International Netball Federation

The International Netball Federation (INF), formerly the "International Federation of Netball Associations" (IFNA), is the worldwide governing body for Netball. The INF was created in 1960[2] and is responsible for world rankings, maintaining the rules for netball and organising the Netball World Cup.

International Netball Federation (INF)
Official logo
Formation1960
TypeSports Federation
HeadquartersManchester, England
Membership
49 (and 25 associate members)[1]
President
Liz Nicholl
Vice-President
Sue Taylor
Websitenetball.sport

General information

The organisation is based in Manchester, England.[3] The INF has over 70 national members which are grouped into five regional areas: Africa, Asia, Americas, Europe and Oceania.[3] The INF is governed by a congress that meets every two years, a board of directors that meets three times a year, a chief executive officer and a Secretariat.[3] It is also responsible for providing world rankings for national representative teams.[4] The INF organises several major international competitions including the Netball World Cup and Netball World Youth Cup.[5] It is also a signatory to the World Anti-Doping Code.[6]

History

In 1957, a pair of national netball organisations discussed the need to create an international governing body for the sport to help address issues like standardising the rules. This conversation was started between England and Australia, while Australia was touring England. In 1960, netball representatives from Australia, England, New Zealand, South Africa and the West Indies finally gathered to create the needed organisation, the International Federation of Women's Basketball and Netball. The meeting took place in Sri Lanka (then known as Ceylon), with rules for the newly creating organisation being created. A decision was made at this first meeting create a world championship competition for the sport to be held every four years, with the first event to be held in 1963 in Eastbourne, England.

The organisation has since undergone several changes. After all countries adopted the name "netball" for the sport, the organisation was renamed the "International Federation of Netball Associations" (IFNA). This name was used until November 2012, when the organisation changed to its current name, the "International Netball Federation" (INF), to bring it in line with other sports governing bodies.

Netball World Cup

The INF is responsible for organising the Netball World Cup (formerly the World Netball Championships), the premier event in international netball, held every four years.[7] The table below contains a list of these championships/cups, where they took place and how many teams competed in the event and the winners.

Year Location Number of teams Winner
1963 Details[8][9] Eastbourne, England[10][11] 11 Australia
1967 Details[9] Perth, Australia 8 New Zealand
1971 Details[9] Kingston, Jamaica[7] 9 Australia
1975 Details[9] Auckland, New Zealand[7][11] 11 Australia
1979 Details[9] Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago 19 New Zealand, Australia, Trinidad & Tobago
1983 Details[9] Singapore City, Singapore[7][12] 14 Australia
1987 Details[9] Glasgow, Scotland 17 New Zealand
1991 Details[9] Sydney, Australia 20 Australia
1995 Details[9] Birmingham, England 27 Australia
1999 Details[9] Christchurch, New Zealand[7][11] 26 Australia
2003 Details[9] Kingston, Jamaica[13] 24 New Zealand
2007 Details[9] Auckland, New Zealand[11] 16 Australia
2011 Details[9] Singapore, Singapore 16 Australia
2015 Details[9] Sydney, Australia 16 Australia
2019 Details[9] Liverpool, England 16 New Zealand
2023 Details[9] Cape Town, South Africa 16 -

Netball World Youth Cup

The INF is responsible for organising the Netball World Youth Cup (formerly the World Youth Netball Championships), the premier event in international netball, held every four years in a year other than that of the Netball World Cup.[7] The Netball World Youth Cup is the pinnacle of netball competition for emerging players who are under 21 years of age and the INF has held an U21 international competition every four years since 1988. The table below contains a list of these championships/cups, where they took place and how many teams competed in the event and the winners.

Year Location Number of teams Winner
1988[14] Canberra, Australia, England[10][11] 9 Australia
1992[14] Suva, Fiji, England[10][11] 11 New Zealand
1996[14] Toronto, Canada, England[10][11] 18 Australia
2000[14] Cardiff, Wales, England[10][11] 11 Australia
2005[14] Fort Lauderdale, USA, England[10][11] 20 New Zealand
2009[14] Rarotonga, Cook Islands, England[10][11] 20 Australia
2013[14] Glasgow, Scotland, England[10][11] 20 New Zealand
2017[14] Gaborone, Botswana, England[10][11] 20 New Zealand

Fast5 Netball World Series

The Fast5 Netball World Series is an international competition that features modified Fast5 rules, and has been likened to Twenty20 cricket and rugby sevens.[15][16] The competition is contested by the six top national netball teams in the world, according to the INF World Rankings, with teams from Australia, England, Fiji, Jamaica, Malawi New Zealand, Samoa and South Africa having played in the series so far. The Series was first held in England from 2009-2011 and the game played was called Fast Net, this evolved into Fast5 in 2012.[17]

Year Location Number of teams Winner
2009[18] Manchester, England, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2010[18] Liverpool, England, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2011[18] Liverpool, England, England[10][11] 6 England
2012[18] Auckland, New Zealand, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2013[18] Auckland, New Zealand, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2014[18] Auckland, New Zealand, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2016[18] Melbourne, Australia, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand
2017[18] Melbourne, Australia, England[10][11] 6 England
2018[18] Melbourne, Australia, England[10][11] 6 New Zealand

Goals and objectives

The INF’s fundamental purpose is to promote, improve and grow netball globally, in accordance with the ideals and objects of the Olympic and Commonwealth movements. One of the goals of the INF is to attain International Olympic Committee (IOC) recognition for netball and to lobby for the sport's inclusion at future Olympic Games.[7]

National organisations

The INF is responsible for Netball across the Globe with currently 72 Members, 53 Full Members and 20 Associate Members across 5 Regions; Africa, America, Asia, Europe and Oceania.

Africa Netball Region
Full Members Associate Members
Botswana Burundi
Ghana Cameroon
Kenya Central African Republic
Lesotho Guinea
Malawi Liberia
Namibia Nigeria
South Africa Seychelles
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Ivory Coast
Americas Netball Region
Full Members Associate Members
Antigua & Barbuda Anguilla
Argentina
Barbados
Bermuda
Canada
Cayman Islands
Dominica
Grenada
Jamaica
St Lucia
St Maartens
St Vincent & the Grenadines
Trinidad & Tobago
USA
St Kitts & Nevis
Asia Netball Region
Full Members Associate Members
Australia Bahrain
Chinese Taipei Brunei
Hong Kong Philippines
India Japan
Malaysia Korea
Pakistan Nepal
Singapore Timor Leste
Sri Lanka
Thailand
The Maldives
Europe Netball Region
Full Members Associate Members
England Denmark
Gibraltar Sweden
Israel
Malta
Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland
Scotland
Switzerland
Wales
Manx Netball (Isle of Man)
United Arab Emirates
Oceania Netball Region
Full Members Associate Members
Cook Islands Soloman Islands
Fiji Norfolk Island
New Zealand Tokelau
Papua New Guinea
Tonga
Samoa

The following (incomplete) list is a timeline of national organisations becoming affiliated with the International Netball Federation:

1960

1978

1992

2010

gollark: The haskell version uses *floats*, if you can believe that.
gollark: <@!319753218592866315> Fix the code in a way which will *not* entirely kill performance.
gollark: Wonderful.
gollark: ```rust// randomly increase/decrease one of the channels in a color by `range`fn mod_channel(rng: &mut WyRand, range: u16, n: u16) -> u16 { let rand = rng.generate_range(0, range * 2 + 1); let o = ((n as u32) + (rand as u32)).saturating_sub(range as u32); o as u16}```
gollark: This is basically just meant to increase/decrease a `u16` by a randomly generated `u16` amount.

See also

References

  1. "Members". Netball.org. Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
  2. "International Netball Federation". Netball Australia. Archived from the original on 13 February 2016. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  3. International Netball Federation
  4. International Netball Federation 2011a
  5. International Netball Federation 2009c
  6. International Netball Federation & a
  7. International Netball Federation 2008
  8. Sri Lanka Netball 2010
  9. World Netball Championships 2011 Singapore 2011
  10. Australian Women's Weekly 1979
  11. Netball Singapore 2011b
  12. Netball Singapore 2011
  13. Hickey & Navin 2007, p. 35
  14. Netball World Youth Cup
  15. Newstalk ZB (2 December 2008). "Innovative World Series planned for next year". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  16. Marshall, Jane (5 February 2009). "Kiwis keen on novel netball variant". The Press. Retrieved 6 February 2009.
  17. "Samoa prepares for World netball series". Samoa Observer. 18 December 2008. Archived from the original on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 5 February 2009.
  18. "Fast5 Netball World Series". International Netball Federation. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  19. Limca book of records. Bisleri Beverages Ltd. 1991. pp. 101 (Delhi). ISBN 81-900115-1-0.
  20. Hull 2000
  21. United States of America Netball Association (USANA), Inc. 2010

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.