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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Host selection  





2 Opening ceremony  





3 Closing ceremony  





4 Mascot  





5 Participating teams  





6 Medals by country  





7 Medals by event  



7.1  Aquatics  





7.2  Athletics  





7.3  Badminton  





7.4  Bowls  





7.5  Boxing  





7.6  Cycling  



7.6.1  Track  





7.6.2  Road  







7.7  Gymnastics  



7.7.1  Artistic  





7.7.2  Rhythmic  







7.8  Judo  





7.9  Shooting  



7.9.1  Pistol  





7.9.2  Rifle  





7.9.3  Shotgun  







7.10  Weightlifting  







8 References  





9 External links  














1990 Commonwealth Games






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Shooting at the 1990 Commonwealth Games)

XIV Commonwealth Games
Host cityAuckland, New Zealand
MottoThis is the Moment (Māori: Ko te moma tenei)
Nations55
Athletes2,074
Events213 events in 10 sports
Opening24 January 1990
Closing3 February 1990
Opened byPrince Edward
Closed byElizabeth II
Queen's Baton Final RunnerMark Todd and Peter Snell
Main venueMount Smart Stadium
← XIII
XV →

The 1990 Commonwealth Games (Māori: 1990 Taumāhekeheke Commonwealth) was held in Auckland, New Zealand from 24 January – 3 February 1990. It was the 14th Commonwealth Games, and part of New Zealand's 1990 sesquicentennial celebrations. Participants competed in ten sports: athletics, aquatics, badminton, boxing, cycling, gymnastics, judo, lawn bowls, shooting and weightlifting. Netball[1] and the Triathlon were demonstration events.

The main venue was the Mount Smart Stadium.

Host selection[edit]

The event was awarded to Auckland on 27 July 1984 at the 1984 Summer OlympicsinLos Angeles, United States. Perth, Australia, had withdrawn from the bid contest leaving New Delhi, India, as the sole opponent to Auckland's bid. New Delhi lost the hosting rights to Auckland by a margin of 1 vote, which made it the closest host selection vote in the history of Commonwealth Games

1990 Commonwealth Games bidding results
City Round 1
New Zealand Auckland 20
India New Delhi 19

Opening ceremony[edit]

The opening of the games comprised a variety of events, including the arrival of The Queen's representative Prince Edward (her youngest son), the arrival of the Queen's Baton, and many Māori ceremonial stories. The Queens Baton was carried across the Auckland Harbour by the vessel "Ceduna".

Queen's Baton's from the 1990 Commonwealth Games.

The opening ceremony itself started off with the Auckland Commonwealth Games Choir singing the Song of Welcome. Upon the arrival of Prince Edward, the Māori in attendance, gave him a Challenge of a welcome. This is conducted by a Māori placing a wooden baton on the ground. To see if the visitor comes in peace or not, the visitor must pick it up.

The New Zealand national anthem "God Defend New Zealand" was sung during a ceremonial fourteen gun salute from nearby One Tree Hill. This was followed by the New Zealand Army Guard Commander allowing Prince Edward to inspect the guard of honour. After which was the introduction of the participating countries of the Commonwealth, Scotland entering first as the hosts of the previous games, and New Zealand entering last as hosts. During the introduction of the countries, the choir would display the flag of the announced country with boards.

When all the athletes finally sat down, the main Māori ceremonies began. First of the Māori ceremonies was all the Māori women performing a "Song of Welcome" for the athletes with the use of Poi. The Māori women then gave some of the athletes a Hongi. Next was the Māori story of how New Zealand was formed according to legend; it a narration of how the Polynesians found their way to what was to become New Zealand, and how New Zealand was formed between Rangi and Papa, the sky father and earth mother. The story then moved on to the coming of religion and European migration. This was demonstrated with a formation of the Union Jack, to show the colonisation by the British. Dame Whina Cooper then made a speech about the Treaty of Waitangi signed in 1840 that brought about peace and stability of modern New Zealand.

Introduction of the European communities was next with music and native dancing from European countries such as Italy, Poland, Greece, Netherlands, Scotland, Ireland, Austria, Wales and England, and music and native dancing also from Asian countries such as China, Sri Lanka and India. From here, many of the neighbouring Pacific Islanders made their entrance with the rhythmic tempo of the Pacific Island drum beat. This was to show the then complete migration of people to New Zealand.

Howard Morrison then lead New Zealand in singing the folk song Tukua-a-hau. After Morrison, the Queen's Baton arrived at the stadium where Prince Edward announced the opening of the games which was followed by the Athletes Pledge.

Fireworks followed and was capped off with a night time flyover by nine A-4 Skyhawk jets of the Royal New Zealand Air Forces 75 Squadron. The ceremony was concluded by the singing of the game's motto "This is the moment" as performers and athletes exited the stadium.

Closing ceremony[edit]

A more relaxed affair was held for the 14th Commonwealth Games closing ceremony, reflecting that of Christchurch in 1974. Attended by HM The Queen of New Zealand, formality and respect played their due part in the beginning with formal salute and the acceptance of the Commonwealth Games flag to the next host city, Victoria, Canada. This was followed by a First Nations and modern Canadian dancing display.

Next,thousands of children entered the stadium with a mass skipping rope demonstration, followed by the athletes. The Queen then made the traditional closing speech and called for all the Commonwealth's athletes to assemble in four years time in Victoria. As the evening wore on, opera singer Dame Kiri Te Kanawa sang "Now is the Hour", a favourite New Zealand hymn, as the Royal New Zealand Air Force’s A4 Skyhawks made one final swooping flyover of Mount Smart Stadium followed by fireworks. The Queen, Duke of Edinburgh, and Prince Edward then exited the stadium standing in open top vehicles.

Mascot[edit]

Goldie the Kiwi bird – the Games' mascot

The mascot of the games was Goldie, representing New Zealand's national symbol the kiwi bird.

Participating teams[edit]

Participating countries

55 teams were represented at the 1990 Games.
(Teams competing for the first time are shown in bold).

Participating Commonwealth countries and territories
  •  Bahamas
  •  Bangladesh
  •  Barbados
  •  Bermuda
  •  Botswana
  •  British Virgin Islands
  •  Brunei
  •  Canada
  •  Cayman Islands
  •  Cook Islands
  •  Cyprus
  •  England
  •  Falkland Islands
  •  Ghana
  •  Gibraltar
  •  Guernsey
  •  Guyana
  •  Hong Kong
  •  India
  •  Isle of Man
  •  Jamaica
  •  Jersey
  •  Kenya
  •  Lesotho
  •  Malawi
  •  Malaysia
  •  Maldives
  •  Malta
  •  Mauritius
  •  Nauru
  •  New Zealand
  •  Nigeria
  •  Norfolk Island
  •  Northern Ireland
  •  Pakistan
  •  Papua New Guinea
  •  Saint Kitts and Nevis
  •  Scotland
  •  Seychelles
  •  Sierra Leone
  •  Singapore
  •  Solomon Islands
  •  Sri Lanka
  •  Swaziland
  •  Tanzania
  •  The Gambia
  •  Tonga
  •  Trinidad and Tobago
  •  Uganda
  •  Vanuatu
  •  Wales
  •  Western Samoa
  •  Zambia
  •  Zimbabwe
  • Debuting Commonwealth countries and territories
  •  Brunei
  •  Nauru
  •  Seychelles
  • Medals by country[edit]

    This is the full table of the medal count of the 1990 Commonwealth Games. These rankings sort by the number of gold medals earned by a country. The number of silvers is taken into consideration next and then the number of bronze. If, after the above, countries are still tied, equal ranking is given and they are listed alphabetically. This follows the system used by the IOC, IAAF and BBC.

    Figures from Commonwealth Games Foundation website.[2]

      *   Host nation (New Zealand)

    RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
    1 Australia (AUS)525456162
    2 England (ENG)464042128
    3 Canada (CAN)354137113
    4 New Zealand (NZL)*17142758
    5 India (IND)1381132
    6 Wales (WAL)1031225
    7 Kenya (KEN)69318
    8 Nigeria (NGR)513725
    9 Scotland (SCO)571022
    10 Malaysia (MAS)2204
    11 Jamaica (JAM)2024
     Uganda (UGA)2024
    13 Northern Ireland (NIR)1359
    14 Nauru (NRU)1203
    15 Hong Kong (HKG)1135
    16 Cyprus (CYP)1102
    17 Bangladesh (BAN)1012
     Jersey (JEY)1012
    19 Bermuda (BER)1001
     Guernsey (GUE)1001
     Papua New Guinea (PNG)1001
    22 Zimbabwe (ZIM)0213
    23 Ghana (GHA)0202
    24 Tanzania (TAN)0123
    25 Zambia (ZAM)0033
    26 Bahamas (BAH)0022
     Western Samoa (WSM)0022
    28 Guyana (GUY)0011
     Malta (MLT)0011
    Totals (29 entries)204203231638

    Medals by event[edit]

    Aquatics[edit]

    Athletics[edit]

    Badminton[edit]

    Bowls[edit]

    Boxing[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men
    Light Flyweight  Justin Juuko (UGA)  Abdurahaman Ramadhani (KEN)  Domenic Figliomeni (CAN)
     Dharmendar Yadav (IND)
    Flyweight  Wayne McCullough (NIR)  Nokuthula Tshabangu (ZIM)  Born Siwakwi (ZAM)
     Maurice Maina (KEN)
    Bantamweight  Mohammed Sabo (NGR)  Geronimo Bie (CAN)  Justin Chikwanda (ZAM)
     Wesley Christmas (GUY)
    Featherweight  John Irwin (ENG)  Haji Ally (TAN)  David Gakuha (KEN)
     James Nicolson (AUS)
    Lightweight  Godfrey Nyakana (UGA)  Justin Rowsell (AUS)  Bakari Mambeya (TAN)
     David Anderson (SCO)
    Light Welterweight  Charlie Kane (SCO)  Nicodemus Odore (KEN)  Stefan Scriggins (AUS)
     Duke Chinyadza (ZIM)
    Welterweight  David Defiagbon (NGR)  Greg Johnson (CAN)  Anthony Mwamba (ZAM)
     Grahame Cheney (AUS)
    Light Middleweight  Richie Woodhall (ENG)  Ray Downey (CAN)  Sililo Figota (SAM)
     Andy Creary (NZL)
    Middleweight  Chris Johnson (CAN)  Joseph Laryea (GHA)  Charles Matata (UGA)
     Mark Edwards (ENG)
    Light Heavyweight  Joseph Akhasamba (KEN)  Dale Brown (CAN)  Nigel Anderson (NZL)
     Abdu Kaddu (UGA)
    Heavyweight  George Onyango (KEN)  Pat Jordan (CAN)  Kevin Onwuka (NGR)
     Emerio Fainuulua (SAM)
    Super Heavyweight  Michael Kenny (NZL)  Liadi Alhassan (GHA)  Vernon Linklater (CAN)
     Paul Douglas (NIR)

    Cycling[edit]

    Track[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men
    Time Trial  Martin Vinnicombe (AUS) 00:01:06  Gary Anderson (NZL) 00:01:07  Jon Andrews (NZL) 00:01:07
    Sprint  Gary Neiwand (AUS)  Curt Harnett (CAN)  Jon Andrews (NZL)
    Individual Pursuit  Gary Anderson (NZL) 00:04:45  Mark Kingsland (AUS) 00:04:53  Darren Winter (AUS) 00:04:52
    Team Pursuit  New Zealand
    Gary Anderson
    Nigel Donnelly
    Glenn McLeay
    Stuart Williams
    00:04:23  Australia
    Brett Aitken
    Steve McGlede
    Shaun O'Brien
    Darren Winter
    00:04:26  England
    Chris Boardman
    Simon Lillistone
    Bryan Steel
    Glen Sword
    00:04:27
    10 Miles Scratch  Gary Anderson (NZL) 00:19:44  Shaun O'Brien (AUS) 00:19:44  Steve McGlede (AUS) 00:19:44
    Points Race  Robert Burns (AUS) 81  Craig Connell (NZL) 72  Alistair Irvine (NIR) 39
    Women
    Sprint  Louise Jones (WAL)  Julie Speight (AUS)  Sue Golder (NZL)
    Individual Pursuit  Madonna Harris (NZL) 00:03:55  Kathy Watt (AUS) 00:03:55  Kelly-Ann Way (CAN) 00:04:00

    Road[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men
    Road Race  Graeme Miller (NZL) 04:34:00  Brian Fowler (NZL) 04:34:00  Scott Goguen (CAN) 04:34:05
    Team Time Trial  New Zealand
    Brian Fowler
    Gavin Stevens
    Graeme Miller
    Ian Richards
    02:06:47  Canada
    Christopher Koberstein
    David Spears
    Peter Verhesen
    Sean Way
    02:09:20  England
    Chris Boardman
    Peter Longbottom
    Ben Luckwell
    Wayne Randle
    02:09:33
    Women
    Road Race  Kathryn Watt (AUS) 01:55:11.60  Lisa Brambani (ENG) 1:55:11.88  Kathleen Shannon (AUS) 1:55:12.06

    Gymnastics[edit]

    Artistic[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men
    All-Around  Curtis Hibbert (CAN) 57.95  Alan Nolet (CAN) 57.8  James May (ENG) 57.4
    Team  Canada
    Alan Nolet
    Claude Latendrese
    Curtis Hibbert
    Lorne Bobkin
    171.8  England
    David Cox
    James May
    Neil Thomas
    Terence Bartlett
    170.45  Australia
    Brennon Dowrick
    Kenneth Meredith
    Peter Hogan
    Tim Lees
    169.5
    Horizontal Bar  Curtis Hibbert (CAN)
     Alan Nolet (CAN)
    9.85  Brennon Dowrick (AUS) 9.8
    Parallel Bars  Curtis Hibbert (CAN) 9.8  Ken Meredith (AUS) 9.675  Peter Hogan (AUS) 9.6
    Vault  James May (ENG) 9.625  Curtis Hibbert (CAN) 9.575  Tim Lees (AUS) 9.25
    Pommel Horse  Brennon Dowrick (AUS) 9.825  Tim Lees (AUS) 9.725  James May (ENG) 9.7
    Rings  Curtis Hibbert (CAN) 9.775  James May (ENG) 9.75  Ken Meredith (AUS) 9.725
    Floor  Neil Thomas (ENG) 9.75  Alan Nolet (CAN) 9.675  Curtis Hibbert (CAN) 9.6
    Women
    All-Around  Lori Strong (CAN) 38.912  Monique Allen (AUS) 38.687  Kylie Shadbolt (AUS) 38.499
    Team  Canada
    Janet Morin
    Larissa Lowing
    Lori Strong
    Stella Umeh
    116.784  Australia
    Kylie Shadbolt
    Lisa Read
    Michelle Telfer
    Monique Allen
    115.272  England
    Lisa Elliott
    Lisa Grayson
    Lorna Mainwaring
    Louise Redding
    114.046
    Asymmetric Bars  Monique Allen (AUS) 9.875  Lori Strong (CAN) 9.85  Michelle Telfer (AUS) 9.737
    Beam  Lori Strong (CAN) 9.85  Larissa Lowing (CAN) 9.762  Kylie Shadbolt (AUS) 9.7
    Vault  Nikki Jenkins (NZL) 9.712  Lori Strong (CAN) 9.643  Monique Allen (AUS) 9.506
    Floor  Lori Strong (CAN) 9.887  Larissa Lowing (CAN) 9.762  Kylie Shadbolt (AUS) 9.675

    Rhythmic[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Women
    All-Around  Mary Fuzesi (CAN) 37.65  Madonna Gimotea (CAN) 37.25  Angela Walker (NZL) 36.9
    Ball  Madonna Gimotea (CAN) 9.45  Mary Fuzesi (CAN) 9.4  Angela Walker (NZL) 9.25
    Hoop  Mary Fuzesi (CAN) 9.4  Madonna Gimotea (CAN) 9.2  Raewyn Jack (NZL)
     Alitia Sands (ENG)
     Viva Seifert (ENG)
    9.1
    Ribbon  Mary Fuzesi (CAN) 9.4  Madonna Gimotea (CAN) 9.3  Raewyn Jack (NZL)
     Viva Seifert (ENG)
     Angela Walker (NZL)
    9.2
    Rope  Angela Walker (NZL) 9.3  Madonna Gimotea (CAN) 9.275  Mary Fuzesi (CAN) 9.25

    Judo[edit]

    Shooting[edit]

    Pistol[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men/Open
    50m Free Pistol  Phil Adams (AUS) 554  Bengt Sandstrom (AUS) 549  Gilbert U (HKG) 549
    50m Free Pistol - Pairs  Australia
    Phil Adams
    Bengt Sandström
    1106  New Zealand
    Brian Read
    Greg Yelavich
    1084  Bangladesh
    Ateequr Rahman
    Abdus Sattar
    1078
    25m Centre-Fire Pistol  Ashok Pandit (IND) 583  Surinder Marwah (IND) 577  Bruce Quick (AUS) 576
    25m Centre-Fire Pistol - Pairs  Australia
    Phil Adams
    Bruce Quick
    1155  New Zealand
    Barry O'Neale
    Greg Yelavich
    1144  India
    Ashok Pandit
    Surinder Marwah
    1142
    25m Rapid-Fire Pistol  Adrian Breton (GGY) 583  Pat Murray (AUS) 582  Michael Jay (WAL) 579
    25m Rapid-Fire Pistol - Pairs  Australia
    Bruce Favell
    Pat Murray
    1153  Canada
    Stanley Wills
    Mark Howkins
    1138  England
    Brian Girling
    John Rolfe
    1133
    10m Air Pistol  Bengt Sandström (AUS) 580  Phil Adams (AUS) 574  David Lowe (ENG) 574
    10m Air Pistol - Pairs  Bangladesh
    Ateequr Rahman
    Abdus Sattar
    1138  Australia
    Phil Adams
    Bengt Sandström
    1138  New Zealand
    Julian Lawton
    Greg Yelavich
    1137

    Rifle[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men/Open
    50m Rifle Prone  Roger Harvey (NZL) 591  Stephen Petterson (NZL) 590  Philip Scanlan (ENG) 590
    50m Rifle Prone - Pairs  New Zealand
    Stephen Petterson
    Roger Harvey
    1185  Canada
    Barry Sutherland
    Michael Ashcroft
    1184  England
    Bob Jarvis
    Philip Scanlan
    1180
    50m Rifle Three Positions  Mart Klepp (CAN) 1157  Malcolm Cooper (ENG) 1154  Soma Dutta (IND) 1143
    50m Small Bore Rifle Three Positions - Pairs  Canada
    Jean-François Sénécal
    Mart Klepp
    2272  England
    Malcolm Cooper
    Robert Smith
    2268  Scotland
    William Murray
    Robert Law
    2258
    Full Bore Rifle  Colin Mallett (JER) 394  Andrew Tucker (ENG) 390  James Corbett (AUS) 390
    Full Bore Rifle - Pairs  England
    Simon Belither
    Andrew Tucker
    580  Australia
    James Corbett
    Barry Wood
    565  Jersey
    Clifford Mallett
    Colin Mallett
    564
    10m Air Rifle  Guy Lorion (CAN) 583  Chris Hector (ENG) 578  Mart Klepp (CAN) 577
    10m Air Rifle - Pairs  Canada
    Guy Lorion
    Mart Klepp
    1163  England
    Chris Hector
    Robert Smith
    1155  India
    Soma Dutta
    Bhagirath Samai
    1148
    10m Running Target  Colin Robertson (AUS) 539  John Maddison (ENG) 539  Tony Clarke (NZL) 535
    10m Running Target - Pairs  New Zealand
    Paul Carmine
    Tony Clarke
    1091  Canada
    David Lee
    Mark Bedlington
    1070  England
    David Chapman
    John Maddison[3]
    1064

    Shotgun[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men/Open
    Trap  John Maxwell (AUS) 184  Kevin Gill (ENG) 183  Ian Peel (ENG) 179
    Trap - Pairs  England
    Kevin Gill
    Ian Peel
    181  Wales
    Colin Evans
    James Birkett-Evans
    178  Australia
    Russell Mark
    John Maxwell
    178
    Skeet  Ken Harman (ENG) 187  Georgios Sakellis (CYP) 187  Andy Austin (ENG) 184
    Skeet - Pairs  Scotland
    Ian Marsden
    James Dunlop
    189  England
    Andy Austin
    Ken Harman
    185  New Zealand
    Tim Dodds
    John Woolley
    183

    Weightlifting[edit]

    Event Gold Silver Bronze
    Men
    Flyweight - Snatch  Chandersekaran Raghavan (IND) 105  Velu Govindraj (IND) 95  Greg Hayman (AUS) 90
    Flyweight - Clean and Jerk  Chandersekaran Raghavan (IND) 127.5  Greg Hayman (AUS) 117.5  Velu Govindraj (IND) 117.5
    Flyweight - Overall  Chandersekaran Raghavan (IND) 232.5  Velu Govindraj (IND) 212.5  Greg Hayman (AUS) 207.5
    Bantamweight - Snatch  Rangaswamy Punnuswamy (IND) 110  Alan Ogilvie (SCO) 107.5  Denis Aumais (CAN) 102.5
    Bantamweight - Clean and Jerk  Rangaswamy Punnuswamy (IND) 137.5  Gopal Maruthachelam (IND) 125  Alan Ogilvie (SCO) 122.5
    Bantamweight - Overall  Rangaswamy Punnuswamy (IND) 247.5  Alan Ogilvie (SCO) 230  Gopal Maruthachelam (IND) 227.5
    Featherweight - Snatch  Marcus Stephen (NRU) 112.5  Parvesh Chander Sharma (IND) 112.5  Kumarasan Sudalaimani (IND) 110
    Featherweight - Clean and Jerk  Parvesh Chander Sharma (IND) 145  Marcus Stephen (NRU) 142.5  Kumarasan Sudalaimani (IND) 142.5
    Featherweight - Overall  Parvesh Chander Sharma (IND) 257.5  Marcus Stephen (NRU) 255  Kumarasan Sudalaimani (IND) 252.5
    Lightweight - Snatch  Paramjit Sharma (IND) 130  Lawrence Iquaibom (NGR) 130  Mark Blair (AUS) 127.5
    Lightweight - Clean and Jerk  Paramjit Sharma (IND) 165  Lawrence Iquaibom (NGR) 160  Mark Roach (WAL) 155
    Lightweight - Overall  Paramjit Sharma (IND) 295  Lawrence Iquaibom (NGR) 290  Mark Roach (WAL) 280
    Middleweight - Snatch  Karnadhar Mondal (IND) 135  Karl Jones (WAL) 135  Ron Laycock (AUS) 132.5
    Middleweight - Clean and Jerk  Ron Laycock (AUS) 177.5  Karnadhar Mondal (IND) 170  Damian Brown (AUS) 167.5
    Middleweight - Overall  Ron Laycock (AUS) 310  Karnadhar Mondal (IND) 305  Benoît Gagné (CAN) 292.5
    Light Heavyweight - Snatch  David Morgan (WAL) 155  Muyiwa Odusanya (NGR) 152.5  Sylvain Leblanc (CAN) 145
    Light Heavyweight - Clean and Jerk  David Morgan (WAL) 192.5  Soronomathu Ramaswamy (IND) 182.5  Muyiwa Odusanya (NGR) 180
    Light Heavyweight - Overall  David Morgan (WAL) 347.5  Muyiwa Odusanya (NGR) 332.5  Andy Callard (ENG) 317.5
    Middle Heavyweight - Snatch  Duncan Dawkins (ENG) 162.5  Keith Boxell (ENG) 152.5  Harvey Goodman (AUS) 150
    Middle Heavyweight - Clean and Jerk  Duncan Dawkins (ENG) 195  Keith Boxell (ENG) 192.5  Harvey Goodman (AUS) 190
    Middle Heavyweight - Overall  Duncan Dawkins (ENG) 357.5  Keith Boxell (ENG) 345  Harvey Goodman (AUS) 340
    Sub Heavyweight - Snatch  Andrew Saxton (ENG) 165  Peter May (ENG) 145  Guy Greavette (CAN) 140
    Sub Heavyweight - Clean and Jerk  Andrew Saxton (ENG) 197.5  Peter May (ENG) 175  Guy Greavette (CAN) 175
    Sub Heavyweight - Overall  Andrew Saxton (ENG) 362.5  Peter May (ENG) 320  Guy Greavette (CAN) 315
    Heavyweight - Snatch  Mark Thomas (ENG) 160  Jason Roberts (AUS) 152.5  Steve Wilson (WAL) 152.5
    Heavyweight - Clean and Jerk  Mark Thomas (ENG) 197.5  Jason Roberts (AUS) 192.5  Aled Arnold (WAL) 187.5
    Heavyweight - Overall  Mark Thomas (ENG) 357.5  Jason Roberts (AUS) 345  Aled Arnold (WAL) 335
    Super Heavyweight - Snatch  Andrew Davies (WAL) 180  Aduche Ojadi (NGR) 177.5  Steven Kettner (AUS) 172.5
    Super Heavyweight - Clean and Jerk  Andrew Davies (WAL) 222.5  Aduche Ojadi (NGR) 222.5  Steven Kettner (AUS) 205
    Super Heavyweight - Overall  Andrew Davies (WAL) 402.5  Aduche Ojadi (NGR) 400  Steven Kettner (AUS) 377.5

    References[edit]

    The Bateman New Zealand Encyclopedia

    1. ^ "NETBALL HISTORY: 1990 Commonwealth Games Demonstration event (Auckland)". Netball Scoop. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
  • ^ Past Commonwealth Games Archived 15 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Commonwealth Games Federation
  • ^ No bronze medal awarded as not enough pairs took part - The Complete Book of the Commonwealth Games (Graham Groom -2017)
  • External links[edit]

    Preceded by
    Edinburgh
    Commonwealth Games
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    XIV Commonwealth Games
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    Victoria
  • icon 1990s
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  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1990_Commonwealth_Games&oldid=1224080290#Shooting"

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