1980 African Badminton Championships

1980 African Badminton Championships
Tournament details
Dates22โ€“25 June
Edition2nd
VenueBeira Sports Pavilion
LocationBeira, Mozambique
โ† 1979 1982 โ†’

The 1980 African Badminton Championships (Portuguese: Campeonato Africano de Badminton de 1980) was a continental stage tournament to crown the best badminton squads and players in Africa. The tournament took place from 22 to 25 June 1980. The tournament was held at the Beira Sports Pavilion which stands next to the Mozambique Company Employees Club in Beira, Mozambique.[1]

The tournament consisted of four events, the men's team event and the women's team event which were named the Julius Nyerere Cup in honor of the late Julius Nyerere, who contributed in funding for the African championships in 1979.[2] The mixed team event was named the June 25 Cup to commemorate the date of Mozambique's independence from Portugal.[3] The junior mixed team event, the Dapo Tejuoso's Cup was named after the vice president of the Badminton Confederation of Africa.[2]

Nigeria dominated the championships by winning the men's team, mixed team and junior mixed team titles.[4][5][6] Zimbabwe made their debut in the championships and won the women's team event.[7] Zambia finished up as runners-up at the junior mixed team event.[8]

Medalists

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's team  Nigeria
Babatunde Badiru
Monday Edo
Samson Egbeyemi
Ishola Iyiola
Clement Ogbo
 Kenya
John Mwangi
Narendra K. Shah
Amjid Rasul
Vijai Maini
Hitesh Patani
 Tanzania
Raju Chiplunkar
Mohamed Juma
Mukesh Shah
Shahnawaz Kayumali
Women's team  Zimbabwe
Trish Donaghy
Ann Folcarelli
Merle Palmer
 Nigeria
Bukola Bakreen
Oby Edoga
Grace Edwards
 Tanzania
S. Chiplunkar
Esther Mosha
Nasra Juma
Mixed team  Nigeria
Babatunde Badiru
Monday Edo
Samson Egbeyemi
Ishola Iyiola
Clement Ogbo
Bukola Bakreen
Oby Edoga
Grace Edwards
 Kenya
John Mwangi
Narendra K. Shah
Amjid Rasul
Vijai Maini
Hitesh Patani
Shamin Noormohamed
Chris Maskell
Naila Valani
 Tanzania
Raju Chiplunkar
Mohamed Juma
Mukesh Shah
Shahnawaz Kayumali
S. Chiplunkar
Esther Mosha
Nasra Juma
Junior mixed team  Nigeria  Zambia  Mozambique

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Mozambique)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Nigeria3104
2 Zimbabwe1001
3 Kenya0213
4 Zambia0101
5 Tanzania0033
6 Mozambique*0011
Totals (6 entries)44513

References

  1. ^ Scheele, H. A. E. (1981). World Badminton (PDF) (3rd ed.). International Badminton Federation. p. 10. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b Tejuoso, Dapo (1989). The Ultimate Honour. Nelson Publishers. p. 207. ISBN 9789781261657.
  3. ^ AIM Information Bulletin. Mozambique Information Agency. 1980.
  4. ^ Jakande, L. K. (1983). LKJ'S First Term Report: October 1979 to September 1983. Lagos State Government.
  5. ^ State (Nigeria), Lagos (1981). Two Years of Civilian Administration in Lagos State, 1979-1981. Lagos State Printing Corporation.
  6. ^ Nigeria Year Book. Daily Times of Nigeria. 1981.
  7. ^ Maclaren, I.P. (1982). More Rhodesian Senior Schools. Books of Zimbabwe. pp. 29, 37. ISBN 9780869202609.
  8. ^ Walubita, Moses Sayela (2011-08-04). Zambia Sporting Score: A Period of Hits and Misses. iUniverse. ISBN 9781450279123.