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CHINESE-TAIPEI AND JAPAN TO BATTLE FOR WORLD TEAM TITLE

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Date: Thursday, July 05 2012 @ 19:35:21 UTC
Topic: 9 Ball



Liando U Valley World Pool Team Championship
Luhe Middle School Stadium
135 Xinhua South Street
Tongzhou New City District
Beijing
www.tzxctz.com
www.wpa-pool.com
www.my147.com - photos
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www.top147.com - teams photos - groups - live score
Download the World Teams Information - 250KB PDF file

Sunday-Friday 1-6 July 2012




WHITE HOT CHINESE-TAIPEI CUTS DOWN THE BRITS, WHILE A LOOSE JAPAN SHOCKS CHINA TO MOVE INTO THE FINALS OF THE WORLD POOL TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP IN BEIJING

Team Japan, who have laughed and smiled their way through this entire event, had the last laugh tonight as they stunned a shell shocked China 2 team via a sudden death shootout in front of hundreds of vocal Chinese partisans at Tongzhou Luhe High School, to move into the finals of the 2012 World Pool Team Championship here in Beijing.

Japan will now go on to play in Friday’s final against the white-hot Chinese-Taipei team, which earlier in the day breezed past Great Britain, 4-1. The final will begin at 2pm Beijing time(GMT +8 hours).

It was the second straight win by the Japanese squad via the dramatic shootout rule, which comes into play when the two teams end their six match set tied at 3 all. Last night the Japanese, with Yukio Akagariyama, Toru Kuribayashi, Naoyuki Oi, and female player Chihiro Kawahara, held off the Philippines in the shootout, potting seven of the difficult spot shots to the Philippines’ five.

The loss by the China 2 team represented a decisive death blow to the hopes and fortunes of the home side as China fielded two squads in the 24 team tournament. The sport of pool is massively popular throughout China and the game’s tens of millions of fans were surely certain that at least one of their sides would advance to the final of this $300,000 team event.

But after last night’s bitter defeat in a shootout by Great Briatin of a very strong China 1, led by Li He Wen, Fu Jianbo, Liu Haitao, Fu Xiaofang, the superstar females Pan Xiao Ting, and former Women’s World 9-ball Champion Fu Xiaofang, all the pressure was placed on China 2 today to bring home the gold.



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The weight of expectation did seem to play on the China 2 side today as they played tight, while Japan just kept joking, smiling and playing what amounted to freewheeling pool.

The China 2 team which featured, Dang Jinhu, Dai Yong, Han Haoxiang, and female starts Liu Shasha and Chen Siming, won the first two matches, the 8-ball singles and doubles, to move in front 2-0. Japan then applied serious pressure by winning the next three matches, the 9-ball singles in women’s and men’s, and the 10 ball singles, to lead 3-2. China would need to win the 10 ball mixed doubles to take the match to a shootout.

That they did, 7-4, but not before some nervy moments and missed opportunities that nearly allowed Japan back in the match.

In the shootout, Japan jumped out to a 3-0 lead. China sent the crowd into a tizzy by cutting the score to 3-2. Japan, though, seemed impervious to the crushing pressure and answered right back, to go up 4-2, then did it again in the next round to make the score 5-3. China potted the next spot shot to get within one. Japan, however, kept it loose and when Akakagariyama sank the very next shot for the 6-4 shootout win, the Japanese danced and shouted as they had ousted China 2 to move into the finals.

Japan is going to have to keep freewheeling it on Friday as they will be up against a Chinese-Taipei side that has played far above the field all week here in Beijing. The team of Chang Jung Lin, Fu Che Wei, Ko Pin Yi, and female player Chieh Yu Chou have left a trail of smoke in their wake, winning 28 individual matches in this event, and losing just three. Out of 175 racks played in the group stages, they have won 124 and given up a mere 51.

The Chinese-Taipei express continued barreling down the tracks today in the first semi-final against Great Britain. Everything went Taiwan’s way, while Great Britain stumbled badly from the opening singles 8-ball match. When the Brits literally gave away a hill-hill doubles 8-ball match to drop to a 2-0 deficit, the handwriting was on the wall. Chieh then handily defeated Kelly Fisher in 9-ball and Ko finished off the beating by easily taking down a demoralized Darren Appleton in 9-ball. Chinese-Taipei cruised into the final, 4-0.

Based on their results so far, Chinese-Taipei has to be the favorite for the finals against Japan in the pool world’s biggest team tournament. The players have all the ingredients that make a great team in a sport that normally revolves around individual efforts. The Chinese Taipei players all know each other well, all live in Taipei and they play and practice together for hours on end, even when they are preparing for singles tournaments.

Japan has certainly got the bottle to pull off the win, but they’ll have to keep things loose and light, which is the very thing that has gotten them to this point so far.

Finals
Chinese-Taipei vs. Japan
Friday, July 6, 2012
2pm(GMT +)

*The World Pool and Billiard Association(WPA) is the international governing body for the sport of pocket billiards.



2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
LAST 16 GROUPS


Australia
David Rothall, Louis Condo, Robby Foldvari, Lyndall Hulley

Canada
Jason Klatt, John Morra, Erik Hjorleifson, Brittany Bryant

China 1
Li He Wen, Fu Jianbo, Liu Haitao, Fu Xiaofang, Pan Xiao Ting

China 2
Dang Jinhu, Dai Yong, Han Haoxiang, Liu Shasha, Chen Siming

Chinese Taipei
Chang Jung Lin, Fu Che Wei, Ko Pin Yi, Chieh Yu Chou

Finland
Peter Makkonen, Aki Heiskanen, Abbas Al-Marayati, Marika Pokkijoki

Germany
Oliver Ortmann, Thorsten Hohmann, Ralf Souquet, Jasmin Michel

Great Britain
Darren Appleton, Daryl Peach, Chris Melling, Mark Gray, Kelly Fisher    



India
Alok Kumar, Sundeep Gulati, Syed Habib, Neena Praveen

Indonesia
Ricky Wang, Isral Afrinneza Nasution, Muhammad Zulfikri, Amand Rahayu

Japan
Yukio Akagariyama, Toru Kuribayashi, Naoyuki Oi, Chihiro Kawahara

Norway
Roger Rasmussen, Mats Schjetne, Matey Ullah, Ine Helvik

Philippines
Efren Reyes, Francisco Bustamante, Dennis Orcullo, Rubilen Amit

Poland
Mateusz Sniegocki, Radoslaw Babica, Tomasz Kaplan, Oliwia Czuprynska

South Korea
Lee Wansu, Ryu Seungwoo, Hwang Yong, Kim Ga Young

Sweden
Marcus Chamat, Tomas Larsson, Andreas Gerwen, Carline Roos





2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
THE LAST 16
Chinese Taipei
4 : 1
India
Sweden
4 : 3
Indonesia
Great Britain
4 : 1
Australia
China 1
4 : 1
Poland
Philippines
4 : 0
Norway
Japan
4 : 2
Germany
Canada
4 : 3
South Korea
China 2
4 : 0
Finland


2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
THE QUARTER-FINALS
Chinese Tapei
4 : 1
Sweden
Great Britain
4 : 3
China 1
Japan
4 : 3
Philippines
China 2
4 : 2
Canada


2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
THE SEMI-FINALS
Chinese Taipei
4 : 0
Great Britain
Japan
4 : 3
China 2


2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
THE FINAL
Chinese Taipei
-vs-
Japan




2012 WPA WORLD TEAMS POOL CHAMPIONSHIP
TONGZHOU - BEIJING - CHINA
THE PRIZE FUND
1st
$ 80,000
2nd
$ 40,000
3rd ~ 4th
$ 20,000
5th ~ 8th
$ 12,000
9th ~ 16th
$ 7,500
17th ~ 24th
$ 4,000
TOTAL PRIZE FUND = US $300,000
















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