Lawn bowls at the Commonwealth Games
Bowls is one of the sports at the quadrennial Commonwealth Games competition. It has been a Commonwealth Games sport since the inaugural edition of the event's precursor, the 1930 British Empire Games. It is a core sport and must be included in the sporting programme of each edition of the Games. It was not included in the programme of the 1966 Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica due to no sufficient bowling greens being available.
Editions
[1]
Games |
Year |
Host city |
Host country |
Best Nation |
I | 1930 | Hamilton, Ontario | Canada | England |
II | 1934 | London | England | England |
III | 1938 | Sydney, New South Wales | Australia | New Zealand |
IV | 1950 | Auckland | New Zealand | New Zealand |
V | 1954 | Vancouver, British Columbia | Canada | Southern Rhodesia, South Africa |
VI | 1958 | Cardiff | Wales | South Africa |
VII | 1962 | Perth, Western Australia | Australia | England |
IX | 1970 | Edinburgh | Scotland | England |
X | 1974 | Christchurch | New Zealand | England |
XI | 1978 | Edmonton, Alberta | Canada | Hong Kong |
XII | 1982 | Brisbane, Queensland | Australia | Scotland |
XIII | 1986 | Edinburgh | Scotland | Wales |
XIV | 1990 | Auckland | New Zealand | Australia |
XV | 1994 | Victoria, British Columbia | Canada | Scotland |
XVI | 1998 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | South Africa |
XVII | 2002 | Manchester | England | England |
XVIII | 2006 | Melbourne, Victoria | Australia | Australia |
XIX | 2010 | Delhi | India | South Africa |
XX | 2014 | Glasgow | Scotland | South Africa |
XXI | 2018 | Gold Coast, Queensland | Australia | |
Commonwealth Champions
[2]
Men's Singles
Men's Pairs
Men's Triples
Men's Fours
Year |
Winner |
1930 |
Ernie Gudgeon, James Edney, Jack Frith & Albert Hough |
1934 |
Robert Slater, Ernie Gudgeon, Percy Tomlinson & Fred Biggin |
1938 |
Bill Bremner, Alec Robertson, Ernie Jury & Bill Whittaker |
1950 |
H Currer, Harry Atkinson, Alfred Blumberg & Norman Walker |
1954 |
Frank Mitchell, George Wilson, John Anderson & Wilfred Randall |
1958 |
Norman King, John Bettles, Walter Phillips & George Scadgell |
1962 |
David Bryant, John Watson, Sidney Drysdale & George Fleming |
1970 |
Abdul Kitchell, CC (Saco) Delgado, George Souza Sr. & Roberto da Silva |
1974 |
Kerry Clark, David Baldwin, John Somerville & Gordon Jolly |
1978 |
Philip Chok, Majid Bin Hassan Jr., Omar Dallah & Roberto da Silva |
1982 |
Robbie Dobbins, Keith Poole, Bert Sharp & Don Sherman |
1986 |
Hofod Thomas, James Morgan, Robert Weale & William Thomas |
1990 |
Denis Love, George Adrain, Ian Bruce & Willie Wood |
1994 |
Alan Lofthouse, Donald Piketh, Neil Burkett & Robert Rayfield |
1998 |
Gary McCloy, Ian McClure, Martin McHugh & Neil Booth |
2002 |
John Ottaway, Simon Skelton, Robert Newman & David Holt |
2014 |
Alex Marshall, Paul Foster, Neil Speirs & David Peacock |
2018 |
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Women's Singles
Women's Pairs
Women's Triples
Women's Fours
Year |
Winner |
1986 |
Linda Parker, Linda Evans, Joan Ricketts & Rita Jones |
1990 |
Audrey Rutherford, Daphne Shaw, Dorothy Roche, Marion Stevens |
1994 |
Anna Pretorius, Colleen Grondein, Hester Bekker (1/2), Lorna Trigwell (1/2) |
1998 |
Lorraine Victor, Trish Steyn, Hester Bekker (2/2), Lorna Trigwell (2/2) |
2002 |
Ellen Alexander, Shirley Page, Gill Mitchell, Carol Duckworth |
2014 |
Esme Steyn, Santjie Steyn, Tracy-Lee Botha, Susan Nel |
2018 |
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All-time medal table
Updated after the 2014 Commonwealth Games
References
External links
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| Recognised sports | |
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