2021 Balloon World Cup

The 2021 Balloon World Cup is the first edition of the Balloon World Cup, a sporting event organized by Ibai Llanos and Gerard Piqué, based on a game of keep-up with a balloon that went viral on social media. It was held on 14 October 2021, at the convention center in the PortAventura World resort in the province of Tarragona.[1][2] The tournament was broadcast live in its entirety on Llanos's Twitch channel,[1] and culminated with Peruvian Francesco de la Cruz defeating German Jan Spiess in the final.[3][4]

2021 Balloon World Cup
VenuePortAventura Convention Centre
LocationVila-seca, Tarragona, Spain
Date14 October 2021 (2021-10-14)
Competitors32 from 32 nations
Medalists
gold medal    Peru
silver medal    Germany
bronze medal    Spain
2022 →

Background edit

Ibai was inspired to organize the tournament by a video of American siblings Antonio, Diego and Isabel Arredondo playing a game of keep-up with a balloon in their Canby, Oregon home,[5] which Ibai tweeted with the caption "I want to buy the rights to this and set up a World Cup."[6] Antonio and Diego attended the tournament in Spain to represent the United States, but Diego was eliminated early after a first-round loss to Cuba's Eric Guzmán González.[1]

Staff edit

Llanos enlisted several panelists of Spanish sports talk show El chiringuito de Jugones for the event's staff, including former La Liga assistant referee Rafa Guerrero as one of the referees for the tournament's matches, and Alfredo Duro, Jorge D'Alessandro and Ander Cortés as commentators.[2]

Person Role
Ibai Llanos Announcing team
Gerard Piqué
Alfredo Duro
Jorge D'Alessandro
Ander Cortés
Rafa Guerrero Referees
Franc Tormo
Xavi Sánchez
Nacho Tellado Assistant referee
Cristóbal Soria Delegate

Competition rules edit

  • Matches would last for 2 minutes, except for the final, which would last 5 minutes.
  • Players had to touch the balloon with their hands, launching it upwards.
  • Players could only touch the balloon once before their opponent touched it.
  • A player is awarded a point when their opponent fails to touch the balloon before it hits the ground.
  • The player who has scored the most points when time runs out wins the match.
  • If the two players are tied when time runs out, they go to an overtime where they must use their head and feet instead of the hands to touch the balloon; the first player to score a point wins the match.

Format edit

In spite of the championship having initially been announced as a 24-country tournament with a group stage that would ensure every participant played at least two matches, this was abandoned when the field was expanded to 32 participants, opting instead for a single knockout tournament. All matches were played inside a glass cage that contained a number of pieces of furniture acting as obstacles, and simulating the home environment in which the keep-up game is usually played.[citation needed]

List of competitors edit

All of the competitors were announced as the representatives of their country.[7]

Competitor Country
Walid Seddiki   Algeria
Ramon Cierco   Andorra
Elián Barrado   Argentina
Gor Khechoyan   Armenia
Israel Quispe   Bolivia
Diego Mendez   Brazil
Tsetevan Mladenov   Bulgaria
Felipe Pávez   Chile
Funtxi Ursua Zhang   China
Tarik   Colombia
Eric Guzmán González   Cuba
Matías Boho   Equatorial Guinea
Pol Jorquera   France
Tamaz Tsagareishvili   Georgia
Jan Spiess   Germany
Momo Benavides   Italy
Luis "Pollo" Forzan   Mexico
Gerelt-Od Tserennorov   Mongolia
Yahya El Hajouji   Morocco
Javi Damas   Netherlands
Raúl Eduardo Giménez   Paraguay
Francesco de la Cruz   Peru
Ricardo Ferreira   Portugal
Yana Rudenko   Russia
Pape Ndour   Senegal
Jan Franquesa   Spain
Nicklas Hallback   Sweden
Andrii Mostavchuk   Ukraine
Moses Duckrell   United Kingdom
Diego Arredondo   United States
Isaac "Suko" Leal   Uruguay
Raúl David Carrero   Venezuela

Replaced competitors edit

Name Country Reason for replacement Substitute
Marco Fiorillo   Italy Tested positive for COVID-19 prior to the event Gerónimo "Momo" Benavides

Tournament bracket edit

Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
  Francesco de la Cruz 6
  Tsetevan Mladenov 4   Francesco de la Cruz 3
  Gerelt-Od Tserennorov 3   Gerelt-Od Tserennorov 2
  Luis "Pollo" Forzan 1   Francesco de la Cruz 2
  Tamaz Tsagareishvili 3   Elián Barrado 1
  Raúl Eduardo Giménez 2   Tamaz Tsagareishvili 1
  Walid Seddiki 2   Elián Barrado 4
  Elián Barrado 5   Francesco de la Cruz 2
  Nicklas Hallback 4   Jan Franquesa 1
  Yahya El Hajouji 6   Yahya El Hajouji 6
  Momo Benavides 2   Momo Benavides 4
  Funtxi Ursua Zhang 1   Yahya El Hajouji 2
  Diego Arredondo 2   Jan Franquesa 4
  Eric Guzmán González 4   Eric Guzmán González 5
  Jan Franquesa 2   Jan Franquesa 6
  Isaac "Suko" Leal 1   Francesco de la Cruz 6
  Diego Mendez 3   Jan Spiess 2
  Raúl David Carrero 1   Diego Mendez 5
  Javi Damas 4   Javi Damas 4
  Andrii Mostavchuk 3   Diego Mendez 3
  Ricardo Ferreira 7   Israel Quispe 1
  Gor Khechoyan 2   Ricardo Ferreira 2
  Israel Quispe 4   Israel Quispe 3
  Yana Rudenko 2   Diego Mendez 1
  Moses Duckrell 3   Jan Spiess 4
  Matías Boho 5   Matías Boho 1 Bronze medal match
  Ramon Cierco 7   Ramon Cierco 6
  Pol Jorquera 6   Ramon Cierco 0   Jan Franquesa 6
  Pape Ndour 4   Jan Spiess 1   Diego Mendez 4
  Felipe Pávez 3   Pape Ndour 1
  Jan Spiess 3   Jan Spiess 5
  Tarik 1

Reaction edit

After Francesco de la Cruz won the tournament, he was congratulated on social media by President of Peru Pedro Castillo.[8]

Awards and nominations edit

Year Ceremony Category Result Ref.
2021 ESLAND Awards Best Event of the Year Nominated [9]
2022 The Streamer Awards Best Streamed Event Nominated [10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Wright, Chris (15 October 2021). "Barcelona's Gerard Pique organises inaugural Balloon World Cup". ESPN. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b Gómez Rodríguez, Isabel (14 October 2021). "Ibai Llanos y Piqué fichan a varios colaboradores de 'El Chiringuito' para su Mundial de Globos". FormulaTV (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Living room acrobatics earn Peruvian inaugural Balloon World Cup". CNN. 15 October 2021. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Pique organises first Balloon World Cup". BBC Sport. 15 October 2021. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  5. ^ Francke, Tyler (28 September 2021). "Canby Siblings to Play in 'Balloon World Cup' Inspired by Their Viral Videos". Canby First. The Canby Current. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  6. ^ Junquera, Natalia (16 October 2021). "El mundial de globos y las tres Españas". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  7. ^ Llanos, Ibai (8 October 2021). "LOS PAÍSES PARTICIPANTES EN LA BALLOON WORLD CUP". YouTube (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  8. ^ "Pedro Castillo, presidente de Perú, felicita a Francesco de la Cruz tras ganar el Mundial de globos de Ibai Llanos y Piqué". Marca (in Spanish). 15 October 2021. Retrieved 18 October 2021.
  9. ^ "Estos son todos los ganadores de los Premios Esland - TyC Sports". www.tycsports.com. 18 January 2022.
  10. ^ Miceli, Max (22 February 2022). "All nominees for QTCinderella's Streamer Awards". Dot Esports. GAMURS Group.