Two tense tiebreaks brought the Junior World Bowls Championships to
an exciting close at the County Antrim indoor bowls club in Northern
Ireland yesterday, when Harry Goodwin won the men's singles title
for England and Australia's Brianna Smith won the women's singles
title.
While Goodwin's final win over Queenslander Nick
Cahill denied the Aussie a rare double, he also chalked up a golden
double for himself, after he partnered England team-mate Ruby Hill
to a win over Smith and Cahill in yesterday (THURSDAY)'s mixed pairs
final.
'Tiebreak Torment'
is how players describe the sudden
death nature of the brutal one-end deciders that break a one-set-all
deadlock - but spectators enjoyed the drama as Goodwin beat Cahill,
10-11, 9-4, 1-0, and Smith returned an 11-5, 5-6, 1-0 scorecard
against Hong Kong star Yu Yee Sin.
Smith looked the winner
all the way when she scorched to an 11-5 win in the first set, but
Yu, who despite her calm appearance, admitted she was close to panic
mode, kept her head and dug deep to edge the second set, 6-5, and
force Smith into tiebreak territory.
Brilliant bowls from
both players on the shoot-out - a dead-length toucher from Yu and an
accurate running bowl from Smith - left the result in doubt until
the Umpire Mike Clewer, after measuring several times, decreed that
the Aussie's bowl was closer by a fraction of an inch.
Smith,
who is 23, had played consistently throughout the tournament, and
was a worthy winner, but the 24-year-old Yu, a product of the Hong
Kong Youth Development scheme, captured the hearts of spectators
with her quiet demeanour and unstated self-assurance.
"I may
feel panicky inside, but I take a deep breath, try to be calm, and
concentrate on the basics, to boost my inner confidence,"
Yu explained, while an overjoyed Smith, who plays for the St John's
club in Sydney, was close to tears, insisting, "This
win is beyond my wildest dreams."
Goodwin, a 25-year-old plasterer from
Sittingbourne, also expressed his disbelief in winning a world
title. "I never thought it was possible," he said,
"But it's been a
great week for me. Winning the mixed pairs with Ruby was fantastic,
but to add the singles title is unbelievable."
In the final,
Cahill, who is only 20, had the better of the opening set, and
forged into an 11-6 lead after seven ends, and held on to win the
set, 11-10, and the Aussie, a professional bowler, who plies his
trade on the Gold Coast, looked the likely winner when he led, 4-2
in the second set.
However, stringing together a sequence of
five unanswered scores, Goodwin turned things around, winning the
set, 9-4, after eight ends, and controlled the tiebreak with
inch-perfect drawing to the jack, forcing Cahill into playing
weight.
A good strike saw Goodwin's shot disappear, but
England's Under 25 captain simply replaced the shot with a prefect
draw, and Cahill's valiant attempt to beat it on a draw slipped
frustratingly past the jack, and left the tall Englishman with the
shot that gave him the world title.
MEN'S SINGLES:- Final:
Harry Goodwin (England) bt Nick Cahill
(Australia) 10-11, 9-4, 1-0.
WOMEN'S SINGLES:- Final:
Brianna Smith (Australia) bt Yu Yee
Sin (Hong Kong) 11-5, 5-6, 1-0.
Mens U25 Singles Winners Harry Goodwin
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