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Olivia "Bong" Coo is a world-renowned tenpin bowling athlete from the Philippines. She is the most bemedalled Filipino athlete per Philippine Republic Act 9064〔Manila Standard Vol. XVI No. 103 Tuesday, May 28, 2002 Front Page - May I present… President Arroyo enjoys bantering with bowler Bong Coo…. Coo received the lion's share….〕 also known as "Athletes Incentives Act of 2001". Her career with the national team has earned for Philippines 78 medals broken down to 37 gold, 23 silver and 18 bronze, and won a total of 137 championship titles with at least one Masters title for 28 consecutive years. Bong Coo is 4-time World Champion and the first Filipino athlete listed in the Guinness Book of World Records. She is one of the inaugural member to the International Bowling Hall of FameSt. Louis Missouri in 1993 with compatriot Paeng Nepomuceno ''(the Hall of Fame relocated to Arlington, Texas in 2010)''. Bong Coo was named one of the "Greatest International Bowlers of All-Time" by the prestigious Bowlers Journal International in its November 2013 100-year anniversary issue.〔Bowlers Journal November 2013 issue Luby Publishing〕 ==All Events Champion== All Events is the combined scores in 6 events: Singles, Doubles, Trios and 5-Team Event. Played in varying lane conditions and pace totaling 24 games . This category is regarded as the most prestigious medal in world bowling ''(see WTBA World Tenpin Bowling Championships)''. Bong Coo is the only bowling athlete who has won the All Events titles in bowling's quadrennial and biennial competitions such as the regional games, Zone championships and World Championships. She owned the All Events records on those tournaments at one time in 1986, consequently, she was named World Bowling Writers Female "World Bowler of the Year" that year. Major All Events Titles and records *Tenpin bowling's most prestigious event, the Quadrennial World Championships Fédération Internationale des Quilleurs FIQ World Championship now WTBA World Tenpin Bowling Championships, consecutive in 1979 and 1983 *Quadrennial Asian Games, consecutive in 1978〔Philippines at the 1978 Asian Games〕 and 1986〔Philippines at the 1986 Asian Games〕 ''(bowling was not part of the 1982 New Delhi Asian Games)'' *Biennial Zone Championships (Fédération Internationale des Quilleurs now Asian Bowling Federation Championship), 14 years apart 1972 and 1986 *Biennial South East Asian Games, consecutive in 1981 and 1983 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Olivia "Bong" Coo」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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