2016 IQA World Cup
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| 2016 | |
| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Sport | Quidditch |
| Location | Frankfurt, Germany |
| Dates | 23–24 July 2016 |
| Administrator | International Quidditch Association |
Tournament format | Pool Play+Knockout |
| Host | Deutscher Quidditchbund |
| Venue | Rebstockanlage |
| Teams | 21 (of 4 continents) |
| Final positions | |
| Champion | |
| 1st runner-up | |
| 2nd runner-up | |
| Tournament statistics | |
| Matches played | 71 |
| Points scored | 12450 (175.35 per match) |
The 2016 IQA World Cup is the third edition of the IQA World Cup, the international quidditch championship organized by the International Quidditch Association. It was held in Frankfurt, Germany on 23–24 July 2016.[1] Australia won the cup 150*–130 against the United States; the latter team had won all the previous editions. 21 nations competed, including Australia,[2] Canada,[3][4] Ireland,[5] and the United Kingdom.[6] A crowdfunding campaign aimed to send the Ugandan team as the first-ever African nation to compete internationally.[7] However, the team members failed to obtain a German visa and withdrew from the competition.[8] The Peruvian team also withdrew before the competition due to a lack of funds.[9] A documentary entitled Fly the Movie: Journey to Frankfurt followed the British team in their preparation before the cup.[10][11]
Draw
Runner-up Third place Participant Withdrawn 24 teams were expected to participate to the Cup:[12]
| Team | Previous appearances in tournament[a] |
|---|---|
| 2 (2012, 2014) | |
| 2 (2014, 2015) | |
| 2 (2012, 2014) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 3 (2012, 2014, 2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2014) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| withdrawn | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| 1 (2015) | |
| withdrawn | |
| 3 (2012, 2014, 2015) | |
| 2 (2012, 2014) |
The 2014 world medalists and the 2015 European finalists were placed in pod 1. Other teams who have participated in international tournaments filled up pods 2 through 4 based on their finishing rank. Teams participating for the first time were placed randomly in pods 4 and 5.[12]
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The teams were drawn into five groups of four or five teams, with one team per pod in each group, and Pod 5 teams assigned to three randomly chosen groups. Every group was guaranteed at least one non-European team.[13] However, with Peru[14][9] and Uganda[8] withdrawing, only one five-team pool was left, and Pool 1 consisted of European teams only.
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