Talk:Australian men, women win 2013 Asia-Oceania Wheelchair Basketball Championships

Latest comment: 10 years ago by Pi zero in topic Review of revision 2201357 [Passed]

Interview with Maureen Orchard, President and Secretary General of the IWBF. Interviewed at the Thai-Japan Youth Center on 24 November 1315-1530. No recording. Below is a transcription of my hand-written notes. Permission given for these parts of the interview to be reported.

  • World divided into four zones: Europe, Americas, Asia-Oceania and Africa. These correspond to the FIBA zones
  • Next World championships will be held in 2019, not 2018. Tired of competing with FIFA.
  • One place for each zone at the WC. Additional places earned by
  • Everybody wants more places but IPC puts a cap on team sports
  • Expanding WC to 16 for men and 12 for women but not at Paralympics
  • Was recently in Angola for the Africa zone. Algeria won the spot over South Africa.
  • Africa wants more spots. Will have to lift its game and earn them. The zone allocation guarantees Africa one spot.
  • Moving to a system of home and away games similar to those of FIFA. This will allow teams to claim ongoing funding for their sport from their governments.
  • The women's WC competition will in no way be inferior to the men's. The women will be put up in a five-star hotel, and will play at Toronto's
  • Playing at the Maple Leaf which is apparently a sacred site to Canadians.
  • Will be a lot of interest in the women, since Canada bombed out of the men's in a shock result.
  • USA, Columbia, Mexico and Argentina will be the America Zone reps
  • Argentina was once a big player in wheelchair basketball, but not for many years.
  • Great Britain, Turkey, Spain, Sweden, Italy, Germany and the Netherlands are Europe's reps
  • In the women: Netherlands, Germany, Great Britain, France USA, Brazil, Mexico and Peru. Plus three from Asia-Oceania
  • Peru team very strapped financially.
  • No apology for basketball being so popular
  • In London, additional seats were added for the semifinals and more for the finals. Sold out online in minutes.
  • Fighting proposals for equal airtime for all sports.
  • People follow sports they are familiar with. They know the names of players they watch all the time.
  • Enthusiastic about a 3-on-three version of the game. Officially, this will not count as a team sport.


Journalist Notes - AOZ Championships - 1
Journalist Notes - AOZ Championships - 2
Journalist Notes - AOZ Championships - 3
Journalist notes - AOZ Championships - 4
Journalist notes - AOZ Championships - 5
Journalist notes - AOZ Championships - 6. Mostly copied from the notice board outside No. 1 Gymnasium

Tournament groups

edit

Source: Transcribed from the tournament program.

Group A
  • Japan
  • Iran
  • China
  • Malaysia
  • Taipei
Group B
  • Australia
  • Korea
  • Kuwait
  • New Zealand
  • Thailand
Women
  • Australia
  • Japan
  • China
  • Thailand

Australian team lists

edit

Source: Transcribed from team lists supplied by the coaches.

Rollers Team

edit
  • 4 Justin Eveson
  • 5 Bill Latham
  • 6 Adam Deans
  • 7 Shaun Norris
  • 8 Michael Hartnett
  • 9 Tristan Knowles
  • 10 Jannik Blair
  • 11 Luke Pople
  • 12 Michael D’Amelio
  • 13 Tom O’Neill-Thorne
  • 14 Michael Auprince
  • 15 Bradley Ness

Rollers Staff

edit
  • Ben Ettridge – Head Coach
  • Craig Friday – Assistant Coach
  • Luke Brennan – Technical Assistant
  • Jesse Adams – Physiotherapist
  • Leigh Gooding – Team Manager/National Program Manager

Gliders Team

edit
  • 4 Sarah Vinci
  • 5 Cobi Crispin
  • 6 Bridie Kean
  • 7 Georgia Inglis
  • 8 Caitlin de Wit
  • 9 Leanne Del Toso
  • 10 Clare Nott
  • 11 Kylie Gauci
  • 12 Shelley Chaplin
  • 13 Sarah Stewart
  • 14 Kathleen O’Kelly-Kennedy
  • 15 Amber Merritt

Gliders Staff

edit
  • Tom Kyle – Coach
  • David Gould – Assistant Coach
  • Jane Kyle – Team Manager
  • Anna De Araugo – Physiotherapist
  • Joanna Vaile – Physiologist

Review of revision 2182293 [Not ready]

edit
Er. Where were sources added for the team lists and schedule? --Pi zero (talk) 12:00, 25 November 2013 (UTC)Reply
Under the major headings. It says: "Source: Transcribed from the tournament program" and "Source: Transcribed from team lists supplied by the coaches". Hawkeye7 (talk) 12:21, 25 November 2013 (UTC)Reply
Aha. --Pi zero (talk)
It just occurred to me that next time we'll be in the same time zone. You should join me. Hawkeye7 (talk) 12:57, 25 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Review of revision 2187730 [Not ready]

edit

Review of revision 2196858 [Not ready]

edit

firstly, I was also at the events for the training sessions and the opening. I've added more temporal information to the lede. (Source is the printed schedule, which I dont have handy, but other sources are confirming this also like this) Currently we have links to 'China' only on Wikipedia; if it is appropriate, I have created stubs for all of the teams that competed at this event; see w:Category:National wheelchair basketball teams. They are not very good articles, so maybe its not appropriate yet. John Vandenberg (talk) 06:56, 30 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

"The competition has been expanded ..." - competition is ambiguous as it talks about the Paralympics and the World Championships. I assume that 'competition' refers to 'World Championships'? John Vandenberg (talk) 07:38, 30 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

"In a shock result, these places went to the ..." - is that referring to mens, womens, or both? John Vandenberg (talk) 07:38, 30 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

"the women's competition will in no way be inferior to the men's" - this comment is relevant because, I think, this is the first time that mens and womens World Championships have not been run together - but that isnt stated anywhere. John Vandenberg (talk) 07:38, 30 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Whoops; the WC was also split in 1994, with men in Edmonton, Canada and women in Stoke Mandeville, Great Britain.
At the Zone level, the 2013 Euro championships for men and women were integrated, but the Americas zone splits the genders. This shows the Americas Zone has run men and womens in separate countries, albeit back to back with only a small gap between them. But, the website for the mens championship doesnt mention the womens competition, nor does their twitter feed. I havent found a website for the Americas Cup for Women. So, there is at least one other instance of separation, happening at the zone level, and it looks like the women suffered as a result. John Vandenberg (talk) 08:51, 30 November 2013 (UTC)Reply
John and I have made made the date more explicit. The full printed schedule )with my penned-in results) is attached in the contributors' notes. Hawkeye7 (talk) 01:28, 1 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

Review of revision 2201357 [Passed]

edit
Return to "Australian men, women win 2013 Asia-Oceania Wheelchair Basketball Championships" page.