Monday, 20 June 2016

Riga Masters Preview

One of the survivors from the scrapping of the European Tour, the Riga Masters (formerly the Riga Open) in Latvia starting on Wednesday will see the first full event of the 2016/2017 snooker season. The early events in the season take on some importance as there is still decent money on offer with £37,500 for the winner of these three day event which concludes on Friday evening, though it is tough to get any early season momentum with just two more events (the Indian Open and World Open) coming before the end of August when the snooker starts to pile up a lot more.

Qualifying rounds for the Riga Masters were held some two and a half weeks ago and that shortened the field down from 128 to the round of 64 that is played throughout Wednesday. There were plenty of non-entries for this event amongst the top players which will see the likes of Shaun Murphy, Mark Allen, Ding Junhui, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Ricky Walden and last years Riga winner Barry Hawkins all staying at home. Meanwhile, Stephen Maguire failed to qualify after he lost out to Fang Xiongman, someone he had beaten comfortably days earlier in World Open qualifying, while fellow Scot Alan McManus lost out to Jamie Cope and Ben Woollaston was well beaten by Polish Adam Stefanow who competes as an amateur.

On a scheduling point, the Last 64 (and two heldover Last 128 matches) will be played on Wednesday with the Last 32 and Last 16 making up Thursday's play before the final three rounds take place throughout Friday.

Without further ado, here is how the draw looks for the opening act in the story of this new season.

Quarter 1

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Luca Brecel Vs Sean O'Sullivan
David Gilbert Vs Sam Baird
Jamie Jones Vs Gary Wilson
Xiao Guodong Vs Gareth Allen
Ryan Day Vs Jack Lisowski
Ken Doherty Vs Noppon Saengkham
James Cahill Vs Zhao Xintong
Adam Stefanow Vs Bradley Jones or Darren Morgan

This quarter is certainly one in the draw that stands out as an opportunity for someone to really make their mark on the new season. Without a top 16 player in sight, but guys like Ryan Day, David Gilbert and Luca Brecel that are all just outside of there and well capable of a run. With a bit of reflection time after the World Championships I am sure that the Belgian Brecel would view last season as one that got away with decent that did not really convert in to what he was capable of achieving. That will surely inspire him to work harder and carry on his climb up the rankings starting here in Latvia.

The Chinese players could have a huge influence on this event with nine of them qualifying (not including Zhang Anda who has withdrawn) and the two in this quarter could have a big say. Xiao Guodong had a horrid season last season, when it would have been easy to forget that he was a ranking finalist in 2013. The early qualifiers he played show signs of a turn in fortunes that he certainly needs, or else his tour spot itself could be in danger. I can certainly see him having a strong week this week as I could equally with young Zhao Xintong who I and many others have been touting for years as something special. He is one of my three players to watch from the start of the season, though it is surely too early to be talking him up as a winner of this event.

Quarter Winner: Luca Brecel

Quarter 2

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Matthew Stevens Vs Hossein Vafei Ayouri
Tian Pengfei Vs Allan Taylor
Joe Swail Vs Stuart Carrington
Neil Robertson Vs Michael Georgiou
Zhou Yuelong Vs Christopher Keogan
Judd Trump Vs Chris Wakelin
Graeme Dott Vs Marco Fu or Tatiana Vasiljeva
John Higgins Vs Mark King

In contrast to quarter one, quarter two features four members of the world's top 16 who will be looking for stylish starts to the new campaign. Neil Robertson is one players who has started seasons well in previous years as a back to back winner of the Wuxi Classic (played as the first ranking event of the season on both occasions) and a serial runner-up of the Australian Open in the event that followed. Both men that have beaten Robertson in an Australian Open final are also in this quarter in Marco Fu and Judd Trump, while John Higgins has also had success at the start of the season in recent times. Going back to 2013 he defeated Robertson to win one of the early season European Tour events before losing to the same man in the Wuxi final. Last year meanwhile, he was a runner-up in the World Cup final with Stephen Maguire the week before winning the Australian Open.

Marco Fu has to play a held over Last 128 match, and assuming he has no trouble against a little known opponent that could be an advantage for him in settling into the tournament and getting used to conditions before playing a tough player like Graeme Dott as early as the Last 64. Of the four top 16er's in this section it is probably Trump who I fancy least to progress simply because I see him as a player who often has to warm into a season a lot more, being a form and rhythm player that he is.

The best of the rest could well be Matthew Stevens. He impressed in the early season qualifiers after a poor time in the last few months on the table. If he still has the hunger and the correct attitude then it is tough to keep a naturally gifted player like him down for long.

Quarter Winner: John Higgins

Quarter 3

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Li Hang Vs Chen Zhe
Ali Carter Vs Zhang Yong
Jamie Cope Vs Jak Jones
Mark Williams Vs Mark Davis
Jimmy Robertson Vs Dechawat Poomjaeng
Martin O'Donnell Vs Sam Craigie
Fang Xiongman Vs Andy Hicks
Joe Perry Vs John Astley

Quarter number three still has plenty of quality with the likes of Ali Carter who was a winner on the European Tour last year, former Players champion Joe Perry and the man he overcame in that final, Mark Williams. As well as that we have one of my players to watch in Sam Craigie who could do some damage in his section of the draw.

It is a close call in this section but again I have tried to look at players who have played well early on in recent seasons, since the snooker seasons have begun starting much sooner. Carter was a winner last August in Furth which could show good signs and his form last season was good in patches last season, which many of us fans have welcomed. Perry lost out in many events at the beginning of the season to the overall champion including the Australian Open and Shanghai Masters while it is two years since he started the season with that narrow Wuxi Classic final loss. I often think the Gentleman's ability to get to the latter stages of competitions is underestimated and I think he can have a strong start to the season again here. 

Quarter Winner: Joe Perry

Quarter 4

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Rory McLeod W/O Zhang Anda
Anthony McGill Vs Andrew Higginson
Martin Gould Vs Tom Ford
Fraser Patrick Vs Yan Bingtao
Stuart Bingham Vs Lee Walker
Fergal O'Brien Vs Adam Duffy
Mark Selby Vs Michael Holt
Kyren Wilson Vs Ian Burns

The bottom quarter of the draw contains the world champions of the last three years among some very strong names. Defending world champion after winning his first in 2014, Mark Selby also won the last ever event on the old European Tour, which was fitting in a way as he was the most successful player throughout the history of the tour events in Europe. One of his other ET victories came at this event in 2014 in his first full event as world champion. Even though by name this is now a fully fledged ranking event, I am sure Selby will come here with the same game plan that has proved successful in these events through the years and will once again be a strong contender.

At the start of last season Kyren Wilson was in the 50's in the rankings, but following victory in September's Shanghai Masters he ended it inside the world's top 16 and was suddenly a major contender for every time he stepped up to play. His skill and temperament combined, in my opinion, will soon see him become the type of player that wins at least one tournament a season and if the tournament odds are good, he is certainly a player to persist with on the betting front.

The man that I am picking out this week though is the 2015 world champion Stuart Bingham. With the pressures of being the reigning champion gone he can now reflect on a season that still saw him make a major ranking event final and lose some unfortunate matches. Prior to last season he was a player that was becoming a regular winner, particularly on the Asian Tour. With the change to make this an event played down from 64 to a winner over three days rather than the full 128 that sees it become closer to the more staggered format of those Asian Tour events and a hard worker like 'Ballrun' will take confidence from starting the season well in the qualifiers played at Preston a couple of weeks ago. In fact, after some of the criticism he received in the 2015/2016 campaign it would almost be ironic if he came out of the blocks quickly this year with a victory.

Quarter Winner: Stuart Bingham

Tournament Runner-Up: John Higgins

Tournament Winner: Stuart Bingham


Those are my thoughts on the first event of the season, but at this stage it is very hard to tell who is going to get that fast start and who may have a poor run through the summer. Following these three days in Latvia is the Indian Open (another tournament with mostly best-of-7 matches) which begins on July 4th.

Sunday, 5 June 2016

Qualifiers confirmed for Indian Open, World Open and Riga

The qualifiers have now been confirmed for the opening three events of the season after a week of snooker at the Preston Guildhall. Various players chose to pick and choose which events they would play in at the seasons very start here, with some of the world's top players choosing not to enter any of them.

However, it is also a very important week in setting the tone for the year for some of the lower ranked players who will be battling for survival and places in the top 64 at the seasons climax. Below I will be taking a look at some of the selected players and how they progressed or why we did not see them over the course of the last few weeks.

Qualified for all three events:

- Mark Williams
- Kyren Wilson
- Ryan Day
- Graeme Dott
- Luca Brecel
- Matthew Stevens
- Gary Wilson (Much needed ranking money already for Wilson who finished 75th on the one year money list for 2015/2016 season).
- Zhou Yuelong
- Xiao Guodong (A good start for Guodong who was 70th on the money list for 2015/2016)
- Stuart Carrington
- Allan Taylor (Money earned from these three matches nearly doubles Taylor's entire earnings last season of £3,500)
- Andrew Higginson
- Anthony McGill
- Mark King
- Mark Davis
- Stuart Bingham
- Zhang Yong (This has nearly match the money Zhang earned in the entire of last season)

Qualified for Two events:

World and Indian Opens:
- Alfie Burden
- Barry Hawkins (Did not enter the Riga Masters)
- Daniel Wells
- David Grace
- Duane Jones (For this Jones is already guaranteed £6,000 having earned only £775 from the 2015/2016 season)
- James Wattana
- Jamie Burnett
- Marco Fu (Match in the Riga Masters held over to the venue)
- Matt Selt (Was suspended for the Riga Masters)
- Mike Dunn
- Ricky Walden (Did not enter Riga)
- Robin Hull
- Stephen Maguire
- Oliver Lines
- Peter Ebdon
- Robbie Williams

World Open and Riga Masters:
- David Gilbert
- James Cahill
- John Higgins (Did not enter India)
- Neil Robertson (Did not enter India)
- Tom Ford
- Ali Carter
- Fergal O'Brien
- Ian Burns
- Joe Perry
- Jimmy Robertson (Match in the Indian Open against Aditya Mehta is held over to the venue)
- Lee Walker
- Michael Holt
- Zhang Anda
- Jamie Cope
- Judd Trump
- Sam Craigie (Pleasing stuff for one of my players to watch in the 2016/2017 season)

Indian Open and Riga Masters
- Jack Lisowski
- Jamie Jones
- Joe Swail
- Michael Georgiou (Match in the World Open against Ding Junhui is held over to the venue)
- Rory McLeod
- Sam Baird
- Zhao Xintong (Nice to see for Xintong who is one of my players to watch for this season)
- Fang Xiongman (Lost to Maguire in the World Open qualifiers before beating him in Riga Masters qualifying)
- Fraser Patrick
- Martin O'Donnell
- Martin Gould
- John Astley
- Dechawat Poomjaeng

Qualified for only one event:

World Open:
- Ben Woollaston
- Cao Yupeng
- Hammad Miah
- Kurt Maflin
- Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
- Thor Chuan Leong
- Michael White (Has had his match for the Indian Open held over as the defending champion)
- Rod Lawler
- Wang Yuchen
- Yu De Lu
- Alan McManus

Indian Open:
- Eden Sharav
- Elliot Slessor
- Hamza Akbar
- Jimmy White (Match in the World Open against Mark Selby is held over to the venue)
- Liam Highfield
- Mitchell Mann
- Robert Milkins
- Shaun Murphy (Did not enter the Riga Masters and has had his first round match of the World Open held over as the defending champion)
- Mark Joyce
- Akani Songsermsawad
- Dominic Dale
- Nigel Bond

Riga Masters:
- Chris Wakelin (Match in the World Open against Liang Wenbo is held over to the venue)
- Christopher Keogan
- Gareth Allen
- Hossein Vafei Ayouri
- Jak Jones
- Ken Doherty
- Noppon Saengkham
- Sean O'Sullivan
- Tian Pengfei
- Chen Zhe
- Yan Bingtao
- Mark Selby (Match held over in the World Open as World Champion and did not enter the Indian Open)
- Adam Duffy
- Li Hang

Failed to Qualify for any of the events:

- David John (Withdrew from the Riga Masters)
- Hatem Yassin
- Itaro Santos
- Paul Davison
- Alex Borg
- Boonyarit Kaettikun
- Ian Preece
- Jamie Barrett
- Josh Boileau
- Anthony Hamilton (Match in the Indian Open against Michael White is held over)
- Craig Steadman
- Darryl Hill
- Jason Weston
- Kurt Dunham
- Michael Wild
- Rhys Clark
- Sanderson Lam (Match in the World Open against Shaun Murphy is held over to the venue)
- Sydney Wilson


Special Notes:

- Ronnie O'Sullivan (Did not enter any of the events)

- Mark Allen (Did not enter the World or Indian Opens, but did originally enter the Riga Masters until withdrawing)

- Ding Junhui (Did not enter India or Riga but has entered the World Open and has had his match held over to the venue as one of the top two Chinese players)

- Liang Wenbo (Did not enter India or Riga but has entered the World Open and has had his match held over to the venue as one of the top two Chinese players)

- Aditya Mehta (Only entered the Indian Open and has had his first round match held over to the venue)

- Rouzi Maimaiti and Mei Xiwen (These two Chinese players were only given tour cards after the final qualifying draw for the three events had been fully finalised)



An interesting start to the season then for some and a poor one for others when exactly what they needed was a good one to boost their tour survival hopes early on.

Next up on the bill is the final stages of the Riga Masters from June 22nd - June 24th, followed by the Indian Open final stages from Tuesday July 5th - Saturday July 9th and then the World Open final stages from Monday July 25th - Sunday July 31st. Following that is roughly a months break in the calendar until the Paul Hunter Classic in August. I'm looking forward to covering all of that here and all the twists and turns of this new snooker season.