Federazione Italiana Biliardo Sportivo
Federazione Italiana Biliardo Sportivo | |
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sport | billiards |
Founded | 1951 |
Place of foundation | Turin |
president | Andrea Mancino |
Board | Pavio Migliozzi (1st vice) Gabrio Volante (2nd vice) Claudio Bono (Stecca) Liberato Picciano (collision) Michele Monaco (pool / snooker) |
Association headquarters | Via Giovanni Battista Piranesi 46 - 20137 Milan |
Official languages) | Italian |
Homepage |
www.fibis.it Last updated: Feb. 2, 2020 |
The Federazione Italiana Biliardo Sportivo (FIBi.S. or FIBIS) is affiliated with or subordinated to the Italian national billiards association and the Comitato Olimpico Nazionale Italiano (NOC). She takes care of the billiards disciplines carom , pool and snooker , this also includes the more popular disciplines in Italy stecca (5 and 9 cone billiards), boccette (a kind of hand cone billiards, played without a cue) and pool 8-15 (a version of pool billiards with skittles, which was further developed by the Americans after the last world war, combined or copied from the Stecca).
history
The first national championship took place in 1935 (Stecca), but still without a national association. This (FIBA) was only founded by the director of ENAL (Ente nazionale assistenza lavoratori), Vercelli . The ENAL was also the inspiration behind the founding of the FIAB (Federazione italiana amatori biliardo) in 1958, this time in Turin, whose president Filippo Spinosa inaugurated the first Italian championship under the federal aegis. The headquarters were moved to Rome in 1961. In 1964 there were 184 associations with over 5000 members. Under the chairmanship of Luigi Angoli, who remained in office with Giulio Giovannini in the secretariat until 1967, the federal statute for a democratic development of the body was recognized. In 1969, President Amedeo Avallone, FIBA and FIAB reached an agreement and founded FIBIS, which today has around 12,000 members. A new association, FIABS (Federazione italiana amatori biliardo sport) was founded under the Milanese entrepreneur Rinaldo Rossetti, who resigned as a city councilor in 1971. On July 1, 1979, both associations were united and now numbered 1,500 clubs with around 30,000 active players.
tasks
Like all national associations, FIBIS takes care of the national concerns of its members / players, organizes national championships and sends or nominates players for international competitions such as world and European championships.
Memberships
- World Confederation of Billiard Sports (WCBS)
- European Confederation of Billiard Sports (ECBS)
- Union Mondiale de Billard (UMB)
- World Pool Billiard Association (WPA)
- International Billiards & Snooker Federation (IBSF)
- Confédération Européenne de Billard (CEB)
- European Pocket Billiard Federation (EPBF)
- Confédération International de Billard Artistique (CIBA)
Swell:
Superordinate association structures
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See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Storia. (No longer available online.) Federazione Italiana Biliardo Sportivo (FIBIS), January 2020, archived from the original on February 2, 2020 ; accessed on February 2, 2020 (Italian).
- ↑ a b Biliardo-La storia. Lo sviluppo in Italia. (No longer available online.) Trecciani, 2004, archived from the original on July 25, 2019 ; accessed on February 2, 2020 (Italian).
- ↑ Consiglio Federale. Board. (No longer available online.) FIBIS, January 2020, archived from the original on December 7, 2018 ; accessed on February 2, 2020 (Italian).
- ↑ a b Statuto. (PDF) (No longer available online.) FIBIS, June 17, 2019, archived from the original on February 2, 2020 ; accessed on February 2, 2020 (Italian).
Coordinates: 45 ° 28 ' N , 9 ° 14' E