UANA Water Polo Cup

The UANA Water Polo Cup (ASUA Water Polo Cup) is an international water polo tournament for national water polo teams from North and South America, organized by Swimming Union of the Americas (UANA, or ASUA).[1] It is the continental qualification for the World Aquatics Championships, and men's and women's FINA Water Polo World Cup.[2]:16

Results

Men

Year Host Champion Runner-up Third place Fourth place Qualification for Ref
2006
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

United States
UnknownUnknownUnknown2007 World Aquatics Championships[3]
2009
Calgary, Canada
Cancelled due to only two teams (Brazil and Canada) entered2009 World Aquatics Championships[4]
2011
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Canada

Brazil

Argentina
2011 World Aquatics Championships[5]
2013
Calgary, Canada

Canada

United States

Brazil

Argentina
2013 World Aquatics Championships[6]:3
2013
Costa Mesa, California, United States

United States

Canada
2014 FINA World Cup[6]:3–4
2015
Toronto, Canada

Canada

Brazil

Argentina
2015 World Aquatics Championships[6]:4
2017
Trinidad, Trinidad and Tobago

Brazil

Canada

Argentina

Trinidad and Tobago
2017 World Aquatics Championships[2]:11–12
2018
Cochabamba, Bolivia

Colombia

Argentina

Chile

Bolivia
2018 FINA World Cup[2]:14–15
2019
São Paulo, Brazil

Brazil

United States

Canada

Argentina
2019 World Aquatics Championships[2]:18–19

Women

Year Host Champion Runner-up Third place Fourth place Qualification for Ref
2009
Calgary, Canada
Cancelled due to only two teams (Brazil and Canada) entered2009 World Aquatics Championships[4]
2011
São Paulo, Brazil

Cuba

Brazil

Argentina
2011 World Aquatics Championships[5]
2013
Calgary, Canada

Canada

Brazil

Venezuela

Argentina
2013 World Aquatics Championships[6]:3
2013
Costa Mesa, California, United States

United States

Canada
2014 FINA Women's World Cup[6]:3–4
2015
Toronto, Canada

Canada

Brazil
2015 World Aquatics Championships[6]:4
2017Not scheduled2017 World Aquatics Championships[2]:11–12
2018Not scheduled2018 FINA Women's World Cup[2]:14–15
2019
São Paulo, Brazil

Canada

Cuba

Brazil
2019 World Aquatics Championships[2]:18–19

See also

References

  1. "UANA WP Events & Results". teamunify.com. UANA. 2019.
  2. "UANA Technical Water Polo Committee Report 2015–2019" (PDF). teamunify.com. UANA. 2019. pp. 11–12, 14–16, 18–19.
  3. "USA Water Polo 2008 Olympic Teams – Media Guide" (PDF). usawaterpolo.org. USA Water Polo. 2008. p. 10.
  4. "2009 UANA Water Polo Report" (PDF). teamunify.com. UANA. 25 May 2009. p. 2.
  5. "UANA Technical Water Polo Committee Report 2011" (PDF). teamunify.com. UANA. 30 August 2011. pp. 2–3.
  6. "UANA Technical Water Polo Committee Report 2011–2015" (PDF). teamunify.com. UANA. 2015. pp. 3–4.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.