Peter Belliss: Difference between revisions
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*''New Zealand’s top 100 sports history makers'' by Joseph Romanos, page 214 (2006, Trio Books, Wellington) ISBN 0-9582455-8-4 |
*''New Zealand’s top 100 sports history makers'' by Joseph Romanos, page 214 (2006, Trio Books, Wellington) ISBN 0-9582455-8-4 |
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*[http://www. |
*[http://www.olympic.org.nz/athletes/peter-belliss/ Profile at NZOC website] |
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Revision as of 20:59, 26 December 2016
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's lawn bowls | ||
Representing New Zealand | ||
World Outdoor Bowls Championships | ||
1984 Aberdeen | Men's singles | |
1988 Auckland | Men's doubles | |
2000 Johannesburg | Men's triples | |
2000 Johannesburg | Men's fours | |
Commonwealth Games | ||
1994 Victoria | men's fours | |
1982 Brisbane | men's singles |
Peter James Belliss, MBE, is a former lawn bowls player for New Zealand.
Background
Belliss was born in Wanganui in 1951, attending (and playing rugby football at) Wanganui Boys' College. He started playing in the 1970s in the Aramaho (Wanganui) club; Romanos called him The young Turk of lawn bowls. He had been a railways fitter, and in 1982 was the first New Zealand lawn bowler to turn professional.
Bowls career
At the World Bowls Championships, Bellis won the 1984 singles in Aberdeen against local player Willie Wood, the 1988 pairs with Rowan Brassey, and men's triples with Brassey and Andrew Curtain at the 2000 World Outdoor Bowls Championship in Johannesburg.[1]
He has competed at four Commonwealth Games: 1982 (winning bronze), 1994 (winning bronze), 1998, and 2002; missing 1986 as a professional and 1990 as he had played in South Africa five years previously.
He was a coach at the 2006 Commonwealth Games.
Honours
In the 1988 Queen's Birthday Honours, Belliss was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire, for services to bowls.[2] In 2013, Belliss was an inaugural inductee into the Bowls New Zealand Hall of Fame.[3]
References
- ^ "World Bowls Champions". Burnside Bowling Club.
- ^ London Gazette (supplement), No. 51367, 10 June 1988. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
- ^ "Bowls legends honoured at inaugural Hall of Fame celebration". Bowls New Zealand. 2013. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- New Zealand’s top 100 sports history makers by Joseph Romanos, page 214 (2006, Trio Books, Wellington) ISBN 0-9582455-8-4
- Profile at NZOC website
- 1951 births
- Living people
- New Zealand bowls players
- Commonwealth Games competitors for New Zealand
- Commonwealth Games bronze medallists for New Zealand
- Bowls players at the 1982 Commonwealth Games
- Bowls players at the 1994 Commonwealth Games
- Bowls players at the 1998 Commonwealth Games
- Bowls players at the 2002 Commonwealth Games
- New Zealand Members of the Order of the British Empire
- Sportspeople from Whanganui
- Male bowls players
- Bowls New Zealand Hall of Fame inductees
- Commonwealth Games medallists in lawn bowls
- Bowls World Champions
- New Zealand sportspeople stubs
- Bowling biography stubs