84th Three Cushion World Cup 1999/1
Tournament dates
Tournament type:
World cup
Tournament format:
Round robin / knockout system
Organizer:
UMB / BWA
Tournament details
Venue:
Park Hotel (Yeongdeungpo?), Seoul , South Korea Korea South
Opening:
March 15, 1999
Endgame:
March 19, 1999
Attendees:
?
Defending champion:
Belgium Frédéric Caudron
Winner:
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
2nd finalist:
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
3rd place:
Turkey Semih Saygıner Christian Rudolph Germany
Prize money:
?
Records
Best GD:
?
Best ED:
?
Maximum series (HS):
?
Venue on the map
← 1998/10
1999/2 →
The three- cushion world cup 1999/1 was the first UMB / BWA world cup tournament in the 14th year of the three-cushion world cup. The tournament took place from March 15th to 19th, 1999 in this discipline of carom billiards in the South Korean capital Seoul . It was the fourth three-cushion World Cup tournament in South Korea.
history
As in the 1997 World Cup tournament in Seoul, the transmission of results was again very poor. There was no result at all from the game Semih Saygıner against Andreas Efler . So evaluating the averages was not easy. No best individual average (BED) or overall average (GD) was entered. Before and during the tournament there were various unresolved questions. Therefore, the Belgians Frédéric Caudron and Raymond Ceulemans canceled the tournament. The Dutchman Henk Habraken was severely handicapped in his game against Andreas Efler by unnecessary activities on the Korean television. Due to the chaos, the results were accordingly. With just 1.103 GD Dick Jaspers won the tournament with a 3-2 set win over Tonny Carlsen. Third place went to Semih Saygıner and Christian Rudolph .
The exact price money could not be determined from the documents.
Tournament mode
The World Cup tournament was played as an open tournament. From a pre-qualification with a maximum of 124 participants, 12 participants qualify for the 1/16 finals. The main tournament is played with 32 participants. There are 18 participants. The seeded participants are recruited from the best 18 players in the current world rankings. The whole tournament is played in the knockout system with three winning sets of 15 points each.
In the event of a tie, the following order will be applied:
MP = match points
SV = rate ratio
GD = general average
HS = maximum series
Set participants
according to world ranking:
Sweden Torbjörn Blomdahl
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
Turkey Semih Saygıner
Denmark Dion Nelin
Italy Marco Zanetti
Germany Christian Rudolph
Spain Daniel Sánchez
Netherlands Raimond Burgman
United States Sang Chun Lee
Belgium Eddy Leppens
Netherlands Henk Habraken
Austria Andreas Efler
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
Greece Kostas Papakonstantinou
Turkey Muharrem Peker
Korea South Kim Chul-min
Turkey Adnan Yüksel
Greece Nikos Polychronopoulos
from qualification:
12 participants
Wildcards:
2 participants
Final round
The tournament tree for the final round is listed below.
1/16 finals (3 GS 15 points each)
Round of 16 (3 GS 15 points)
Quarter-finals (3 GS 15 points each)
Semi-finals (3 GS 15 points)
Final (3 GS with 15 points)
Sweden Torbjörn Blomdahl
3 / 1.292
Korea South Cho Chang-sub
1 / 0.950
Sweden Torbjörn Blomdahl
3 / 1.323
Netherlands Raimond Burgman
0 / 0.909
Netherlands Raimond Burgman
3 / 1.153
Korea South Pak Chong-tae
0 / 0.567
Sweden Torbjörn Blomdahl
2 / 1,400
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
3 / 1.472
Japan Sumiyoshi
0 / 0.391
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
3 / 1.875
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
3 / 1.685
Denmark Dion Nelin
1 / 1.250
Denmark Dion Nelin
3 / 1.203
Turkey Tahir Alp
1 / 0.744
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
3 / 1.727
Germany Christian Rudolph
1 / 1.343
Spain Daniel Sánchez
3 / 1.097
Belgium Marc Janssen
0 / 0.666
Spain Daniel Sánchez
0 / 1.285
Greece Kostas Papakonstantinou
1 / 1.024
Greece Kostas Papakonstantinou
3 / 1.065
Germany Johann umbrella fire
1 / 0.755
Spain Daniel Sánchez
1 / 1.045
Germany Christian Rudolph
3 / 1.155
Japan Tatsuo Arai
3 / 1.019
Korea South Kim Chul-min
1 / 0.764
Japan Tatsuo Arai
1 / 1.024
Germany Christian Rudolph
3 / 1.285
Korea South Your sub-jim
0 / 0.944
Germany Christian Rudolph
3 / 2.368
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
2 / 1.094
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
3 / 1.320
Turkey Semih Saygıner
3 / 1.621
Korea South Kim Jae-hong
2 / 1.216
Turkey Semih Saygıner
3 / 1.404
United States Sang Chun Lee
1 / 1.121
United States Sang Chun Lee
3 / 1.372
Greece Nikos Polychronopoulos
1 / 0.952
Turkey Semih Saygıner
3 /?
Austria Andreas Efler
0 /?
Netherlands Henk Habraken
3 / 0.712
Korea South Im Jung-sung
1 / 0.607
Netherlands Henk Habraken
2 / 0.985
Austria Andreas Efler
3 / 0.928
Korea South Kim Jung-kyu
2 / 0.887
Austria Andreas Efler
3 / 0.915
Turkey Semih Saygıner
0 / 0.857
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
3 / 1,500
Korea South In Jun-soo
3 / 0.830
Turkey Muharrem Peker
1 / 0.781
Korea South In Jun-soo
2 / 0.826
Korea South Bang Jung-kyu
3 / 0.797
Korea South Bang Jung-kyu
3 / 0.985
Belgium Eddy Leppens
2 / 0.893
Korea South Jung Kyu-bang
1 / 0.523
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
3 / 0.906
Italy Marco Zanetti
3 / 2.142
Turkey Adnan Yüksel
0 / 0.736
Italy Marco Zanetti
1 / 0.948
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
3 / 1.250
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
3 / 0.848
Turkey Süha Erdinç
1 / 0.646
Closing table
Final ranking
phase
space
Surname
MP
SV
Pt.
Recording
GD
BED
HS
WRP * 1
final
1
Netherlands Dick Jaspers
10-0
15: 5
279
253
1.103
1,500
60
2
Denmark Tonny Carlsen
8: 2
14: 7
261
175
1.488
1,875
45
Semi- finals
3
Turkey Semih Saygıner
6: 2
9: 3
?
?
1.608
?
30th
Germany Christian Rudolph
6: 2
10: 5
194
135
1.437
2,368
30th
quarter- final
5
Sweden Torbjörn Blomdahl
4: 2
8: 4
154
115
1,339
1.323
20th
6th
Spain Daniel Sánchez
4: 2
7: 4
145
137
1.058
1.285
20th
7th
Korea South Jung Kyu-bang
4: 2
7: 7
148
171
0.865
0.895
20th
8th
Austria Andreas Efler
4: 2
6: 7
?
?
0.884
0.928
20th
eighth final
9
Netherlands Henk Habraken
2: 2
5: 4
126
150
0.840
0.712
10
10
Korea South In Jun-soo
2: 2
5: 4
111
134
0.828
0.830
10
11
Italy Marco Zanetti
2: 2
4: 3
82
60
1.367
2.142
10
12
Denmark Dion Nelin
2: 2
4: 4
88
72
1.222
1.203
10
13
United States Sang Chun Lee
2: 2
4: 4
165
84
1,250
1.372
10
14th
Japan Tatsuo Arai
2: 2
4: 4
95
93
1.021
1.019
10
15th
Greece Kostas Papakonstantinou
2: 2
4: 4
91
87
1.046
1.065
10
16
Netherlands Raimond Burgman
2: 2
3: 3
75
72
1.041
1.153
10
1/16 finals
17th
Korea South Kim Jae-hong
0: 2
2: 3
45
37
1.216
-
-
18th
Belgium Eddy Leppens
0: 2
2: 3
59
66
0.896
-
-
19th
Korea South Kim Jung-kyu
0: 2
2: 3
63
71
0.887
-
-
20th
Greece Nikos Polychronopoulos
0: 2
1: 3
40
42
0.952
-
-
21st
Korea South Cho Chang-sub
0: 2
1: 3
38
40
0.950
-
-
22nd
Turkey Muharrem Peker
0: 2
1: 3
50
64
0.781
-
-
23
Korea South Kim Chul-min
0: 2
1: 3
39
51
0.764
-
-
24
Germany Johann umbrella fire
0: 2
1: 3
34
45
0.755
-
-
25th
Turkey Tahir Alp
0: 2
1: 3
32
43
0.744
-
-
26th
Turkey Süha Erdinç
0: 2
1: 3
42
65
0.646
-
-
27
Korea South Im Jung-sung
0: 2
1: 3
48
79
0.607
-
-
28
Korea South Your sub-jim
0: 2
0: 3
17th
18th
0.944
-
-
29
Turkey Adnan Yüksel
0: 2
0: 3
14th
19th
0.736
-
-
30th
Belgium Marc Janssen
0: 2
0: 3
26th
39
0.666
-
-
31
Korea South Pak Chong-tae
0: 2
0: 3
21st
37
0.567
-
-
32
Japan Sumiyoshi
0: 2
0: 3
9
23
0.391
-
-
annotation
* 1 = world ranking points
Individual evidence
^ Heinrich Weingartner: Billiards . No. 115 . Vienna May 1999, p. 10-11 .
The three-cushion World Cup was organized by the founding association, the "
Billiards Worldcup Association " (BWA) until 1998 . Disputes between the BWA and the world association
Union Mondiale de Billard (UMB) led to parallel tournaments between 1994 and 1997. The UMB / BWA organized the tournament together until the beginning of 1999. Since the dissolution of the BWA in 1999, the UMB has been the sole organizer.
From 1988-1991 the UMB did not host any world championships. During this time, the annual overall winner of the World Cup was crowned world champion.
World Cup (BWA)
1986: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 1987: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4
World Cup (BWA) as World Cup
1988: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 1989: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 1990: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 1991: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5
World Cup (BWA)
1992: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 1993: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 1994: 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 7 • 1995: 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 1996: 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 1997: 6 • 8 • 1998: 1
World Cup (UMB / CEB)
1994: 1 • 6 • 1995: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 1996: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 1997: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5
World Cup (UMB / BWA)
1997: 7 1998: 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 1999: 1 • 2 • 3
since 1999 (UMB)
1999: • 4 • 5 • 2000: 1 • 2 • 2001: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2002: no tournament • 2003: 1 • 2004: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 2005: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 2006: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2007: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 2008: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 2009: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2010: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 2011: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2012: 1 • 2 • 3 • 2013: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2014: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 2015: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 2016: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 2017: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 2018: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 2019: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 2020: 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7
International carom tournaments
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