan Cup | World Bridge Federation". worldbridge.org. Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  2. 44th World Team Championships
  3. 45th World Team Championships
  4. 46th World Team Championships