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DF’s R48 Trends and Facts: 2011-Present

Through 75 events on the Race 4 Eight tour from 2011-2023, the Race 4 Eight has produced sensational tournaments, memorable matches, dominant champions and inspiring stories, all broadcast live on WPH Patreon, wphlive.tv or on ESPN. Read below for fun facts and trends from the eleven seasons on the most exciting indoor pro handball tour in the sport.

2022/23 Race 4 Eight Fun Facts Post the February 2023 R48 Red Death

 

  • Killian Carroll won his first title of the 2022/23 season and twenty-first overall at the 2023 R48 Red Death
  • Carroll became the third R48 champion of the 2022/23 season (Lucho, Mulkerrins)
  • Carroll has won every R48 Red Death event (2018, 2019, 2020, 2023)
  • Carroll ended his two-match losing streak to Martin Mulkerrins in the 2023
    Red Death final – Mulkerrins is the only player to have defeated Killian Carroll since 2019
  • After making the finals of the first four events of the 2022/23 R48 season, Lucho lost in the semifinals of the 2023 Red Death (Carroll)
  • Shorty Ruiz advanced to his first full Race 4 Eight 4-Wall semifinal at the 2023 Red Death
  • With his fifth-place finish at the 2023 Red Death, Leo Canales has finished in the top five of all four of his 2022/23 R48 starts (3rd, 5th, 3rd, 5th)
  • 19-year-old Mark Doyle notched his best career R48 finish at the 2023 Red Death (6th)
  • Martin Mulkerrins won his third R48 title in his last four starts and fourth overall R48 title on his thirtieth birthday at the 2023 R48 New Orleans Mardi Gras
  • Aimee Tuohey won the first WR48 LTE in WR48 history at the 2023 WR48 LTE Mardi Gras – Tuohey became the fifth different player to win a WR48 title (Casey, Reilly, McMahon, Daskalakis)
  • Only Catriona Casey has won more than one WR48 event (23)
  • Martin Mulkerrins outscored his four Mardi Gras opponents by a combined score of 120-32: 79%, which was 1% better than Lucho’s mark at the 2022 R48 Memorial
  • Lucho Cordova’s 12-match, two-tournament R48 winning streak ended with his finals loss to Martin Mulkerrins in the 2023 R48 Mardi Gras final – Lucho’s 11-match, two-tournament R48 Mardi Gras streak also ended with his loss to Mulkerrins
  • Martin Mulkerrins is 3-0 in tiebreakers through four events on the 2022/23 R48 tour (def Danos in Portland, def Killian at the Memorial, def Shorty at the Icebreaker – all tiebreakers)
  • Martin Mulkerrins leads Lucho Cordova 2-1 in their head-to-head matchups on the 2022/23 R48 tour (all finals). Mulkerrins has outscored Lucho 75-55 in those three matches (58%)
  • There have been four different finalists in the first five R48 events on the 2022/23 R48 tour: Lucho (4), Mulkerrins (3), Fink (1), Carroll (1)
  • The Mardi Gras hosts served the best fried catfish and gumbo in the history of the R48 tour at Saturday’s 2023 Mardi Gras lunch
  • Killian Carroll’s record streak of 2,451 days ranked #1 on the R48 tour ended on December 11, 2022 when Lucho Cordova took over the top spot for the first time (March 26, 2017 – December 11, 2022) *605 of the 2,451 days were during the pandemic, meaning Carroll’s official #1 streak lasted 1,846 days
  • Lucho Cordova became the ninth player to be ranked #1 on the R48 Men’s Pro tour (Chapman, Lenning, Moreno, Shanks, Brady, Ortiz, Carroll, Fink, Lucho)
  • With his sixth R48 title at the R48 Icebreaker in December of 2022, Lucho has won the fifth most titles of any player in R48 Men’s Pro history (Carroll, Brady, Moreno, Lenning, Lucho)
  • In winning the 2022 R48 Icebreaker, Lucho Cordova became just the fourth R48 Men’s Pro to win back-to-back R48 titles (Moreno, Brady, Carroll)
  • In the first three starts of the 2022/23 R48 season, Lucho has appeared in all three finals (Portland, Tucson, Tucson) and won two titles (consecutively)
  • Killian Carroll has played in just one of the first three R48 events of the 2022/23 season, finishing tied third at the 2022 R48 Memorial
  • Lucho Cordova has advanced to the final of both R48 Icebreakers, coming in second in 2021 and winning and 2022
  • After winning the 2022 R48 Icebreaker, Lucho Cordova has now won six R48 titles
  • Leo Canales, Jr. came within one point of advancing to his second consecutive R48 semifinal at the R48 Icebreaker, losing to Danos Cordova 11-10 in the tiebreaker in the quarterfinal – Leo defeated Danos in a quarterfinals rematch in the next event in New Orleans, in a tiebreaker
  • Canales, Jr. became the first player to lose a main draw match after holding match point since David Fink lost to Vic Perez 16-14 in the tiebreaker in the quarterfinals of the 2020 R48 Red Death in Montana (1,050 days) – Fink added his name that the list again at the next event in New Orleans, holding four match points in a loss to Mark Doyle
  • After finishing tied 13th at the 2022 R48 Memorial and reinjuring his foot, Danos Cordova bounced back with a semifinal finish at the 2022 R48 Icebreaker
  • Martin Mulkerrins advanced to the semifinals of his first R48 Icebreaker at the 2022 R48 Icebreaker
  • David Fink became the oldest pro stop finalist in handball history at the 2022 R48 Icebreaker (45 years, 4 months) in advancing to his sixth R48 final
  • Lucho Cordova won his first Memorial and fifth R48 title at the 2022 R48 Memorial, outscoring his five opponents by a combined score of 145-40 (78%), one of the most dominant R48 performances in the 72-event history of the tour
  • Catriona Casey won her twenty-third WR48 event in twenty-five WR48 starts, outscoring her three opponents by a combined score of 90-23 (80%)
  • David Fink won his ninth SR48 title in ten SR48 starts and second in a tiebreaker against Bill Mehilos at the 2022 Tucson Memorial
  • Eilise McCrory became just the fourth WR48 star to score ten points in a game first against Catriona Casey (Reilly, Ni Churraoin, McMahon) in the semifinals of the 2022 Memorial
  • In between winning the November 2022 R48 Memorial and December 2022 R48 Icebreaker, Lucho Cordova won a 16-team Padel Tennis doubles tournament in Mexico
  • After winning the 2022 Memorial and 2022 Icebreaker and advancing to the final of the 2023 Mardi Gras, Lucho Cordova held the longest winning streak on the 2022/23 R48 season (12 matches)
  • Catriona Casey holds the longest current winning streak on the Race 4 Eight (R48, WR48, SR48) with 35 consecutive match wins and 11 straight WR48 tournament wins
  • Leo Canales, Sr. (56) became the oldest SR48 semifinalist in history at the 2022 Memorial
  • Leo Canales, Jr. advanced to his third R48 semifinal at the 2022 Memorial (2019 Memorial, 2021 R48 Icebreaker)
  • Loren Collado’s two-tournament R48 top 7 streak (2022 Player’s Championship, 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic) ended at the 2022 Memorial (11th)
  • Shorty Ruiz finished sixth in three consecutive R48 starts (2022 Player’s Championship, 2022 Memorial, 2022 R48 Icebreaker) – Ruiz’s streak of sixth place finishes ended in New Orleans with a seventh place finish
  • In winning fifth place at the 2022 R48 Memorial, David Fink has won the fifth place playoffs a record 14 times and currently owns an 11-match playoff winning streak dating back to the 2019 Memorial
  • Dylan Hernandez won five of his six matches (only loss to Carroll) at the 2022 Tucson Memorial to finish ninth, his best career R48 finish – Hernandez finished tenth in his previous R48 start at the 2022 Aces Player’s Championship
  • Max Langmack enjoyed a four-tournament streak of top seven finishes: 2022 Player’s Championship: 5th, 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic: 5th, 2022 Memorial, 7th, 2022 R48 Icebreaker, 7th
  • Martin Mulkerrins won his third Race 4 Eight event in 13 starts at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic – the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic was also Martin’s second consecutive R48 win (2022 Aces R48 Player’s Championship) and eighth consecutive R48 match win – Mulkerrins won his fourth R48 title at the 2023 Mardi Gras in January
  • Kyle English (OR) became the first former professional football player to finish in the top eight of a Race 4 Eight event at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic – Kinglish took MVP honors at the 2022 Memorial by finishing 17th
  • David Fink picked up his 137th Race 4 Eight match win (most in history) with his semifinal win against Martin Mulkerrins at the 2022 R48 Icebreaker
  • Max Langmack matched his best career R48 finish at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic – Langmack defeated Loren Collado to finish fifth
  • Danos Cordova was the only player to win a game (semifinals) against Martin Mulkerrins at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic – the only players to win games against Mulkerrins during his eight-match winning streak are Carroll and Danos
  • Jab Bike joined his hall of fame father John Bike, Jr. and future hall of fame uncle Naty Alvarado, Jr. as match winners on the Race 4 Eight tour at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic – no Bike or Alvarado has won a Race title….yet
  • To ensure competitive balance and eliminate vanity entries into pro brackets, the WPH instituted entry rules into Race 4 Eight pro draws – the WPH policy to enter a pro event is: former or current ranked player, former or current qualifier, won a state or national championship in the Open bracket and are stepping up/progressing, all others must check in with WPH Directors for approval
  • Lucho Cordova advanced to his thirteenth Race 4 Eight final at the 2023 R48 Mardi Gras
  • Loren Collado earned his highest career R48 finish at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic (sixth), meaning his two best career R48 finishes have come in his last two R48 starts (seventh at the 2022 Aces R48 Player’s Championship)
  • By hosting the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic, Oregon has hosted the sixth most Race 4 Eight events of any city (4)
  • Jab Bike brought the most fans (8) to the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic, accounting for 67% of the fans at the event
  • After playing in every Race 4 Eight Men’s Pro event during the 2021/22 R48 X season, ironmen Sam Esser (Handballesta slam), Leo Canales, Jr. (Phoenix Mercury WNBA home game), and Shorty Ruiz (Rocky Point, MEX round table vacation) skipped the R48 XI’s first event at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic
  • ESPN play-by-play announcer, WPH photographer and professional comedian Dave Vincent announced ten matches and posted 267 pictures at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic
  • Naty Alvarado, Jr. was the R48’s highest-ranked former player (#2) in the gallery at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic
  • Following the 2022 SR48 Memorial, Marcos Chavez holds the record for most SR48 titles (10), David Fink (9) sits one behind Chavez
  • ESPN’s Race 4 Eight lead interviewer and on-court correspondent Kara Mack

has interviewed Matt Damon, Angelina Jolie, The Rock, Steve Carrell, Jennifer Aniston, Kevin Costner, Owen Wilson, Hugh Jackman, John Travolta, Matthew McConaughey, Meg Ryan, Kate Hudson, Charlize Theron, Robert De Niro, Isla Fisher, Drew Barrymore, Mark Walberg, Scarlett Johansson, Sigourney Weaver, Vince Vaughn, Jaime Lee Curtis, Sean Penn, Elizabeth Shue, Kurt Russell, Mila Kunis, Ashton Kutcher, Reese Witherspoon and dozens of more A listers #thebestinthebusiness #B-listersneednotapply

  • WPH ESPN broadcast engineer/quarterback Kris Gurrad has won three Emmy awards for his work in the Northwest Chapter
  • WPH camera operator Che Lowenstein has been nominated for three Emmy’s and has won one, in addition to winning awards from National Press Photographers Association, Associated Press, Society of Professional Journalists and a 3rd place CLIO. Che’s most exciting moment was creating the Portland Timbers (soccer) championship documentary called The Magic Was Real. The film debuted in a local theater with a packed house, who gave it a great response
  • Since the inception of the Race 4 Eight tour in 2011, the WPH has furnished $2.15 million in prize money, incentive money, and entry fee money for the R48, WR48, and SR48 pros, which does not include broadcasting fees

 

2022/23 R48 XI Season Win/Loss Records and Finishes of the R48 Elite

Lucho (5 events): 17-3, 2nd, 1st, 1st , 2nd, 3rd

Mulkerrins (5 events): 17-3, 1st, 2nd, 3rd , 1st, , 2nd  

Carroll (2 events): 7-1, 3rd , 1st

Fink (5 events): 10-6, 3rd, 5th, 2nd , 13th , 7th

Danos (4 events): 9-4, 3rd, 13th, 3rd , 5th

Canales, Jr. (4 events): 11-4, 3rd, 5th , 3rd , 5th

Ruiz (4 events): 8-7, 6th, 6th , 7th , 3rd

Langmack (5 events): 12-7, 5th, 7th, 7th , 9th , 9th

Hernandez (3 events): 5-5, 9th, 13th, 13th

Esser (3 events): 3-5, 25th, 11th , 6th

 

Digging into the History of the Race 4 Eight Tour

  • In 75 Men’s Race 4 Eight Pro events, there have been 12 different champions and 17 different finalists. Of the 17 different finalists, 10 have been from the U.S., six from Ireland, and one from Mexico
  • 10 U.S. finalists: Moreno, Ortiz, Nett, Lenning, Alvarado, Al. Garner, Fink, Peixoto, D. Cordova, Perez
  • 5 Irish finalists: McCarthy, Brady, Nash, Shanks, Carroll, Mulkerrins
  • 1 Mexican finalist: L. Cordova
  • In 75 R48 Men’s Pro finals since 2011, 25 finals have gone to a tiebreaker (33%)
  • Combining R48, WR48, and SR48, the WPH has hosted 127 Race 4 Eight events (combining R48, WR48, and SR48), not including R48 Pre Qualifiers (this is in addition to 20 Icebreakers from 2020-2022, 56 WPH Outdoor events, and 47 open tournaments)

 

2021/22 Race 4 Eight X Fun Facts

 

Finishes of the 15 Race 4 Eight X Quarterfinalists through the 2021-2022 R48 Season

  • Carroll: 6 starts (1st, 1st, 1st, 1st,. 1st, 2nd)
  • L. Cordova: 5 starts (2nd, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 2nd 3rd)
  • Fink: 5 starts (5th, 1st, 3rd , 3rd ,9th)
  • D. Cordova: 6 starts (3rd, 3rd, 2nd, 7th, 3rd ,5th)
  • Canales, Jr.: 7 starts (7th, 5th, 3rd, 7th, 7th , 6th ,13th)
  • Esser: 7 starts (7th, 9th, 6th, 5th, 5th, 5th 13th)
  • Ruiz: 7 starts (9th, 5th, 3rd, 17th, 10th, 7th, 6th)
  • Cooney: 5 starts (6th, 5th, 3rd, 17th 11th)
  • Montijo: 6 starts (10th, 9th, 7th, 6th, 9th, 7th)
  • Langmack: 7 starts (11th, 9th, 5th, 9th, 7th, 9th 7th)
  • Lenning: 3 starts (3rd, 5th 3rd)
  • Brady: 1 start (2nd)
  • Mulkerrins: 2 starts (3rd, 1st)
  • Bernhard: 2 starts (6th, 11th)
  • Mehilos: 6 starts (9th, 10th, 7th, 13th, 11th  17th)

*The R48 Stop #2/USHA Four Wall Nationals did not have a 5th place or 9th place playoff, meaning the quarterfinals losers were given a 5th place finish and the round of 16 losers were given a 9th place finish for their average finish

 

Best career Race 4 Eight Results

Carroll: win (21 titles)

Cordova: win (4 titles)

Cordova: win (3 titles)

Lenning: win (7 titles)

Fink: win (1 title)

Cooney: 3rd 

Canales, Jr.: 3rd

Esser: 5th

Brady: win (15 titles)

Mulkerrins: win (3 titles)

Ruiz: 3rd

Bernhard: 6th

Langmack: 5th

Montijo: 5th

Mehilos: 7th

There have been 12 different champions in the history of the R48 Men’s Pro – Moreno, Ortiz, Al. Garner, McCarthy, Shanks, in addition to the seven champions listed

 

2021/22 Race 4 Eight Breakthroughs: all players listed achieving their career-best Race 4 Eight finishes during the 2021/22 season

Fink: Best previous finish: 2nd, best 2021/22 finish: 1st

Ruiz: Best previous finish, 7th, best 2021/22 finish: 3rd

Langmack: Best previous finish: 10th, best 2021/22 finish: 5th

Bernhard: Best previous finish: 11th, best 2021/22 finish: 6th

Esser: Best previous finish: 13th, best 2021/22 finish: 5th

Esser: Best previous finish: n/a, best 2021/22 finish: 3rd

Daskalakis: Best previous finish: 3rd, best 2021/22 finish: 1st

Moler: Best previous finish: 6th, best 2021/22 finish: 2nd

Tully: Best previous finish: 3rd, best 2021/22 finish: 2nd

Mehilos (R48): Best previous finish: n/a, best 2021/22 finish: 7th

Mehilos (SR48): Best previous finish: 4th, best 2021/22 finish: 2nd

 

Killian’s 42-Match, 9-Tournament Winning Streak (November 3, 2019-April 10, 2022)

  • 42 straight WPH pro singles wins
  • 10 consecutive WPH pro singles titles
  • 888 days between WPH pro singles loss (November 3, 2019-April 8, 2022)
  • 83-6 in games won/lost during 42-match streak
  • 7 consecutive R48 (4-Wall) titles
  • 3 consecutive WPH Icebreaker titles (undefeated in Icebreaker career)
  • 20 Race 4 Eight titles in 36 starts (most ever R48 Men’s Pro titles)
  • Killian has held the R48 #1 ranking since April of 2017

Danielle’s 9-Match, 3-Tournament Winning Streak (August 16, 2021-April 9, 2022)

  • 9 consecutive WPH pro singles wins
  • 3 consecutive titles (2021 Ice Bowl, 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals, 2022 January Classic)
  • 18-3 in games won/lost (86%) in 9-match streak
  • 3-0 in tiebreakers
  • 368-212 points won/lost (63%) during 9-match streak
  • First American player to win a WR48 event (Casey: 20, Reilly: 1, McMahon: 1, Danielle: 1)
  • Daskalakis is the only Race 4 Eight champion to have also won the 1-Wall small ball and big ball singles national titles, the 3-Wall singles national title, and the 4-Wall national title.
  • Daskalakis is the current 3-Wall national singles champion, current 4-Wall national champion, and currently the #1 player on the 2021/22 WR48 tour

 

R48 X Win/Loss Records of the 15 R48 X quarterfinalists

 

Carroll: 24-1, 6 events

Cordova: 15-6, 6 events

Cordova: 13-7, 6 events

Fink: 15-4, 5 events

Canales, Jr.: 11-12, 7 events

Esser: 13-9, 7 events

Ruiz: 15-10, 7 events

Cooney: 7-8, 5 events

Montijo: 12-10, 6 events

Langmack: 16-10, 7 events

Mehilos: 9-9, 6 events

Lenning: 5-3, 3 events

Brady: 3-1, 1 event

Mulkerrins: 6-1, 2 events

Bernhard: 5-4, 2 events

 

2021/22 WR48 Elite Records

Casey: 6-0, 2 events

Daskalakis: 6-1, 2 events

Tully: 4-2, 2 events

Tuohey: 4-3, 2 events

Moler: 5-5, 3 events

Esser: 5-3, 3 events

McMahon: 3-1, 1 event

 

 

  • The 2022 R48 X Player’s Championship was the 70th R48 Pro event since the inception of the tour in 2011
  • The 2021/22 Race 4 Eight X featured seven R48 Men’s Pro events, three WR48 events, and one SR48 event, with 246 pro players competing in the eleven combined R48 Men’s Pro (206 players), WR48 (32 players), and SR48 (8 players) events.
  • The only players to finish in the top three in all of their R48 Men’s Pro starts during the 2022/23 season were Carroll (6), Lucho (6), Mulkerrins (2), Brady (1)
  • The only players on the 2022/23 Race 4 Eight with less total losses than total starts were Carroll (1 loss, 6 starts), Mulkerrins (1 loss, 2 starts), Fink (4 losses, 5 starts), Casey (0 losses, 2 starts)
  • Catriona Casey was the only player to be outscored on the 2021/22 Race 4 Eight and still win the match (32-36 in the 2022 WR48 Player’s Championship final vs. McMahon)
  • The only players to play in all three WR48 events during the 2022/23 season were Ashley Moler, Mikaila Esser, and Kristen Hughes
  • Martin Mulkerrins outscored his four main draw opponents 132-62 (68%) en route to winning the 2022 R48 Player’s Championship – including Martin’s two qualifiers matches at the 2022 R48 Player’s Championship, Martin outscored his six opponents 182-71 (72%)
  • There were no players that earned ranking points in all seven 2021/22 R48 Men’s Pro events (Carroll – 6, Lucho – 6, Danos – 6, Canales – 6, Ruiz – 6)
  • There were no players that earned ranking points in the three 2021/22 WR48 events (Casey, Daskalakis, Tully, Tuohey, and Moler all earned ranking points in two of three events)
  • Sean Lenning played in his first Race 4 Eight qualifier at the 2022 R48 Player’s Championship after being an invited Elite 8 player in his first 59 Race 4 Eight starts – Lenning had not entered a qualifier in more than 20 years prior to the 2022 R48 Player’s Championship
  • After failing to make a semifinal in his first six years of play on the R48 tour, Martin Mulkerrins has finished in the top three of his last five R48 starts (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 1st, 1st)
  • In 30 main draw matches on the 2021/22 WR48, two went to tiebreakers (7%): Tully def Tuohey in Houston, Casey def McMahon in Salt Lake City
  • In seven main draw matches on the 2021/22 SR48, one went to a tiebreaker (14%): Garcia def Hammond in Salt Lake City
  • In the seven stops on the R48 X, there were three different champions: Carroll (5), Fink (1), Mulkerrins (1)
  • The R48 X March Madness was the third R48 X event to be held at the Tucson Racquet Club (2021 R48 X Tucson Memorial, 2022 R48 X January Classic)
  • The R48 X March Madness was the fourth R48 X event held in Tucson
  • Two R48 X finalists were their 40’s: Fink (44), Brady (42)
  • There were seven different R48 X finalists: Carroll (4), L. Cordova (3), Brady (1), Fink (1), D. Cordova (1), Nash (1), Mulkerrins (1)
  • The January Classic featured R48 Men’s Pro players born in four countries: U.S., Mexico, Canada, Ireland
  • The R48 X March Madness was the 13th R48 event held in Tucson
  • Tucson has the most glass-banging fans of any R48 locale (6) – the oldest Tucson glass banger is 82 and the youngest Tucson glass banger is two years old
  • Killian Carroll’s 32-match, seven-tournament R48 winning streak was snapped by Martin Mulkerrins in the 2022 R48 Player’s Championship final
  • R48 Men’s Pros Juan Canales Sr. and Juan Canales, Jr are the first (and only) father and son to qualify on the R48 tour
  • Martin Mulkerrins holds the longest current winning streak on the R48 tour (8- consecutive titles in Salt Lake ’22 and Portland ’22)
  • Bill Mehilos became the first player to play three straight David’s in three consecutive matches at the 2022 Houston R48 (David Walsh, David Fink, David Miller)
  • Sam and Mikaila Esser and Shorty Ruiz and Ashley Moler became the first couples to play simultaneously in adjacent courts in the Race 4 Eight playoffs at the 2022 Houston Race 4 Eight: The Essers both won, Moler and Ruiz both lost
  • Lucho Cordova received the only technical of the R48 X season in Houston – Lucho was also called for the most avoidable hinders on the R48 X season (5)
  • Of the 15 matches played from the Round of 16 to the final at the 2021 Tucson Memorial, 2 of 15 went to a tiebreaker (13%) – Canales vs. Iglesias, Cooney vs. Ruiz (both Round of 16 matches)
  • Of the 15 matches played from the Round of 16 to the final at the 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals/R48 10 Stop #2, four went to a tiebreaker (27%) – Cooney vs. Esser, Ruiz vs. Ure, Carroll vs. Mulkerrins, Carroll vs. Brady
  • Of the 15 matches played from the Round of 16 to the final at the 2021 R48 Men’s Pro Icebreaker, 2 went to a tiebreaker (13%) – Montijo vs. Mehilos, Canales vs. Esser
  • Out of 45 main draw (starting with the round of 16) R48 Men’s Pro matches in the first three stops of the season, 8 went to a tiebreaker (18%)
  • Of the seven WR48 main draw matches at the 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals/WR48 Stop #1, 0 went to a tiebreaker

Top 8 2021 Tucson Memorial Point Differentials, Points Scored vs. Lost, Percentage of Points Won, Match Record

  • 1st: Carroll: +82, 150-68 (69%), 5-0
  • 2nd: Lucho: +37, 103-66 (61%), 3-1
  • 3rd: Danos: +32, 82-50 (62%), 2-1
  • 3rd: Lenning: +31, 79-48 (62%), 2-1
  • 5th: Fink: +48, 118-70 (63%), 4-1
  • 6th: Cooney: +7, 109-102 (52%), 3-2
  • 7th: Esser: -9, 78-87 (47%), 2-2
  • 7th: Canales: -11, 97-108 (47%). 2-2
  • The 2021 Tucson Memorial R48 Top 8 were born in three different countries: U.S. (5), Ireland (2), Mexico (1)
  • The 2021 Tucson Memorial R48 Top 8 all reside in the U.S. in five different states: MA (Carroll), Lucho (TX), Danos (TX), Lenning (WA), Fink (AZ), Cooney (CA), Canales (TX), Esser (AZ)

 

 

2021/22 R48 Kansas/Missouri Breakthrough

  • Esser (formerly from KS): first quarterfinal appearance on the Race 4 Eight (finished seventh at the, 2021 Tucson Memorial and seventh at the R48 X Holiday Icebreaker, fifth at the 2022 January Classic, fifth at the 2022 Race 4 Eight Houston, fifth at the R48 X March Madness
  • Langmack (KS): first quarterfinal appearance on the Race 4 Eight (finished fifth at the R48 X Holiday Icebreaker, first 4-Wall R48 quarterfinal finish at the 2022 Houston R48 (finished 7th)
  • Mikaila Esser advanced to her first WR48 semifinal at the 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals/WR48 Stop #1

 

Daskalakis Breaks Through on the WR48

  • Danielle Daskalakis became the first American player to win a WR48 event in the 23rd WR48 event held (Casey: 20, Reilly: 1, McMahon: 1)
  • Daskalakis ended Casey’s 8-tournament WR48 win streak in Nashville (Casey did not start in Nashville)
  • Daskalakis became the second left-handed player to win on the WR48 (McMahon), and third left-handed player to win on the three Race 4 Eight tours (McMahon, Fink)
  • Daskalakis is the only Race 4 Eight champion to have also won the 1-Wall small ball and big ball singles national titles, the 3-Wall singles national title, and the 4-Wall national title. Wow!
  • Daskalakis is the current 3-Wall national singles champion, current 4-Wall national champion, and currently the #1 player on the 2021/22 WR48 tour
  • Danielle outscored her three opponents at the 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals/WR48 Stop #1 by a combined 126-60 (68%)

 

Catriona Casey 11-Tournament WR48 Winning Streak (February 2018-current)

  • Catriona has won 23 of the 25 WR48 events she has entered
  • Catriona has only missed one WR48 stop in the 25-stop history of the tour (Nashville USHA Four Wall Nationals, December 2021)
  • When Catriona hit her first serve in Houston, it had been 734 days since she last competed on the WR48 tour (last start/win: New Orleans, February 16, 2020)
  • Catriona entered the 2022 WR48 Player’s Championship having just won the 2022 GAA She’s Ace, 2022 GAA Irish Nationals, 2022 Houston WR48, and the 2022 All Ireland 40×20 Championship
  • Catriona finished number one in every completed WR48 season (2014-2022)
  • Catriona has won every WR48 Player’s Championship (7) ever held (2014-2022)
  • In 25 Women’s R48 starts, Catriona Casey owns a 76-2 match record (97%)
  • In the 25 WR48 events Catriona Casey has won, Casey won 145 out of 150 games played (97%)
  • Catriona Casey is the only player in Race 4 Eight history to have started a Race 4 Eight event and never lost before the finals, having appeared in every WR48 final in which she has entered (23-2 in 25 WR48 finals)
  • Catriona Casey became the first women’s player in the history of handball to defeat a current men’s pro in tournament play at the NYAC ’18 – Casey defeated then R48 #22 Loren Collado 25-19 in the 17thplace playoffs
  • Catriona has traveled more than 210,000 miles to compete on the WR48 tour in her 24 WR48 starts  

 

Most Match Wins in R48 Men’s Pro History (2011-current: main draw and playoff match wins)

  • Fink: 138-84
  • Carroll 130-18
  • Lenning: 126-61
  • Lucho: 118-61
  • Danos: 104-62
  • Moreno: 98-36
  • Peixoto: 88-70
  • Brady: 73-6
  • Perez: 73-68
  • Ortiz: 66-42

 

2011 Plummer Bash R48 Elite 8 (October 2011, First Race 4 Eight Event)

Sean Lenning

Naty Alvarado, Jr.

Luis Moreno

Allan Garner

David Fink

Armando Ortiz

Tommy Little

Andy Nett

2022/21 End of Season Elite 8 Rankings

Killian Carroll

Lucho Cordova

Danos Cordova

David Fink

Leo Canales, Jr.

Sam Esser

Shorty Ruiz

Martin Mulkerrins

 

2013 WR48 Fab 4 -After first WR48 Stop at the Oct 2013 Simple Green U.S. Open

Catriona Casey

Aisling Reilly

Megan Dorneker

Tracy Davis

2022 WR48 Fab 4 Post April Player’s Championship

Catriona Casey

Danielle Daskalakis

Fiona Tully

Aimee Tuohey

The only WR48 players to play in the first WR48 event at the 2013 Simple Green U.S. Open and the twenty-fifth WR48 event at the 2022 Aces Player’s Championship are Catriona Casey, Megan Dorneker, and Tracy Davis

 

The Race 4 Eight Men’s Pro has featured 75 events in ten+ seasons from the first Race 4 Eight event in Coeur d’Alene, ID at the Plummer Family Bash in October of 2011 through the 2022 R48 Icebreaker. Let’s examine the number of different finalists in those 74 R48 events.

  • 2011-2012 R48 I: six new finalists: Moreno, Alvarado, Lenning, Al. Garner, McCarthy, Shanks
  • 2012-2013 R48 II: one new finalist: Brady
  • 2013-2014 R48 III: three new finalists: Ortiz, Peixoto, Nash
  • 2014-2015 R48 IV: one new finalist: Nett
  • 2015-2016 R48 V: one new finalist: Carroll
  • 2016-2017 R48 VI: two new finalists: Fink, L. Cordova
  • 2017-2018 R48 VII: one new finalist: D. Cordova
  • 2018-2019 R48 VIII: one new finalist: Perez
  • 2019-2020 R48 IX: one new finalist: Mulkerrins
  • 2021-2022 R48 X: no new finalists
  • 2022-23 R48 XI: no new finalists

R48 Men’s Pro Tiebreaker Records (2011-current, minimum 14 tiebreakers)

Lenning: 18-15

Lucho: 18-10

Carroll: 21-6

Moreno: 13-6

Ortiz: 13-10

Chavez: 12-9

Perez 10-6

Danos: 10-11

Fink: 10-21

Peixoto: 3-11

 

Race 4 Eight Player’s Cup Champions (ranked #1 at season’s end)

 

R48 Men’s Pro

2012: Luis Moreno

2013: Charly Shanks

2014: Luis Moreno

2015: Paul Brady

2016: Paul Brady

2017: Killian Carroll

2018: Killian Carroll

2019: Killian Carroll

2022: Killian Carroll

 

WR48

2014: Catriona Casey

2015: Catriona Casey

2016: Catriona Casey

2017: Catriona Casey

2018: Catriona Casey

2019: Catriona Casey

2022: Catriona Casey

 

SR48

2013: John Bike, Jr.

2014: Marcos Chavez

2015: Marcos Chavez

2016: Marcos Chavez

2017: Marcos Chavez

2018: David Fink

2019: David Fink

2022: David Fink

 

Most R48 events started: Fink (70), Lenning (61), Emmett Peixoto (54)

Most R48 Men’s Pro 5th place playoff titles:

  • Fink: 14
  • Peixoto: 8
  • Perez: 8

The 75 events held on the Race 4 Eight tour since 2011 have been held in 17 different states

AZ (13)

CA (10)

UT (9)

TX (7)

NY (6)

OR (4)

GA (4)

LA (5)

MT (4)

WA (2)

CO (2)

ID (3)

MN (1)

AK (1)

NV (1)

PA (1)

TN (1)

 

37 of the last 52 Race 4 Eight events have appeared on ESPN3, starting with the 2014 Simple Green U.S. Open

 

In 75 Men’s R48Pro events from 2011-present, 12 different players have won a Race title

Carroll: 21

Brady: 15

Moreno: 10

Lenning: 7

Cordova: 6

Cordova: 3

McCarthy: 3

Mulkerrins: 4

Ortiz: 2

Shanks: 2

Al. Garner: 1

Fink: 1

 

Top winning percentages on the Men’s Pro Race 4 Eight Tour:

  • Killian Carroll has won 21 of 38 R48 events he has entered: 55%
  • Paul Brady has won 15 of 21 R48 events he has entered: 71%
  • Robbie McCarthy has won 3 of 10 R48 events he has entered: 30%
  • Luis Moreno has won 10 of 42 R48 events he has entered: 24%
  • Lucho Cordova has won 6 of 62 R48 events he has entered: 10%
  • Martin Mulkerrins has won 4 of 17 R48 events he has entered: 24%
  • Sean Lenning has won 7 of 61 R48 events he has entered: 11%
  • Charly Shanks has won 2 of 16 R48 events he has entered: 13%

 

In 75 official Men’s Pro R48 events, 2,246 players have entered, including the invited pros, qualifiers, and U.S. Open (open draw)

Allan “The Blonde Bombshell” Garner and David Fink are the only R48 Champions to have only one R48 title. The other R48 champions have won between 2-15 titles

 

R48 Men’s R48 Pro Finals Records:

  • Carroll: 21-5
  • Brady: 15-1
  • Moreno: 10-6
  • Lenning: 7-14
  • L. Cordova: 6-7
  • Mulkerrins: 4-3
  • D. Cordova 3-5
  • McCarthy: 3-3
  • Ortiz: 2-7
  • Shanks: 2-4
  • Al. Garner: 1-2
  • Alvarado: 0-5
  • Fink: 1-5
  • Peixoto: 0-2
  • Nett 0-1
  • Nash: 0-2
  • Perez: 0-1

 

Post 2022 R48 X Player’s Championship: Killian Carroll

  • Killian Carroll has won the most R48 Men’s Pro titles (21)
  • Carroll’s winning percentage in his Race 4 Eight career is 55% (21/38)
  • Killian Carroll won all nine of his games in his five matches at the 2021 Tucson Memorial (the round of 32 was one game to 25)

Killian Carroll dropped a game in the semifinals and finals at the 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals/R48 X Stop #2 (won both tiebreakers), Killian dropped game two in the 2022 Houston R48 final (Nash) and won the third game, Killian dropped the second game in the R48 X March Madness final and won the third game, Killian dropped the first game at the 2022 Player’s Championship and lost in a tiebreaker to Martin Mulkerrins

  • Killian Carroll faced game point once at the 2021 Tucson Memorial, trailing 14-13 against Sean Lenning in the semifinals before winning the game in overtime (16-14)
  • After seeing his lead cut to 11-10 in the 2021 Tucson Memorial final against Luis Cordova, Carroll ended his Memorial on a 19-3 run (15-11, 15-2)
  • In Carroll’s last R48 win before the tour’s hiatus at the 2020 RFC, Carroll outscored Daniel Cordova in the final 22-1 after being tied at eight in the first game (15-8, 15-1)
  • In Carroll’s last Icebreaker win at the August 2021 Ice Bowl, Carroll scored the final 20 points of the match against Daniel Cordova (21-9, 21-11)
  • Killian Carroll outscored his five opponents 150-68 (69%) in his five matches at the 2021 Tucson Memorial
  • Killian Carroll ended his 2021 Tucson Memorial +82 in points scored vs. lost
  • Killian outscored his 2021 Tucson Memorial opponents by an average of 16.4 points per match
  • Killian Carroll defeated the #32, #17, #9, #4, and #2 seeds at the 2021 Tucson Memorial – average seed Killian faced was 12.8
  • By contrast, Stephen Cooney was seeded 10thand also played five matches – Cooney faced the #23, #7, #2, #6, and #5 seeds, making the average seed he played in five matches 8.6
  • Killian Carroll traveled 2,641 miles from Boston, MA to Tucson, AZ to compete in the Tucson Memorial, the furthest distance traveled in the pro division by 988 miles (Minneapolis, MN)
  • Four players in the Men’s R48 draw traveled lass than 10 miles each to compete in the 2021 Tucson Memorial
  • Sean Lenning scored the most points against Carroll (19) in Carroll’s five matches at the 2021 Tucson Memorial
  • Including the three WPH Icebreaker events Carroll won in the summer of 2021, Carroll had won his last ten WPH Pro starts (Red Death 2020, RFC 2020, Three Icebreakers 2021, 2021 Tucson Memorial, 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals, 2022 R48 January Classic, 2022 Houston, 2022 March Madness) before losing in the final of the 2022 Player’s Championship
  • From November 9, 2021 until April 10, 2022, Carroll did not lose a WPH pro singles match in (890 days)
  • Carroll’s last loss in a WPH Pro match came on November 2, 2019 in the semifinals of the 2019 Tucson Memorial against Sean Lenning until losing to Martin Mulkerrins in the 2022 Aces Player’s Championship final
  • Since Carroll’s loss to Sean Lenning at the 2019 Tucson Memorial, Carroll lost four games in seven consecutive R48 wins before losing to Mulkerrins in the final of the 2022 Player’s Championship: 32-0, titles at the 2020 Red Death, 2020 RFC, 2021 Tucson Memorial, 2021 USHA Four Wall Nationals, 2022 R48 January Classic, 2022 Houston R48, 2022 March Madness
  • During his 42-match winning streak, Carroll has lost six games (two in Icebreakers, two at the USHA Four Wall Nationals, one at the R48 Houston, one at the R48 March Madness)
  • Carroll was 83-6 in games won/lost during the 42-match winning streak (93%)

 

Killian Carroll has played in the most R48 finals (26)

 

The WR48 has held 26 events since the inception of the tour in 2013

WR48 Finals Records:

Casey: 23-2

Daskalakis: 1-0

Reilly 1-6

Gawley: 0-1

Ni Churraoin: 0-5

McMahon: 1-5

Peixoto de Melo: 0-1

Davis: 0-1

Koehler 0-1

Tuohey: 1-1

Tilly: 0-2

Munroe: 0-1

In 25 Women’s R48 starts, Catriona Casey owns a 76-2 match record (97%)

In the 23 WR48 events Catriona Casey has won, Casey won 145 out of 150 games played (97%)

 

Naty Alvarado (5), Emmett Peixoto (2), Diarmaid Nash (2), Andy Nett (1), and Vic Perez (1) are the only players to have advanced to a R48 final and not won a title

Of the 150 R48 finalists in 75 R48 events, nine have been qualifiers, three qualifiers have won a title (Brady, Mulkerrins x 2)

R48 Men’s Pro Qualifier Statistics:

  • 103 players attempted to qualify during the R48 I season (21 qualified)
  • 86 players attempted to qualify during the R48 II season (30 qualified)
  • 91 players attempted to qualify during the R48 III season (25 qualified)
  • 152 players attempted to qualify during the R48 IV season (26 qualified)
  • 168 players attempted to qualify during the R48 V season (40 qualified, thus far) (per Luis Cordova, Sr.)
  • 125 players attempted to qualify during the R48 6 season (40 qualified)
  • 190 players attempted to qualify during the R48 7 season (33 qualified)
  • 200 players attempted to qualify during the R48 8 season (48 qualified)
  • 123 players attempted to qualify during the R48 9 season (25 qualified)
  • 33 players entered the only qualifier during the R48 X season (8 qualified): The first six events on the R48 X were open events (173 combined players entered the first six R48 X open events)
  • 127 players have entered the first five events of the 2022/23 R48 season (all open events)

R48 Stats

2017/18 R48 Match Analytics

Game averages tallied in games to 15. Game to 25 were included by dividing the totals by 1.7

 

Player: Killian Carroll

Kills/game: 8.8

Aces/game: 2.5

Passes/game: 2

Errors/game: 4.8

 

Player: Sean Lenning

Kills/game: 9.1

Aces/game: 2.3

Passes/game: 3.3

Errors/game: 6.1

 

Player: Mando Ortiz

Kills/game: 7.5

Aces/game: 1.4

Passes/game: 2.7

Errors/game: 6.5

 

Player: Daniel Cordova

Kills/game: 7

Aces/game: 1.8

Passes/game: 4.4

Errors/game: 5.2

 

Player: David Fink

Kills/game: 10.8

Aces/game: 0.8

Passes/game: 2.3

Errors/game: 5

 

Player: Luis Cordova

Kills/game: 5.3

Aces/game: 0.7

Passes/game: 2

Errors/game: 6.3

 

Player: Emmett Peixoto

Kills/game: 6.3

Aces/game: 0.3

Passes/game: 5

Errors/game: 6

 

Player: Vic Perez

Kills/game: 8.3

Aces/game: 1.2

Passes/game: 2

Errors/game: 5.2

 

Inside the Numbers

Elite 8 Men’s Pro Kill average/game to 15: 7.9

Elite 8 Men’s Pro Ace Serve average/game to 15: 1.4

Elite 8 Men’s Pro Pass Shot average/game to 15: 3

Elite 8 Men’s Pro Error average/game to 15: 5.6

 

Most average kill shots per game: Fink (10.8)

Most average ace serves per game: Carroll (2.5)

Most average pass shots per game: Peixoto (5)

Most average errors per game: Ortiz (6.5)

 

Most kill shots in one game: Fink (19) vs. Perez

Most ace serves in one game: Carroll (6) vs. Ortiz

Most pass shots in one game: D. Cordova (7) vs. Ruiz

Most errors in one game: M. Ortiz (14) vs. D. Cordova

 

R48 number’s 1-4 ranked pros average ace serves per game: 2

R48 number’s 5-8 ranked pros average ace serves per game: 0.95

 

2017/18 WR48 Match Analytics

Player: Catriona Casey

(match vs. Martina McMahon at ’17 WR48 Memorial)

Kills/game: 4.7

Aces/game: 0.3

Passes/game: 2.3

Errors/game:  10.3

 

Player: Martina McMahon

(match vs. Catriona Casey at the ’17 WR48 Memorial)

Kills/game: 6.7

Aces/game: 1.3

Passes/game: 2.7

Errors/game: 9.7

 

Player: Aimee Tuohey

(averages vs. Courtney Peixoto de Melo at the ’18 WR48 Player’s Championship and vs. Ashley Moler at the ’18 WR48 Las Vegas)

Kills/game: 7.7

Aces/game:  0.7

Passes/game: 4

Errors/game: 6.3

 

Player: Courtney Peixoto

(averages vs. Tracy Davis at the ’18 WR48 Las Vegas and vs. Aimee Tuohey at the ’18 WR48 Player’s Championship)

Kills/game: 2

Aces/game: 0.5

Passes/game: 6

Errors/game: 8.6

 

Player: Tracy Davis

(vs. Courtney Peixoto de Melo at the ’18 WR48 Las Vegas)

Kills/game: 2.5

Aces/game: 1

Passes/game: 7.5

Errors/game: 9

 

Player: Ashley Moler

(vs. Aimee Tuohey at the ’18 WR48 Las Vegas)

Kills/game: 4

Aces/game: 0

Passes/game: 2

Errors/game: 15

 

Kills=ball bounces twice in front of returner before he/she touches the ball

Aces= returner does not get his/her hand on the ball before the ball bounces twice

Passes: ball goes behind the returner and he/she does not touch the ball before the ball bounces twice

Errors: any ball that hits a player’s hand that does not make the front wall (diving, on the run not included)

 

Assorted R48 Fun Facts 

Catriona Casey leads the WR48 with 23 titles in 25 starts. The only other players with a WR48 title are Aisling Reilly (1), Martina McMahon (1), Danielle Daskalakis (1), Aimee Tuohey (1)

 

Catriona Casey is the only player in Race 4 Eight history to have started a Race 4 Eight event and never lost before the finals. Catriona Casey has appeared in 25 of the 26 WR48 finals ever held (23-2 in 25 WR48 finals). Every R48 Men’s pro has lost before the semifinals in R48 events

 

Catriona Casey became the first women’s player in the history of handball to defeat a current men’s pro in tournament play at the NYAC ‘18. Casey defeated then R48 #22 Loren Collado 25-19 in the 17th place playoffs

 

Juan Canales Sr. and Juan Canales, Jr. (MEX) are the first (and only) father and son to qualify on the R48 tour

 

Luis Cordova is the youngest R48 pro to finish the season in the Elite age: 21 years old in 2012

 

Colin Crehan was the youngest qualifier in R48 history at the 2015 R48 NYAC (19)

 

The largest age gap in a Race 4 Eight final: Killian Carroll vs. David Fink (16 years)

The smallest age gap in a Race 4 Eight final: Sean Lenning vs. Allan Garner (4 days)

 

Sean Lenning played in the most consecutive R48 events to start a R48 career before missing New Orleans ’17 (37)

David Fink made the most career Race starts before making his first final (34)

David Fink made the most career Race starts before winning a title (63)

 

The Race 4 Eight averages 14 hours of coverage per weekend on ESPN3, not including ESPN3 replays

 

Gavin Buggy is the only player to have appeared on ESPN and never lost (Portland  SR48 ’16)

Counting only round of 16 and Playoff matches, Tommy Little owns the worst record in R48 history (0-9)

 

Lucho and Danos Cordova are the only ranked players in R48 history to not identify their country of origin and/or residence

 

John Bike, Jr. was the oldest qualifier in R48 history at the 2013 R48 II Houston (47 years, 11 months). Leo Canales Sr. broke Bike’s record by qualifying at 52 years, 10 months for the Tucson Memorial ‘18

 

Tyler Hamel (4), Dan Armijo (1), Dave Vincent (1), Matt Mclaughlin (1), John Bike (1), Tom Sheridan (1), Chris Watkins (1), and Bill Mehilos (1) have all advanced to SR48 finals but not won a title

Race 4 Eight #1 Pros: History

David Chapman (2011: 2 months)

Sean Lenning (2012: one month)

Luis Moreno (2012-2014, 2017-current: 2 years, 3 months)

Charly Shanks (2013: 8 months)

Paul Brady: (2014-2016: 2 years, 0 months)

Mando Ortiz (2016-2017: five months)

Killian Carroll (2017: 5 years, 8 months)

David Fink (2017: one month)

Luis Cordova (2022: three months – current)

 

David Fink is the only player to be ranked #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, and #8 on the Race 4 Eight Tour

R48 Men’s Pro Champions have ranged in age from (22) Luis Moreno at the Plummer R48 I Stop #1 and Killian Carroll (22) at the R48 V Player’s Championship to (44) David Fink at the R48 X Icebreaker

 

The only player to have been ranked inside the Men’s Pro R48 Elite 8 since the inception of the R48 tour in 2011 (75 events) is David Fink

 

The youngest Race 4 Eight Champion in history was Catriona Casey at the WR48 I Stop #1 Simple Green U.S. Open (20)

 

In 20 R48 Men’s Pro starts, Paul Brady has a match record of 73-6 (92%)

 

January ’19 marked the first time in R48 history that two 40-somethings have held R48 Elite 8 rankings simultaneously (Fink, Chavez)

 

David Fink and Marcos Chavez are the only players to play one another twice in the same event: Las Vegas ’18 R48 quarterfinals and Las Vegas ’18 SR48 finals

 

No teenager has ever been ranked in the R48 Elite 8, three 40-somethings have been ranked in the R48 Elite 8 (Alvarado, Fink, Chavez)

 

Emmett and Courtney Peixoto de Melo and Robbie and Aoife McCarthy are the only brothers/sisters to have been ranked on the Race 4 Eight 

 

Daniel Cordova became the first player to win the 5th place playoffs without dropping one point at the ’17 Tucson Memorial (consecutive forfeits)

 

Dalton Beall holds the record with six consecutive R48 playoff forfeits (October 2016-Feb 2018)

 

Allan Garner/Aaron Garner, Luis Cordova/Daniel Cordova, and Peter Funchion/Paddy Funchion (Bash Brothers) are the only brothers to have held R48 rankings

 

Martina McMahon became the first left-handed player to win a R48 or WR48 stop at the 2017 Tucson Memorial

Since MM’s left-handed Race victory, Danielle Daskalakis (2021) and David Fink (2021) have also become Race champions

 

David Fink (1-5) and Diarmaid Nash (0-2) are the only left-handed R48 Men’s pro players have appeared in R48 Men’s Pro finals (Fink and Nash have never played one another)

Every player who has entered a R48 Men’s Pro has lost in the round of 16

The only R48 pro to have never entered a qualifier is David Fink

The only players to face a match point and win a main draw Men’s Pro R48 match are:

  • Alvarado vs. Shanks Plummer 2011 (Alvarado 12-21, 21-17, 11-10
  • Alvarado vs. Al. Garner Plummer 2011 (Alvarado 16-21, 21-20, 11-7)
  • Fink vs. Iglesias Tucson 2013 (Fink 27-25)
  • Fink vs. Cooney Simple Green U.S. Open (2013) 17-21, 21-19, 11-10
  • Shanks vs. Peixoto 2013 Denver 2013 (Shanks 28-26)
  • Perez vs. Ortiz Tucson 2014 (Perez 10-15, 16-14, 15-8)
  • Crehan vs. Fink NYAC 2015 (Crehan, 1-15, 17-15, 15-13)
  • Ortiz vs. L. Cordova Salt Lake City 2016 (Ortiz 11-14, 16-14, 15-2)
  • Ortiz vs. Peixoto Atlanta 2017 (Ortiz 7-15, 17-15, 15-1)
  • McCarthy vs. Lenning Tucson 2017 (McCarthy 3-15, 16-14, 15-2)
  • Lenning vs. Nash Montana 2018 (Lenning 8-15, 15-13, 19-17)
  • Chavez vs. Ruiz Las Vegas 2018 (Chavez 17-15, 11-14, 17-15)
  • D. Munson vs. Chavez 2018 Houston (Munson 3-15, 17-15, 15-13)
  • Ortiz vs. Pet. Funchion NYAC 2018 (Ortiz 6-15, 16-14, 15-9)
  • Perez vs. Chavez NYAC 2018 (Perez 15-10, 11-15, 17-15)
  • Perez vs. Chavez 2019 New Orleans R48LTE (13-15, 17-15, 15-11)
  • Canales Jr. vs. Ortiz 2019 Tucson R48LTE Hall of Fame (16-14, 12-15, 16-14)
  • Ruiz vs. Peixoto 2019 San Francisco (7-15, 15-6, 16-14)
  • Iglesias vs. Peixoto 2019 Salt Lake City (5-15, 16-14, 15-2)
  • Perez vs. Fink 2020 Red Death (15-12, 3-15, 16-14)
  • D. Cordova vs. Canales, Jr. 2022 R48 Icebreaker (21-5, 11-21, 11-10)
  • M. Doyle vs. D. Fink 2023 R48 Mardi Gras (12-15, 16-14, 17-15)

Two-time defending world champion Aisling Reilly (2012, 2015) is 1-6 in WR48 finals, with her lone victory coming in the 2015 Simple Green U.S. Open

From 2011-2022, the only left vs. lefty matchup in the history of the R48 tour was the first R48 match ever played between John Bike and David Fink at the 2011 Plummer Bash – 1800+ R48 matches later, Niall O’Connor played John Bike followed by Niall O’Connor playing David Fink at the 2022 R48 Memorial, making for the second and third lefty vs. lefty matchups in the history of the tour

Catriona Casey leads Aisling Reilly 6-1 head-to-head in WR48 play with 22 WR48 titles for Casey to one for Reilly

Max Langmack (6”9) became the tallest pro in R48 and pro handball history when he qualified at the 2018 R48 7 Houston (finished 10th). Langmack’s best career Race finish is fifth at the Race 4 Eight Icebreaker (December 2021) and fifth at the 2022 R48LTE Portland Classic

The largest height disparity in a R48 match is 17 inches (Langmack vs. Burgos Montana ‘23)

Max Langmack and Pete Svennungsen combined to create the tallest match in R48 qualifier history (155 inches)

Tyler Hamel is the only player to have played in a R48 qualifier and never lost one point (Houston ’14)

Mando Ortiz became the first R48 pro to defeat four former or current WPH #1 pros in his maiden R48 title in Houston 2016: Emmett Peixoto (2008), Allan Garner (2009), Paul Brady (2016), Sean Lenning (2012)

One member of the original Elite 8 from the first Race event at the 2011 Plummer Bash is in the current Elite 8 (Fink)

Killian Carroll held the longest winning streak in Race 4 Eight history with 32 consecutive wins (2020-2022)

Catriona Casey held the longest winning streak on the WR48 tour: 33 matches (2018-current)

David Fink holds the longest winning streak on the SR48 tour: 21 matches (2018-current)

Marcos Chavez became the first player in Race 4 Eight history to defeat doctors in consecutive matches at the 2016 SR48 Houston (Dr. Dan Zimet and Dr. Tyler Hamel)

Mando Ortiz became the first player to defeat Paul Brady in international singles play and win the tournament since 2004 (Chapman) at the 2016 Houston R48 V Stop #4 (Killian Carroll became the second at the R48 V Player’s Championship)

Paul Brady has lost twice in the semifinals in a R48 event (15-2)

Mando Ortiz became the first R48 champion to win back-to-back tiebreakers by the minimum margin of two points in the semifinals and finals of a R48 event (Houston 2016: 15-13 x 2)

Shorty Ruiz became the first player in R48 history to lose back to back round of 16 matches by two points in the third game (Montana ’18, Las Vegas ’18)

Of the 12 R48 champions, eight have been ranked #1 on the Race 4 Eight: Moreno, Lenning, Shanks, Brady, Ortiz, Carroll, Fink, L. Cordova

Marcos Chavez (45 years, 11 months) is the oldest player to ever finish a R48 event in the top three (RFC ‘20)

Catriona Casey won her seventh consecutive WR48 Player’s Championship at the 2022 Aces Player’s Championship

Ryan Bowler was the highest ranked Canadian R48 pro in history (#26 in 2018)

Catriona Casey pitched the only perfect game in the history of a Race 4 Eight final in not allowing a point or a side out in the final of the San Francisco Olympic Club Del Grande Dealer Group ’15

The five tallest players ever ranked on the R48 tour are Max Langmack (6’9), Andy Nett (6’3), Charly Shanks (6’3), Adam Bernhard (6’3), Sean Lenning (6’2), Loren Collado (6’2)

The LAAC won the inaugural Manning Cup by defeating Team Tucson at the Tucson Memorial ’17, earning the title of best handball club in the world. Mando Ortiz, Marcos Chavez, and Vic Perez represented the LAAC in the ’17 Manning Cup. The Manning Cup was named for WPH film crew superstar Ben Manning

184-186 Courtesy of WPH ambassador, lifetime member, and R48 referee Nick Flores:

  1. On the Men’s R48, from Season 1 through Season 7, in 150 tiebreakers:

– the player who won the 2nd game won the tiebreaker 57% of the time

– the player who served first in the tiebreaker won 61% of the time

 

  1. On the Women’s R48, from Season 1 through Season 5, in 31 tiebreakers:

– the player who won the 2nd game won the tiebreaker 71% of the time

– the player who served first in the tiebreaker won 67% of the time

 

  1. On the Senior R48, from Season 1 through Season 6, in 9 tiebreakers:

– the player who won the 2nd game won the tiebreaker 56% of the time

– the player who served first in the tiebreaker won 67% of the time

 

Nick Flores: “For the Men and the Seniors, serving first in the tiebreaker is more of a factor than winning the 2nd game. However for the Women, winning the 2nd game has a higher win % than serving first, indicating momentum may be a bigger factor for Women.”

To view the Race 4 Eight Pro Player Bios, go here

To view even more Race 4 Eight Fun Facts, go HERE

 

Race 4 Eight Results: 2011-2019

 

Race 4 Eight Season I: 2011-12

R48 Men’s Pro

Plummer Bash (ID): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 21-7, 21-17

U.S. Open (CA): Robbie McCarthy (IRE) def Charly Shanks (IRE) 21-15, 18-21, 11-9

Tucson (AZ): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Sean Lenning (WA) 21-19, 21-4

Fresno (CA): Sean Lenning (WA) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 25-8, 25-23

Atlanta (GA): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 25-22, 23-25, 25-18

Salt Lake City (UT): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Sean Lenning (WA) 25-5, 25-8

LAAC (CA): Sean Lenning (WA) def Allan Garner (TX) 15-25, 25-14, 25-23

WAC Player’s Championship (WA): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-11, 15-11

 

Race 4 Eight Season II: 2012-13

R48 Men’s Pro

U.S. Open (CA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Charly Shanks (IRE) 21-15, 21-12

Tucson (AZ): Sean Lenning (WA) def Allan Garner (TX) 15-13, 15-10

Houston (TX): Charly Shanks (IRE) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 15-11, 20-18

Anchorage (AK): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Charly Shanks (IRE) 15-6, 15-3

Denver (CO): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-5, 15-13

Salt Lake City (UT): Charly Shanks (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 25-8

Seattle (WA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Charly Shanks (IRE) 15-5, 15-7

 

SR48

Houston (TX): Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) def Tyler Hamel (TX)

Denver (CO): Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) def Matt Mclaughlin (MO) 15-3, 15-1

Salt Lake City (UT): Naty Alvarado, Jr. def John Bike, Jr. 25-12

Seattle (WA): Andy Schad (D.C.) def John Bike, Jr. (CA) 15-10, 15-12

 

Race 4 Eight Season III: 2013-14

R48 Men’s Pro

Plummer Bash (ID): Allan Garner (TX) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 21-5, 21-10

U.S. Open (CA): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 21-6, 21-20

Houston (TX): Luis Moreno (AZ) def Diarmaid Nash (IRE) 21-12, 21-15

NYAC (NY): Paul Brady (IRE) def Robbie McCarthy (IRE) 21-12, 17-21, 11-6

Denver (CO): Paul Brady (IRE) def Emmett Peixoto (CA) 21-13, 21-13

Salt Lake City (UT): Robbie McCarthy (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 14-21, 21-16, 11-5

 

SR48

Houston (TX): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Tyler Hamel (TX) 25-23

Denver (CO): Bear Meiring (CO) def Dave Vincent (AZ) 25-20

Salt Lake City (UT): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Bear Meiring (CO) 25-13

 

WR48

U.S. Open (CA): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 21-17, 21-12

NYAC (NY): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Tracy Davis (NY) 21-12, 21-3

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 21-14, 21-6

 

Race 4 Eight Season IV: 2014-15

 

R48 Men’s Pro

U.S. Open (CA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 21-8, 21-4

Tucson (AZ): Paul Brady (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 15-13, 15-11

Houston (TX): Paul Brady (IRE) def Sean Lenning (AZ) 15-5, 15-7

San Francisco (CA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Emmett Peixoto (CA) 15-7, 15-10

NYAC (NY): Paul Brady (IRE) def Andy Nett (MN) 15-3, 15-0

Salt Lake City (UT): Sean Lenning (AZ) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 3-15, 15-8, 15-9

 

SR48

Tucson (AZ): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 25-16

Houston (TX): Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) def Tyler Hamel (TX) 25-20

NYAC (NY): Andy Schad (D.C) def Dan Armijo (AZ) 25-2

Salt Lake City (UT): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Tom Sheridan (IRE) 25-15

 

WR48

U.S. Open (CA):  Catriona Casey def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 21-10, 21-16

San Francisco (CA): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Jessica Gawley (CAN) 15-0, 15-0

NYAC (NY): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Ciana Ni Churraion (IRE) 15-1, 12-15, 15-8

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 15-2, 12-15, 15-9

 

Race 4 Eight Season V: 2015-16

 

R48 Men’s Pro

U.S. Open (CA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 21-15, 21-14

Tucson (AZ): Sean Lenning (AZ) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 15-10, 15-7

New Orleans (LA): Paul Brady (IRE) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 15-11, 15-7

Houston (TX): Mando Ortiz (CA) def Sean Lenning (AZ) 15-0, 7-15, 15-13

NYAC (NY): Paul Brady (IRE) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 15-11, 15-6

Salt Lake City (UT): Paul Brady (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-5, 4-15, 15-5

Portland (OR): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-6, 12-15, 15-11

 

SR48

U.S. Open (CA): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 16-21, 21-12, 11-7

Houston (TX): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Tyler Hamel (TX) 25-14

Portland (OR): Gavin Buggy (IRE) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 21-17, 21-17

 

WR48

U.S. Open (CA): Aisling Reilly (IRE) def Catriona Casey (IRE) 6-21, 21-11, 11-9

NYAC (NY): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Martina McMahon (IRE) 21-11, 21-2

Portland (OR): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 15-4, 15-6

 

Race 4 Eight Season VI: 2016-17

 

R48 Men’s Pro

U.S. Open (CA): Robbie McCarthy (IRE) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 21-5, 21-17

Minneapolis (MN): Mando Ortiz (CA) def David Fink (AZ) 15-4, 8-15, 15-9

Plummer Bash (ID): Luis Moreno (AZ) def David Fink (AZ) 15-4, 15-5

New Orleans (LA): Killian Carroll (IRE) def David Fink (AZ) 2-15, 15-12, 15-8

Houston (TX): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Luis Moreno (AZ) 15-7, 15-4

NYAC (NY): Paul Brady (IRE) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 15-12, 15-5

Salt Lake City (UT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Luis Cordova (MEX) 12-15, 15-0, 15-6

 

SR48

U.S. Open (CA): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Naty Alvarado, Jr. (CA) 7-21, 21-10, 11-10

Minneapolis (MN): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Naty Alvarado (CA) 15-12, 15-9

Salt Lake City (UT): Marcos Chavez (CA) def Chris Watkins (CA) 25-13

 

WR48

U.S. Open (CA): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aisling Reilly (IRE) 21-3, 21-14

NYAC (NY): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Martina McMahon (IRE) 15-5, 15-4

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Martina McMahon (IRE)

 

Race 4 Eight Season VII: 2017-18

 

R48 Men’s Pro

Atlanta (GA): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 17-15, 15-4

Tucson (AZ): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Robbie McCarthy (IRE) 15-9, 15-1

Missoula (MT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Mando Ortiz (CA) 12-15, 15-3, 15-11

Las Vegas (NV): Sean Lenning (WA) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 7-15, 15-10, 15-12

Houston (TX): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-1, 16-14

NYAC (NY): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Daniel Cordova (GA) 15-3, 15-9

Salt Lake City (UT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 17-15, 5-15, 15-7

 

SR48

Las Vegas (NV): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 25-10

Houston (TX): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 25-3

Salt Lake City (UT): Marcos Chavez (CA) def David Fink (AZ) 25-22

 

WR48

Tucson (AZ): Martina McMahon (IRE) def Catriona Casey (IRE) 14-16, 15-9, 15-3

Las Vegas (NV): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Courtney Peixoto de Melo 15-0, 15-3

NYAC (NY): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Suz Koehler (MO) 15-1, 15-3

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Aimee Tuohey (GA) 15-9, 15-0

 

Race 4 Eight Season VIII: 2018-19

 

R48 Men’s Pro

Atlanta (GA): Luis Cordova (MEX) def Daniel Cordova (MEX) 15-12, 9-15, 15-12

Tucson (AZ): Sean Lenning (WA) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 15-10, 15-7

Portland (OR): Daniel Cordova (GA) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 15-6, 15-6

Missoula (MT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 13-15, 15-2, 15-6

New Orleans (LA): Luis Cordova (MEX) def Vic Perez (CA) 15-9, 15-7

Tucson (AZ): Daniel Cordova (MEX) def David Fink (AZ) 15-9, 15-6

San Francisco (CA): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 9-15, 15-6, 15-9

NYAC (NY): Paul Brady (IRE) def Robbie McCarthy (IRE) 15-13, 15-2

Salt Lake City (UT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Daniel Cordova (MEX) 15-12, 15-3

 

SR48

Tucson (AZ): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 15-2, 15-11

New Orleans (LA): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 15-3, 15-4

Salt Lake City (UT): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 17-15, 15-9

 

WR48

Tucson (AZ): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Ciana Ni Churraoin (IRE) 15-7, 16-14

San Francisco (CA): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Ciana Ni Churraoin (IRE) 15-12, 15-6

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Martina McMahon (IRE) 15-13, 15-12

 

Race 4 Eight Season IX: 2019-20

 

R48 Men’s Pro

Atlanta (GA): Daniel Cordova (MEX) def Luis Cordova (MEX) 15-7, 15-8

Portland (OR):  Luis Cordova (MEX) def Sean Lenning (WA) 13-15, 15-4, 15-1

Tucson (AZ): Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) def Sean Lenning (WA) 15-9, 15-6

Missoula (MT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) 16-14, 15-5

New Orleans (LA): Lucho Cordova (MEX) def Danos Cordova (GA) 11-15, 15-13, 15-9

Pittsburgh (PA): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Danos Cordova (TX) 15-8, 15-1

 

SR48

Tucson (AZ): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 10-15, 15-10, 15-8

Pittsburgh (PA): David Fink (AZ) def Marcos Chavez (CA) 15-11, 15-1

 

WR48

Tucson (AZ): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Ciana Ni Churraoin (IRE) 15-2, 15-4

New Orleans (LA): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Ciana Ni Churraoin (IRE) 15-3, 15-10

 

Race 4 Eight Season X: 2021-22

R48 Men’s Pro

Tucson (AZ):  Killian Carroll (IRE) def Lucho Cordova (MEX) 15-11, 15-2

Nashville (TN): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Paul Brady (IRE) 15-21, 21-6, 5-4 inj fft

Tucson (AZ): David Fink (AZ) def Luis Cordova (MEX) inj. fft

Tucson (AZ): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Danos Cordova (TX) 15-6, 15-9

Houston (TX): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Diarmaid Nash (IRE) 15-1, 11-15, 15-7

Tucson (AZ):  Killian Carroll (IRE) def Lucho Cordova (MEX) 15-4, 8-15, 15-1

Salt Lake City (UT): Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) def Killian Carroll (IRE) 15-8, 11-15, 15-3

 

SR48

Salt Lake City (UT): David Fink (AZ) def Bill Mehilos (IN) 15-6, 15-4

 

WR48

Nashville (TN): Danielle Daskalakis (NY) def Ashley Moler (AZ) 21-8, 21-7

Houston (TX): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Fiona Tully (IRE) 15-1, 15-4

Salt Lake City (UT): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Martina McMahon (IRE) 16-14, 1-15, 15-7

 

Race 4 Eight Season XI: 2022-23

R48 Men’s Pro

Portland (OR): Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) def Lucho Cordova (TX/MEX) 15-8, 15-5

Tucson (AZ): Lucho Cordova (TX/MEX) def Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) 15-7, 15-8

Tucson (AZ): Lucho Cordova (TX/MEX) def David Fink (AZ) 21-16, 21-8

New Orleans (LA): Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) def Lucho Cordova (TX/MEX) 15-2, 15-11

Missoula (MT): Killian Carroll (IRE) def Martin Mulkerrins (IRE) 16-14, 15-4

 

SR48

Tucson (AZ): David Fink (AZ) def Bill Mehilos (IN) 15-2, 13-15, 15-3

 

WR48

Tucson (AZ): Catriona Casey (IRE) def Fiona Tully (IRE) 15-3, 15-7

New Orleans (LA): Aimee Tuohey (WI) def Clodah Munroe (IRE) 15-0, 15-7

 

Handball History, Origins, and Games

 

Handball History

  • According to Tom O’Connor in the History of Handball on the USHA website HERE, the first record of ball games with the hand is 2000 B.C. in Egypt. In 450 B.C. Alexander the Great was credited with spreading the game to Greek colonies in Italy, where the game was then spread to Spain, France, and other parts of the Roman Empire.
  • Mentions of handball became more numerous as Europe emerged from the Dark Ages in 1000 A.D., as Jeux de Paume (palm play) gained popularity with the nobility in their enclosed courts and the ordinary people who played longe-paume on common land.
  • Jeux de Paume, or Jeu de Paume as it is also known, originated in France, and is a former Olympic Sport with the oldest ongoing amateur world championship in sport, starting in 1740.
  • Jeu de Paume became known as tennis and eventually “real tennis.”  The outdoor version of Jeux de Paume is known as longue paume. Jeux de Paume was a medal event at the 1908 Summer Olympics.
  • Today France’s Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume is a museum of contemporary art, but when the Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume museum was constructed at the behest of Napoleon III in 1861, a space with a length of 80m and a width of 13m was used for Jeux de Paume.

(Information gathered HERE and HERE)

Basque Pelota

  • Basque Pelota is one of the most popular sports in Basque Country (autonomous community in Spain) and is played by hitting a ball against a wall, called a fronton. Basque Pelota can be played using a racquet, your hands, or a wooden bat. The main types of Pelota include Hand, Zesta Punta, Pala, and Remonte. The Basques claim that zesta punta, in which a rubber ball is caught inside a basket and hurled into the wall, is the fastest game on earth.
  • Hand pelota most closely resembles the form of handball in which North American and Irish handballers are most familiar, in which players try to hit the ball with their hands out of their opponent’s reach.
  • Much like Jeu de Palme, the origins of Basque Pelota are thought to have originated in Ancient Greece, and is played today in Spain, France, North America, South America, and the Philippines. Also like Jeu de Palme, Basque Pelota was an official Olympic Sport in the 1900 Olympic Games, contested between France and Spain

Information gathered HERE

Australian 3-Wall Handball

Australian 3-Wall started formally in 1923, with earlier versions of the game starting in the 19th century. The Australian Handball Council was formed in 1928, which runs the various Australian 3-Wall championships.

Comparing Australian 3-Wall handball to U.S. 3-Wall handball

  • Australian 3-Wall is the supersized version of American 3-Wall – the dimensions of an American 3-Wall court are 40×20, whereas the dimensions of the Australian court are 60×30
  • In American 3-Wall, the long line (40 feet) serves as the backline – if the ball does not land on or before the backline, the ball is “out.” In Australian 3-Wall, the ball can travel past the long line, as long as the ball stays within the confines of the side walls, meaning the ball could travel 40 feet (or more) beyond the long line and still be in play
  • The Australian 3-Wall ball is roughly the same size as the U.S. small ball handball, but considerably softer, making the ball play slower
  • In traditional U.S. 3-Wall, players must stand inside the service box, not allowing either foot to exit the confines of the service box until the serve has crossed the service line. In Australian 3-Wall, the server can stand inches from the front wall when serving, with some players almost hitting their serving hand against the front wall on their service follow through

Some information from this Sunday Stats obtained HERE

60×30 Court Dimensions, Balls, Rules

  • The Irish 60×30 court dimensions: 30 feet wide, front wall is 27 feet high, the length is 60 feet with a recommended back wall height of 10 feet
  • The short line is 32.5 feet from the front wall.
  • 60×30 can be played with a Hardball or Softball all at the Senior (Open) Level, in addition to junior balls.
  • The Softball is made of rubber, red, and is between 2.2inches to 2.25 inches in diameter and weights between 58-60 grams.
  • The Hardball is made of rubber and yarn covered with goatskin or other suitable hide with a center of lancewood or cork
  • The Hardball size is between 1.8-1.95 inches, and weighs between 42.5-49.6 grams.
  • Timeouts are not permitted in 60×30 handball, with two minutes allowed between the first and second game and five minutes allowed between the second and third games
  • 60×30 matches at the championship level are best two of three games, all games to 21, win by one point.

Information for this Sunday Stats found HERE

60×30 Handball History, Championships, Courts, & Participation

  • The first organized handball matches in Ireland in the 20thcentury were played on a 60×30 court
  • 60×30 Handball is referred to as the “Big Alley”
  • 60×30 was originally an outdoor game, only moving indoors as the old courts (alleys) were roofed and new indoor alleys were constructed
  • Hardball 60×30 is the most ancient handball game in Ireland, and also considered the most severe due to the ball moving at a higher speed than any other ball and the hardness of the ball
  • The first 60×30 Softball and Hardball Championships were held in 1923, sponsored by the GAA
  • The first All Ireland 60×30 Softball and Hardball Championships were held in 1925
  • The first modern 60×30 court was built in Croke Park for the World Championships in 1970 – the third handball World Championships (The first 40×20 court was built in Ireland in 1969)
  • The underhand stroke is considered to be more effective, as the underhand stroke provides more power to move the ball around the 60×30 alley
  • Participation in 60×30 Hardball declined with the burgeoning popularity of 40×20 and 1-Wall, but interest in the game has been revived in recent years with the staging of an International Rules match on an annual basis between the Basque Country and the top Hardball players from Ireland – Basque Handball explained on the WPH Sunday Stats HERE
  • 2016 All Ireland GAA Men’s 60×30 Singles Final HERE

Information gathered from HERE and HERE

Race 4 Eight Achievements

  • Combining R48, WR48, and SR48, the Race 4 Eight tour has hosted 127 events (not including R48 Pre Qualifiers)
  • The R48 Men’s Pro has held 75 events since the first event in October of 2011
  • The Race 4 Eight kicked off at the Plummer Family Bash in Coeur d’Alene, ID in October of 2011
  • 17 states have held Race 4 Eight events
  • 36 of the last 51 Race 4 Eight events have appeared on ESPN3, starting with the 2014 Simple Green U.S. Open
  • The Race 4 Eight averages 14 hours of coverage per weekend on ESPN3, not including ESPN3 replays

1-Wall History

According to Britannica HERE, 1-Wall Handball was developed in New York City in 1913, and was eventually played by men and women in the eastern U.S. 1-Wallis considered to be a forerunner of the 3-Wall game, as some of the 1-Wall courts were built with a hinged triangular wing, which swung out and locked into position along the two sidelines, forming a partial 3-Wall court.

 

TIMELINE HERE states that the single wall style (1-Wall) was first developed by Coney Island beach-goers who used their bare hands to slap old tennis balls against wooden jetties lining the shore. In the 1930’s FDR’s Works Progress Administration built hundreds of 1-Wall courts across New York City, with more than 2,000 1-Wall courts standing across the five boroughs in New York City.

David Fink

WPH Senior Statistician

DV: David Vincent formed the World Players of Handball in 2005 and ushered live handball viewing into our living rooms for the first time. Since its inception, the World Players of Handball has broadcast over 1,500 matches live. Dave Vincent serves as the lead play-by-play announcer for virtually all matches, combining his unique perspective and personality with a lifetime of handball experience. DV brings 25 years of broadcast radio experience (in Oregon and California) to World Players of Handball & ESPN broadcasts and provides professionalism and wit to the amazing game of handball. DV also serves as the Executive Director of the World Player of Handball at the WPH headquarters in Tucson, AZ, working daily to grow the game of handball through innovation.
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