With three separate world junior championship titles - men's
singles, women's singles and mixed pairs - up for grabs at the Jim
Baker Stadium in County Antrim, and with each competition down to
the semi final stage by Thursday morning, there were three countries
who still had their sights set on a notable clean sweep.
The host nation, perhaps not surprisingly, was in contention, as
was England - but it was the professionalism and style of the
Australians, with their smart green'n'gold uniforms, and bright
yellow bowls, that marked them out as the most likely to achieve a
monopoly for the titles.
Brianna Clark, who plays for the St John's club in Sydney, and Nick
Cahill, a member of the legendary Broadbeach club on Australia's
Gold Coast, accounted for Irish hopes Shauna O'Neill and Adam
Rankin, 14-1, 9-9, in the semi final of the mixed pairs, and stayed
on course for the clean sweep.
England's Ruby Hill and Harry Goodwin also kept their hopes alive,
and qualified for the final, with a 10-5, 6-6 victory over Scottish
duo Kara Lees and Bradley Buchan, though it was only a late surge of
four shots over the last two ends that gave them the tied they
needed for a 1.5-0.5 win.
The mixed pairs final that brought the day to a close was notable
for its topsy-turvy nature, with the Aussies dominated the first
set, and the English pair in command in the second.
Having scored only one shot in the opening set, Hill and Goodwin
claimed a full house of six shots on the first end of the second
set, and kept up the pressure to guarantee a tiebreak sudden-death
shoot-out, which may not be what the players would choose, but is
always a hit with spectators.
The scorecard - showing that Hill and Goodwin won, 1-14, 12-3, 1-0
- may suggest that the sets were ludicrously one-sided, but, in
reality, there was some superlative play in both sets, followed by a
tense and highly competitive tiebreak in which the England duo just
had the edge.
England's chances of a clean sweep disappeared earlier in the semi
finals of the women's singles, when Hong Kong's Yu Yee Sin edged
home against Ruby Hill, who, after losing the first set in eight
ends, fought back bravely to force Yu into a tiebreak. Yu prevailed,
9-4, 6-9, 1-0.
The diminutive 24-year-old Yu, a product of the prolific Hong Kong
Youth Development Scheme, will now face Brianna Smith in (FRIDAY)
final, after the Aussie foiled the hopes of home supporters with a
desperately close 7-5, 8-7 victory over Shauna O'Neill, from the
Ballybrakes club in Ballymoney.
Australia's Nick Cahill had his work cut out to beat Ireland's
17-year-old Daniel Spratt, who put up an impressive display. Until
recently, Spratt was on the books of the prominent Belfast football
team, Glentoran, but opted out in order to concentrate on bowls.
Cahill was glad to get home, 7-5, 8-7.
In the men's singles final, Cahill will - for the fourth time this
week - come face to face with England's Harry Goodwin, who plays for
the Swale club in Sittingbourne in Kent, but who learnt to play
bowls in Devon, where he came under the influence of World Champion
of Champions title-holder Sam Tolchard.
Goodwin was pushed all the way in a thrilling semi final contest by
Scotland's Bradley Buchan, who hails from Fraserburgh. Shots were
hard to come by, and there was only one brief occasion when the gap
between them was more than two shots. Goodwin was relieved to return
a 6-5, 8-7 scorecard.
Now, of course, no-one can perform that mythical clean sweep -
England could win two titles, and so could Australia. But no-one
should write off the chances of a certain Hong Kong starlet, who
will do her best to derail Brianna Smith in the women's singles
final.
In a short ceremony, the trophies for the finalists in the mixed
pairs were presented by IIBC President Peter Brill, from Wales, and
World Bowls Chief Operating Officer Gary Smith.
WOMEN'S SINGLES Qualifying play-offs: Section A:
Brianna Smith (Australia)
bt Kara Lees (Scotland) 6-4, 11-9; Section B:
Ruby Hill (England) bt
Ellie Dixon (Norfolk Island) 9-4, 4-4.
Semi finals: Brianna Smith (Australia) bt Shauna O'Neill (Ireland) 4-11,
9-5, 1-0; Yu Yee Sin (Hong Kong) bt Ruby Hill (England) 9-4, 6-9,
1-0. Final (tomorrow - Friday - 0930hrs): Smith v Yu Yee Sin
MEN'S SINGLES Qualifying play-offs: Section A:
Nick Cahill (Australia) bt
Chow Ho Yin (Hong Kong) 10-5, 9-2. Section B:
Bradley Buchan (Scotland)
bt Ben Matthews (Wales) 3-9, 10-2, 1-0. Semi finals: Nick Cahill (Australia) bt Daniel Spratt (Ireland) 7-5, 8-7;
Harry Goodwin (England) bt Bradley Buchan (Scotland) 6-5, 7-6. Final (tomorrow - Friday - 1130hrs): Cahill v Goodwin
MIXED PAIRS Semi finals:
Brianna Smith & Nick Cahill (Australia) bt Shauna O'Neill & Adam
Rankin (Ireland) 14-1, 9-9; Ruby Hill & Harry Goodwin (England)
bt Kara Lees & Bradley Buchan (Scotland) 10-5, 6-6.
Final:
Goodwin & Hill bt Cahill & Smith 1-14,
12-3, 1-0.
Mixed Pairs Winners Harry Goodwin & Ruby Hill
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