EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY BRIDGE CHAMPIONSHIPS

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EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY BRIDGE CHAMPIONSHIPS
EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY BRIDGE CHAMPIONSHIPS
The European University Championships are open to all European
Universities and High Schools may submit an unlimited number of teams of 4 /
6 players (non-playing captain more) provided at least two players belong to
the same university or school. All players of a team but must have the same
nationality.
The championships usually take place and since their first edition in a
designated City of Culture for the year of progress and, in 1995, were not
played due to the fact that the city was named the culture of that year that
Luxembourg has its own university.
The event is in fact a Championship Team Open University for Nations, was
created in 1993 for an initiative of the University of Antwerp, which was
already a sponsor of the chess champion, was initially held once a year and,
since 1999 under the auspices of the European Bridge League, only in odd
years alternatively, to peers, the University World Cup.
Since February 2003 the European University Sports Association has decided
to annex the European University Bridge Championships, giving them the
name of European Universities Bridge Cup for the EUSA Championships in
2007 and subsequent ones.
Starting with the 2009, the EUSA added a tender closing Transnational Pairs
which students can also participate as part of National Teams.
Teams
1993 - ANTWERPEN (Belgium) – 11 teams
1.
GERMANY
2.
GREAT
BRITAIN
Michael Tomski, Richard Bley, Barbara Stawowy
Andreas Kirmse, Sebastian Reim, Bernhard Bussek
Stefan Back (npc)
Jon Cooke, Tom Townsend, Ed Ionides, Chris Jagger
Frances Hinden
3.
ISRAEL
NETHERLANDS
Ricco van Prooijen, Timo van den Berg, Jaap Brulleman
Pauline Doedens, Susanne Joosten
1994 – LISBOA (Portugal) – 9 teams
1.
DENMARK
Mik Kristensen, Mikkel Nohr, Lars Lund Madsen
Morten Lund Madsen
2.
GERMANY
Björn Kapplinghaus, Klaus Reps, Michael Tomski
Joachim Parsch, Sebastian Reim
3.
NETHERLANDS
Ricco van Prooijen, Simon de Wijs, Jaap Brulleman
Timo van den Berg, Peter Blauw, Robert van Poelgeest
1996 – ÅRHUS (Denmark) – 8 teams
1.
NETHERLANDS
Erik Oltmans, Arnoud Oltmans, Leon Jacobs
Femke Hoogweg
2.
NORWAY
Tore Skoglund, Jan Einar Saetre, Vegard Brekke
Eskil Hagen
3.
DENMARK
Mik Kristensen, Anders Sigsgaard, Lars Lund Madsen
Morten Lund Madsen, Thomas Vang Larsen, Mikkel Nohr
?.
GERMANY
??
1997 – PALERMO (Italy) – 8 teams
1.
NETHERLANDS
Ricco van Prooijen, Simon de Wijs, Friso Zwerver
Schelte Wijma
2.
ITALY
Sergio Bianchi, Andrea Medusei, Mario d'Avossa
Matteo Mallardi
3.
GERMANY
Julius Linde, Klaus Reps, Sebastian Reim, Ingo Nieten
Rolf Kühn, Frank Pioch
Roland Rohowsky (npc)
1998 – SKÖVDE (Sweden) – 7 teams
1.
DENMARK
2.
ITALY
3.
GREAT
BRITAIN
4.
GERMANY
Anders Hagen, Lars Lund Madsen, Anders Sigsgaard
Gregers Bjarnarson
Sergio Bianchi, Andrea Medusei, Mario D'Avossa
Matteo Mallardi
Keith Bennett, Steve Noble, Paul Fearnhead
Alex Fearnhead
Frank Pioch, Klaus Reps, Sebastian Reim, Ingo Nieten
Raoul Balschun, Julius Linde
1999 – WEIMAR (Germany) – 11 teams
1.
NETHERLANDS
2.
GERMANY
3.
FRANCE
Niek Brink, Simon de Wijs, Bas Drijver, Frank Burghout
Raoul Balschun, Julius Linde, Ingo Nieten, Sebastian Reim
Julien Geitner, Felicien Daux, Jerome Rombaut
Vanessa Reess, Julien Gaviard, Thomas Bessis
2001 – ROTTERDAM (Netherlands) – 14 teams
1.
NETHERLANDS
Jeroen Bruggeman, Niels de Groot, Marvin Kuivenhoven
Frank Burghout, Andor van Munnen, Simon de Wijs
2.
DENMARK
Anders Hagen, Kasper Konow, Anita Jensen
Christina Klemmensen
3.
GERMANY
Martin Möller, Julius Linde, Andreas Kornek, Nils Bokholt
2003 – WROCLAW (Poland) – 20 teams
1.
ITALY
Stefano Uccello, Matteo Sbarigia, Simone Pisano
Alberto Sangiorgio, Francesco Ferrari, Andrea Boldrini
Gian Paolo Rinaldi (npc)
2.
POLAND
University of Warsaw
Piotr Dybicz, Jacek Kalita, Przemysław Janiszewski,
Krzysztof Kotorowicz, Jakub Kotorowicz
3.
BELGIUM
Steven de Donder, Alon Amsel, Tine Dobbels
Johan Fastenakels
?.
GERMANY
??
2005 – ROTTERDAM (Netherlands) – 29 teams
1.
POLAND
University of Lodz
Andrzej Kozikowski, Marta Maj, Marek Popielarczyk
Tomasz Spodenkiewicz
2.
FRANCE
University of Paris
Thomas Bessis, Godefroy De Tessières, Adrien Vinay
Paul Seguineau, Nicolas Chauvelot
3.
NORWAY
University of Trondheim
Tor-Ove Reistad, Asmund Forfot, Karl Morten Lunna
Ivar Berg
?.
GERMANY
??
2007 – BRUGGE (Belgium) – 32 teams
1.
FRANCE
University of Paris
Fréderic Volcker, Thomas & Olivier Bessis, Julien Clément
Christophe Oursel (npc)
2.
POLAND
University of Warsaw
Ewa Grabowska (mascot), Jan Sikora, Maciej Sikora
Piotr Butryn, Piotr Nawrocki, Jacek Kalita, Krzysztof Buras
3.
NORWAY
Håkon Bogen, Daniel Ueland, Steffen Fredrik Simonsen
Lars Arthur Johansen
5.
GERMANY
Falko Gleichmann, Andre Marx, Andreas Sauter
Nils Bokholt, Matthias Schüller, Julius Linde
Ralph Retzlaff (npc)
2009 – OPATIJA (Croatia) – 22 teams
1.
POLAND
Politechnika Wrocław
Wojciech Gaweł, Michał Nowosadzki, Piotr Wiankowski
Piotr Zatorski
Stanisław Gołębiowski (coach)
2.
FRANCE
University of Paris
Pierre Franceschetti, Christophe Grosset
Nicolas Lhuissier, Cedric Lorenzini
3.
NORWAY
Erik Berg, Karl Morten Lunna, Fredrik Simonsen
Erlend Skjetne
Aas Hilde (coach)
12.
GERMANY
University of Potsdam
Raffael Braun, Katharina Brinck, Marie Eggeling, Paul Grünke
Hartmut Kondoch (coach)
2011 – WARSZAWA (Poland) – 14 teams
1.
GERMANY
University of Hamburg
Janko Katerbau, Martin Rehder, Paul Orth, Felix Zimmermann
2.
POLAND
Politechnika Wrocław
Bartlomiej Igła, Piotr Zatorski, Wojciech Gaweł, Paweł Jassem
3.
POLAND
University of Warsaw
Jan Betley, Piotr Kruszewski, Tomasz Jochymski
Michał Kania
2013 – KRALJEVICA (Croatia) – 12 Teams
1.
POLAND
Politechnika Wrocław
Piotr Zatorski, Maciej Bielawski, Piotr Marcinowski
Sławomir Niajko, Paweł Jassem
2.
GERMANY
University of Potsdam
Raffael Braun, Vemund Vikjord, Marie Eggeling, Paul Grünke
3.
CZECH
REPUBLIC
Institute of Chemical Technology Prag
Patrik Bouřa, František Králik, Jan Králik, Kamil Žylka
2015 (31 August – 6 September) – WARSZAWA (Poland) – 12 teams
1.
CZECH
REPUBLIC
Institute of Chemical Technology Prag
Patrik Bouřa, František Králik, Jan Králik, Jakub Vojtik
2.
POLAND
University of Warsaw 1
Tomasz Jochymski, Michał Kania, Rafał Marks
Paweł Szymaszczyk, Jakub Wojcieszek, Marta Wό
3.
POLAND
Politechnika Wrocław
Maciej Bielawski, Piotr Marcinowski
Sławomir Niajko Łukasz Witkowski
4.
GERMANY
University of Potsdam
Raffael Braun, Vemund Vikjord, Marie Eggeling, Paul Grünke