1971 Men's World Team Squash Championships

Men's World Team 1971
3rd World Men's Team Championship
Location  New Zealand
Date6–16 August 1971
Results
Champions Australia
Runners-up Great Britain
Third place Pakistan

The 1971 Men's World Team Amateur Squash Championships were the third edition of that tournament. It was held in Palmerston North, Henderson and Auckland, New Zealand, from 6 to 16 August 1971. Australia became champions for the third consecutive time, and England were the runners-up, also for the third time in a row. Pakistan finished in the third place, as they had in the previous edition in 1969.[1][2]

Results

Venue Team One Team Two Score
North Palmerston Great Britain Pakistan 3-0
North Palmerston India Canada 2-1
North Palmerston Egypt New Zealand 2-1
North Palmerston Australia Great Britain 3-0
North Palmerston Pakistan Canada 3-0
North Palmerston New Zealand India 2-1
Auckland Australia Pakistan 2-1
Auckland Egypt Canada 3-0
Auckland Great Britain India 3-0
Auckland Great Britain Canada 3-0
Auckland Australia New Zealand 3-0
Auckland Pakistan Egypt 2-1
Auckland Great Britain New Zealand 3-0
Auckland Australia Egypt 3-0
Auckland Pakistan India 3-0
Henderson Australia India 3-0
Henderson Egypt Great Britain 2-1
Henderson New Zealand Canada 3-0
Auckland Australia Canada 3-0
Auckland Egypt India 3-0
Auckland Pakistan New Zealand 3-0


Pos Team Players P W L F A Pts
1 Australia (Geoff Hunt, Ken Hiscoe, Dick Carter, Cam Nancarrow) 6 6 0 17 1 12
2 Great Britain (John Easter, Mike Corby, Philip Ayton, Paul Millman) 6 4 2 13 5 8
3 Pakistan (Aftab Jawaid, Torsam Khan, Mohammad Saleem) 6 4 2 12 6 8
4 Egypt (Abbas Kaoud, Mohamed Asran, Galal Allam) 6 4 2 11 7 8
5 New Zealand (Laurie Green, Trevor Johnston, Don Burmeister, Charlie Waugh) 6 2 4 6 12 4
6 India (Vijay Paul, Sanjit Roy, Ali Ispahani, P Handa) 6 1 5 3 15 2
7 Canada (Steve Moysey, Peter Martin, Gordon Anderson, Colin Adair) 6 0 6 1 17 0

See also

References

  1. ^ "Men's World Team Championship 1971" (PDF). worldsquash.org). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 January 2016.
  2. ^ "Times Archives". Oxfordshire Libraries.