Thursday 28 September 2017

FANTASY SNOOKER: World Open points and Euro Masters info

Another game week of fantasy snooker is fast approaching after, what for many, was a successful week at the World Open. Ding Junhui's win has helped propel a number of players up the overall table, while those that picked Kyren Wilson, Luca Brecel, Mark Allen and even Mark Williams were to make a nice move in the standings.

Here's how everything sits then after events in Yushan:

TY: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Zhang Anda   Points: 170  
PPS: Ding, Robertson x2, Higgins, Allen, Ding

Couge: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 160  
PPS: Williams, Ding x2, Murphy, Gilbert, Higgins

Colin Delaney: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 152  
PPS: Higgins, Maguire, McGill, Allen, Hawkins, Ding

Kellie Barker: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Alex Ursenbacher   Points: 143  
PPS: Allen, Fu, Murphy, Higgins, Hawkins, Ding

Alex Abrahams: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley    Points: 142
PPS: Carter, Fu, Murphy, Perry, Higgins, K. Wilson

Jake: SEASON: Mark Davis and Zhao Xintong   Points: 131 
PPS: Hawkins, Ding, Murphy, Higgins, Fu, Robertson

Protoursnooker: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Cao Yupeng    Points: 126 
PPS: Ding x2, Allen, Maguire, Murphy, Selby

LTD: SEASON: Robert Milkins and Ken Doherty    Points: 124
PPS: Perry, Carter, Holt, Higgins, Hawkins, Maguire

Daniela Reich: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 123  
PPS: Ding, Fu, Murphy, Allen, Williams, K. Wilson

Gary: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 119  
PPS: Carter, Robertson, Bingham, Gilbert, Fu, Higgins

Kjetil: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and John Astley   Points: 115
PPS: Carter, Perry, Woollaston, Dott, Fu, Allen

GaryOnCue: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie   Points: 114
PPS: Hawkins, Robertson, Maguire, Murphy, Ding, Selby

Ben Summers: SEASON: Noppon Saengkham and Sam Craigie    Points: 111   
PPS: McGill x2, Day, Dott, Ding, Selby

Igor Snooker: SEASON: Matthew Stevens and Ken Doherty   Points: 110  
PPS: Ding, O’Sullivan, Maguire, Murphy, Fu, Robertson

Andy Brooker: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 110  
PPS: Carter, Day, Maguire, Bingham, Higgins, Williams

TungstenDarts: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 107  
PPS: Fu, Hawkins, McGill, Allen, Selby, Williams

D. Muckian: SEASON: Tian Pengfei and Zhang Anda    Points: 104   
PPS: Ding, Perry, Maguire, Allen X2, Williams

FAM147: SEASON: Zhao Xintong and Xiao Guodong   Points: 102 
PPS: Carter, Hawkins, Woollaston, Hossein, Bingham, Allen

Anthony: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and Michael Georgiou   Points: 101
PPS: Higgins, Day, Maguire, Murphy, Ding, King

Isitan Bakar: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Scott Donaldson   Points: 100  
PPS: Wenbo, Robertson, Murphy, Bingham, Ding, M. White

Matthew Lowson: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Alexander Ursenbacher   Points: 98
PPS: Ding, Fu, Maguire, Bingham, Hawkins, Brecel

SnookerChicago: SEASON: Andrew Higginson and Zhang Anda    Points: 86 
PPS: Ding, Dott, Higgins

Phil Mudd: SEASON: Jimmy Robertson and Sam Craigie   Points: 85
PPS: Ding, Fu, Woollaston, Allen, Robertson, Williams

Rob Francis: SEASON: Mark Davis and Cao Yupeng   Points: 85  
PPS: Ding, Robertson, Murphy x2, Allen, Higgins

Voihelevettisua: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and John Astley   Points: 75  
PPS: Ding, Trump, Dott, Allen, Higgins, Murphy

Beat the Boss (Me): SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Robin Hull   Points: 72  
PPS: Maguire, Holt, Allen, Ford, Fu, Williams

John McBride: SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Sam Craigie   Points: 54  
PPS:  Holt, Liang x2, Bingham, King, Murphy

Mark Taylor: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie    Points: 52  
PPS: Allen, Robertson, Maguire, Perry, Hawkins, Higgins

Cluster of Reds: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley   Points: 46 
PPS: Ding, Perry, Allen, Ford, Hawkins, Fu

Munraj: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Michael Georgiou   Points: 36  

PPS: Ding, Trump, Allen, Ford, Hawkins, Selby



Next up then is the European Masters which begins on Monday afternoon in Belgium with the first matches and therefore the deadline for all picks being at 12pm UK time

As yet no-one has utilised one of their captain's picks, while a few people have picked players on a couple of occasions which makes this a good time to remind participants that you can only pick the same player a maximum of 3 times throughout the season. 

Finally, for the "Beat the Boss" competition this week, my two picks are Neil Robertson and Luca Brecel

Wednesday 20 September 2017

Dominant Ding enters World Open last 16

Ding Junhui was one of the most dominant players on day three of the World Open as he thrashed fellow Chinese player Xiao Guodong 5-0. Having already beaten Zhang Anda 5-3 yesterday (having been 4-0 ahead) he carried on his strong scoring form today with contributions of 56, 62, 72 and 90 putting him 4-0 ahead once again at the break despite Xiao having chances of his own. This time there was to be no way back in for Ding's opponent as he killed the job off without any stress and booked his place in Thursday's last 16.

His opponent will be Joe Perry who was also in no mood for hanging around in a whitewash of Riga Masters champion Ryan Day. Perry started as he meant to go on with a break of 114, while a run of 57 in the second doubled his lead in no time at all. Frame three produced over half of Day's total points in the match but he could not get it on the board, and he was fully punished when a 79 gave Perry the fourth in one visit. There was no way back for Day as the gentleman added his fourth 50+ break to complete the 5-0 win.

It was not plain sailing for last week's champion John Higgins who had to win the last two frames to see off Matthew Selt in a decider. Breaks of 125, 86 and 58 gave Higgins the first, third and fifth frames in the match to give him narrow one frame leads on each occasion, but Selt looks to be coming back to a little bit more form in recent times. He showed some of that in frames six and seven with a 103 century followed by a 62 that were enough to see him lead for the first time at a crucial moment, 4-3 and one from victory. Selt failed to score in frame eight and Higgins again dominated the decider to keep his run going and register another win.

Neil Robertson also needed the final frame to see off Ben Woollaston. Both players were scoring nicely as Robertson registered breaks of 54, 87 and 96 to lead 3-2, while Woollaston had an early 94 and runs of 66 and 70 later on in the contest. However, it was Robertson who took a tight decider on the colours to book his place in the last 16.

Stuart Bingham was not quite as lucky as he went down 5-4 to Cao Yupeng having fought back to lead 4-3 from 3-1 adrift, while Daniel Wells could not complete his own comeback from 4-2 adrift as he went out in a final frame decider to China Champion Luca Brecel.

Marco Fu was the highest seed to exit in the last 32 stage, as he fell 5-3 to Peter Ebdon. Fu opened up with a 136 break but could not shake off Ebdon in the early stages and they went to the interval all square. Ebdon then started to dominate with runs of 79 and 59 putting him 4-2 in front, before a break of 56 in frame eight helped him to the winning line, for a second good showing of the week after beating Graeme Dott in the last 64.

Li Hang continued his good form as he made two big centuries in defeating Ricky Walden 5-3. Li opened up with a 127 and followed it with 73 to double his lead. Walden took the third before the China Championship semi-finalist made his second century of the match and set a new high break at 143 in the fourth to lead 3-1. While Walden would fight back from 4-1 to 4-3 he could go no further and it was Li Hang who would become the third Chinese player to make the last 16.

Elsewhere, Mark Allen looked in good touch to beat Allan Taylor 5-2 while David Gilbert beat Martin Gould by the same score with runs of 73, 73 and a match high 130 after the mid-session break. Lee Walker backed up a last 64 win against Selby with a 5-2 defeat of Robert Milkins, Mark Williams registered his second 5-0 win of the week against Chen Zhe and Thepchaiya Un-Nooh chalked up his second 142 break of the week in a 5-2 victory over Chris Wakelin.


Last 16 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Anthony McGill Vs Lee Walker
Luca Brecel Vs Cao Yupeng
Li Hang Vs Peter Ebdon
Ding Junhui Vs Joe Perry
Mark Williams Vs Jimmy Robertson
Kyren Wilson Vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
Neil Robertson Vs Mark Allen
John Higgins Vs David Gilbert


There are some brilliant last 16 ties here and certainly plenty to look forward to here. First off, Anthony McGill will be looking to carry on his good form after fighting back from 4-2 down to beat Stephen Maguire in the last 32 and making the Indian Open final last week. He will not have things easy against Walker though he is in good touch after 5-2 wins against Selby and Milkins already this week.

Luca Brecel and Li Hang look in good shape again and are backing up good runs from the China Championship. Li especially has been scoring well this week and has already sent Liang Wenbo and Walden home so will not be fazed against Ebdon who has two nice wins himself already. Brecel could have a battle on against Cao Yupeng who saw off Bingham today and has looked in better touch at the beginning of this season.

Then comes the Chinese number one Ding Junhui against Joe Perry which is one of the picks of the day. Perry has actually won the last three meetings between these two players, including a Masters quarter-final at the beginning of the year. Along with that he saw to Ryan Day today with no trouble whatsoever and was on top form at this venue last season as he made the final in Yushan.

Mark Williams has started the week with two whitewashes but will have a tougher game against Jimmy Robertson if he is to make his third ranking quarter-final of the season, while the man Williams overcame in the 6 Reds final could well topple Kyren Wilson. Un-Nooh has already had two breaks of 142 this week on the way to two comfortable victories and was a semi-finalist in this tournament last season. That game could well go to the wire with Wilson also looking in good form against Michael Holt in the last 32.

Neil Robertson and Mark Allen is another game that could go the distance. Both look to be scoring well so far and Allen in particular has got off to two very quick starts in his opening two fixtures, and if he does so again he could be too hot for the Australian. Although, Robertson does have a very strong head to head record against Allen so clearly enjoys playing against him and for that reason I would side with him.

It still looks like there is plenty left in the tank of last week's winner John Higgins as he takes on David Gilbert. Gilbert himself had a run to the quarters a week ago and has been in good scoring form, but Higgins has had the edge in all of their recent meetings so that is a hurdle Gilbert will have
to get over also.


Once again the matches are over the best-of-9 frames with some top quality matches to look forward to on day four of the World Open.

Tuesday 19 September 2017

Selby and Murphy exit in World Open last 64

Two big names exited in the last 64 of the World Open in Yushan with Mark Selby and Shaun Murphy both falling to lower ranked opposition.

Selby had come through his heldover last 128 tie on Monday but he found trouble against Lee Walker. After losing the opener, Walker then claimed four frames on the trot to lead 4-1 despite not making a break of above 50. Selby stayed in the tie at 2-4 and threatened to make one of his trademark comebacks but Walker held on in frame seven and got himself over the line.

As for Murphy, he fell 5-3 to another Welshman in Daniel Wells. Wells also took a 4-1 advantage in the match, aided by a break of 71 in frame four. Murphy put the pressure on though by claiming back to back frames to cut his deficit to just one at 3-4, but Wells finished in style winning the eighth frame with a match high break of 76.

Chinese number one Ding Junhui just about managed to hold on in his last 64 match against fellow countryman Zhang Anda. Ding had raced into a 4-0 lead with breaks of 65, 89 and 128 along the way but Zhang still kept fighting after the mid-session break. Three frames in a row clawed it all the way back to 3-4 and he had a nice lead in frame eight, as he hoped to take the match the distance. It was not to be though, as Ding cleared with a 55 to pinch the frame on the black and complete a nervy 5-3 win.

After starting with runs of 68, 86 and 88 on the way to a 4-0 lead himself, Marco Fu had similar nervous times against Ian Burns who also clawed the match back to 3-4 before Fu fell over the line and booked his place in the last 32. Liang Wenbo was not so lucky though as he lost the final two frames in a 5-4 loss to Li Hang, while Ryan Day completed a nice 5-1 win over Gary Wilson with a borrowed cue.

Fellow Welshmen Jamie Jones, Michael White and Matthew Stevens were all without their own cues for their matches in Yushan and with this poor fortune, were all defeated comfortably. Stevens was whitewashed by Mark Williams who made a 126 break in the fourth frame of the win.

Barry Hawkins was another top name to fall in his last 64 match on Monday, seeing 3-0 and 4-2 leads disappear in an eventual 5-4 loss to Chris Wakelin. He will now face Thepchaiya Un-Nooh after the Thai dispatched Hu Hao 5-2 making a round high break of 142 in the final frame of that match, which will certainly take some beating for the high break prize.

There were some simple victories for members of the top 16, with recent Indian Open champion John Higgins thrashing Alexander Ursenbacher 5-0 with a top break of 95. Meanwhile, Neil Robertson and Mark Allen both completed 5-1 wins, with Robertson making two centuries and three other breaks of above 50 in his triumph.


Last 32 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Robert Milkins Vs Lee Walker
Anthony McGill Vs Stephen Maguire 
Stuart Bingham Vs Cao Yupeng
Luca Brecel Vs Daniel Wells
Marco Fu Vs Peter Ebdon
Ricky Walden Vs Li Hang
Ryan Day Vs Joe Perry
Ding Junhui Vs Xiao Guodong
Jimmy Robertson Vs John Astley
Mark Williams Vs Chen Zhe
Kyren Wilson Vs Michael Holt
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Vs Chris Wakelin
Neil Robertson Vs Ben Woollaston
Mark Allen Vs Allan Taylor
Martin Gould Vs David Gilbert
John Higgins Vs Matthew Selt


There are certainly some interesting last 32 ties here. It will be interesting to see how McGill and Maguire get on given the result that Maguire gained at the Crucible, while both have showed form by making finals early in the season. Ricky Walden's match with Li Hang looks like another cracker. Walden scored heavily in a comfortable last 64 win, while Li sent Liang home and has been in good form making the semi's of the last Chinese event.

John Astley came through against Sam Craigie in round one and now faces Jimmy Robertson, after Robertson overcame Tom Ford. Astley has won both of his previous meetings with Jimmy, by comfortable 4-1 and 5-1 scorelines, both of which were last season.

I fancy victories for all of the likes of Higgins, Allen, Neil Robertson, Ding and recent China champion Luca Brecel, while Bingham should also come through against Cao Yupeng who has not really kicked on despite qualifying for a number of events so far.

Michael Holt against Kyren Wilson is another interesting one. Wilson comes in a little cold following a round one walkover and the fact that he was not in India last week. Holt though played nicely last week until he ran into John Higgins, and will fancy his chances against an opponent he overcame in China this time last year.

Martin Gould scored heavily against Jack Lisowski in the last 64, while David Gilbert struggled over the line against Tian Pengfei, and will need to up his game if Gould is on form in this one.


All last 32 matches are to be played on Wednesday and are over the same best-of-9 frames format once again.

Sunday 17 September 2017

World Open Preview

Snooker keeps coming thick and fast now in September as the tour moves from India to China for this week's World Open in Yushan.

After a few big names did not make the trip to India, we will see a lot more of them this week with the likes of world champion Mark Selby, Ding Junhui, Marco Fu, Barry Hawkins, Neil Robertson, Mark Williams and Liang Wenbo all making the trip out. Unfortunately, last season's winner Ali Carter when the tournament was held back in July, opted not to enter the qualifiers that were completed in the second week of August.

Much like the China Championship a month previously, the winner here will take home £150,000 and a coveted place in the November's Champion of Champions. In fact, the entire prize money structure and format of play is the same to the China Championship with the runner-up taking home a healthy £75,000, while matches will be played over the best-of-9 frames until the semi-finals which are best-of-11's and the final is played over two sessions and 19 frames.

Quarter 1 

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Mark Selby or Kritsanut Lertsattayatthorn Vs Lee Walker
Robert Milkins Vs Jamie Jones
Anthony McGill Vs Duane Jones 
Stephen Maguire Vs Ken Doherty
Michael White or Ma Chunmao Vs Cao Yupeng 
Stuart Bingham Vs Alfie Burden
Luca Brecel Vs Mike Dunn
Shaun Murphy Vs Daniel Wells 

In the top quarter we have plenty of top talent that has been in brilliant form over the last few tournaments. First up is Indian Open runner-up Anthony McGill who also played well in this event last season making the quarter-finals, prior to winning his maiden ranking title in India, so this is a stretch of the calendar that he enjoys. Another man who made the quarter-finals a year ago in Yushan was Shaun Murphy. Murphy comes into this off the back of a last 16 in India and back to back finals one of which was on Chinese soil just a month ago. Murphy has a testing draw here as he could, if the draw pans out a certain way, face the two men who beat him in the China Championship and Paul Hunter Classic finals in the last 32 and last 16 should he get that far. Luca Brecel was the China Championship winner in August, and since then he has had a couple of early exits as he adjusts to life as a ranking event winner. Again the Belgian has a tough draw this week that he will have to negotiate if he is to go on a deep run.

Michael White meanwhile was the Paul Hunter Classic champion and has not featured in a tournament since that win so it will be interesting to see if he can carry on his good form from that weekend. For me he could well go on and have another good week as he looks to continue climbing back towards the top 16. Don't forget the likes of Stuart Bingham who can turn it on in any given week and reach the very latter stages, while Ken Doherty's good start to the season carried forward with an appearance in the last 16 of the Indian Open. Doherty can certainly cause problems for Stephen Maguire in round one.

My opening quarter choice for this week is world number one Mark Selby. The world champion has skipped some events at the start of the season, but this was around the time of year last year when he kicked into gear making the final of the Shanghai Masters. Such is how much confidence a back to back world champion must have and how good a player Selby is now, it is hard to see there being tournaments this year when his name is in the draw and he does not go on to reach the latter stages. Looking at the draw I fancy Selby to make the last 16, and if he can do so convincingly enough it will send out a big message to the rest of the field that he means business. With a big prize on offer this week, I certainly expect Selby to deliver the goods as he so often does anywhere in the world that he is playing. 

Best of the Rest: Anthony McGill and Shaun Murphy 
Quarter Winner: Mark Selby

Quarter 2

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Marco Fu Vs Ian Burns
Graeme Dott Vs Peter Ebdon
Liang Wenbo or Akani Songsermsawad Vs Li Hang 
Ricky Walden Vs Andrew Higginson 
Joe Perry Vs Yu De Lu
Ryan Day Vs Gary Wilson 
Dominic Dale Vs Xiao Guodong 
Ding Junhui or Hammad Miah Vs Zhang Anda

The second quarter features a huge amount of home interest with six Chinese players featuring in this section alone along with Hong Kong's Marco Fu. Liang Wenbo will hope to go better than his effort at the China Championship where he lost his heldover game, while his last 64 opponent (should Liang get through) Li Hang will be hoping for something close to repeat business after a run to the semi's in Guangzhou. Xiao Guodong struggled in August qualifying last month as this event marked the only one of the three he qualified for from that week. Zhang Anda will be hoping to show some consistency after putting together a run to the quarter-finals in India last week, a stage he reached for the first time in a full ranking event. Then of course there is the Chinese number one Ding Junhui who will be hoping to win an event that is being played in the same calendar slot that was previously held by the Shanghai Masters, an event that Ding won last year for a second time. Given how little of Ding we have seen this season it is again tough to judge how he will get on.

There is also plenty of British interest that is led by last year's World Open runner-up Joe Perry who played exceptionally in that tournament and was unlucky not to lift the title, so he can certainly go one better this week. Ricky Walden will be looking to build on two good victories he had in India as he comes back from bad back problems. His record in China is always worth considering and he could be a dark horse in the draw this week if he keeps making good progress. Ryan Day was a ranking winner at the start of the season and will be looking to get a second under his belt and open up the floodgates.

My selection from this quarter is Marco Fu. Fu has not played a great deal so far this season but when I looked at the draw I fancied him more than most of the others in this section. He did appear in the 6 Reds in Thailand a couple of weeks ago making the semi-finals, and his loss in the last 32 of the China Championship was to the eventual champion in Luca Brecel. I strongly like his chances of coming through the first two or three rounds with comfort, and if he can keep up some of the heavy scoring he has started to consistently hammer home in the last year, I think he could start reaching the latter stages and winning ranking tournaments a lot more often because he has always had the talent to do so. 

Best of the Rest: Ding Junhui and Ricky Walden
Quarter Winner: Marco Fu 

Quarter 3

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

John Astley Vs Sam Craigie
Tom Ford Vs Jimmy Robertson or Luo Honghao 
Mark Williams Vs Matthew Stevens 
Mark King Vs Chen Zhe 
Michael Holt Vs Mark Joyce
Kyren Wilson Vs Hossein Vafei 
Alan McManus or Hu Hao Vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 
Barry Hawkins Vs Chris Wakelin

Quarter number three is the most likely in my opinion, to produce a run from someone outside of the top 16 to go far. First of all is the fact that Judd Trump is missing having been thrashed in qualifying by Sam Craigie who beat Marco Fu in Yushan last year to make the last 32 and he his certainly someone who could jump out of the pack at the top of this section. Mark King will be looking to carry on from where he left off in India, having played very well to make the semi-finals and miss out narrowly in a deciding frame. Michael Holt looked to be scoring well in India last week before losing to eventual champion John Higgins in the last 16. Holt has had some decent runs out in China over the last year, making the quarter-finals of the 2016 Shanghai Masters, International Championship and China Championship (under its previous invitational status) in pretty quick succession. This could well be the week that Holt takes form a bit further.

There is obvious quality in the shape of top 16 stars Barry Hawkins and Kyren Wilson but we have not seen much of either in full tournament play in the last month or so, whereas there are a number of players that come into this event quite sharp. Watch out too for Thepchaiya Un-Nooh who made it to the semi-finals in Yushan last year before losing out to eventual winner Carter. He showed with victories over the likes of Selby and McGill what he could do and it would not be surprising if he makes a ranking final this season having been unlucky not to do so already. Coming into this after a final on home soil at the 6-Reds he is playing well and if he finds his scoring and rhythm early this week he could be very dangerous.

My third quarter pick is the man who beat Un-Nooh in that 6-Reds final, Mark Williams. As well as winning the invitational 6 Reds title, the Welshman has started the season strongly in ranking play by making the Riga Masters semi-finals and China Championship quarter-finals. I actually picked him out in a draw that lacked a few top players before the Paul Hunter Classic, but he ended up withdrawing there. However, having more time off between events is probably going to be more beneficial to getting back in the big time winners circle, in order to keep him fresh and fully motivated for each tournament. In a section that is perhaps lacking of a stand out name, Williams was the first to jump out at me and I think he has a decent route through the draw if he is playing well. 

Best of the Rest: Mark King and Michael Holt
Quarter Winner: Mark Williams 

Quarter 4

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Neil Robertson Vs Noppon Saengkham 
Ben Woollaston Vs Eden Sharav 
Mark Allen Vs Oliver Lines
Michael Georgiou Vs Allan Taylor
David Gilbert Vs Tian Pengfei 
Martin Gould or Fan Zhengyi Vs Jack Lisowski 
Matthew Selt Vs Elliot Slessor
John Higgins Vs Alexander Ursenbacher

The final quarter is where we find the most recent ranking winner, Indian Open champion John Higgins. Higgins continued his fine form of the last year and it would be no surprise at all if he carried that form over here and made the latter stages again. He is certainly the bookies favourite to win this quarter anyway. Neil Robertson has not appeared a whole lot in the last month or so, having skipped India and Furth whilst the tournament he did play saw him exit in the last 64 stage in Guangzhou so he does not have a large amount of tournament practice or form to bring in essentially. There are not a whole lot of names that jump out in this quarter in terms of form but I do like the chances of David Gilbert. Having made the quarter-finals in India with some heavy scoring and a good win against Mark Allen it was surprising to then see him lose to rookie Xu Si, but he is coming back to a tournament here where he made the quarter-finals a year ago. Ever since his run to the International Championship final a couple of years ago he has quietly gone about his business and picked up some good finishes without forcing his way into another big final, but with the way the tour is now he certainly has plenty of time and chances to get there again.

My final quarter selection for this week is Mark Allen. Allen again showed signs last week in India of a return to form with two good wins to start his week off, scoring heavily and not looking too troubled. He could not keep it going though as he was outplayed in the last 16 by Gilbert, but who knows how far he could have gone. The signs have been there for a while that Allen's game is not far away from producing another big run or a big title, even if some of the results do not necessarily back it up. He is of course no stranger to playing well out in China, having reached four of his six ranking finals here with two wins and two loses in those. Looking at his area of the draw, I think he could again get off to a fast start, and from there it will all be about whether he can get it going from the last 16 or quarter-final stages which he has been unable to do in the last year. His personal life looks very settled also and has produced a new bundle of joy in recent times, so the Northern Irishman's motivation should be higher than ever and I do not think it will be too long until that produces results. 

Best of the Rest: David Gilbert 
Quarter Winner: Mark Allen 

Winner Selection: Mark Williams 


Viewers in the UK and Europe can watch this tournament in full on Eurosport TV and online via Eurosport Player, and with plenty of big names competing for a big prize you would expect them to bring their A games, making for an enjoyable week of snooker. 

FANTASY SNOOKER UPDATE: Indian points and World Open info

Here we are again with a short turnaround between the end of the Indian Open on Saturday and the start of the World Open on Monday. John Higgins was the winner out in India and plenty of players benefited from that, such was the popularity of his pick. A couple of people had a season pick on first time ranking quarter-finalist Zhang Anda so they pick up some handy bonus points.

Here's how the table looks after the second round: (IO= Indian Open round points - excluding beat the boss points which are added separately. PPS= Players previously selected)



LTD: SEASON: Robert Milkins and Ken Doherty    Points: 108   IO: 70
PPS: Perry, Carter, Holt, Higgins

Jake: SEASON: Mark Davis and Zhao Xintong   Points: 108   IO: 70
PPS: Hawkins, Ding, Murphy, Higgins

TY: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Zhang Anda   Points: 100   IO: 77
PPS: Ding, Robertson, Higgins, Allen

Colin Delaney: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 98   IO: 60
PPS: Higgins, Maguire, McGill, Allen

Gary: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 96   IO: 49
PPS: Carter, Robertson, Bingham, Gilbert

Couge: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 90   IO: 43
PPS: Williams, Ding, Murphy, Gilbert

Kellie Barker: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Alex Ursenbacher   Points: 89   IO: 77
PPS: Allen, Fu, Murphy, Higgins

Igor Snooker: SEASON: Matthew Stevens and Ken Doherty   Points: 87   IO: 32
PPS: Ding, O’Sullivan, Maguire, Murphy

SnookerChicago: SEASON: Andrew Higginson and Zhang Anda    Points: 86    IO: 72
PPS: Ding, Dott, Higgins

TungstenDarts: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 80   IO: 50
PPS: Fu, Hawkins, McGill, Allen

Alex Abrahams: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley    Points: 78   IO: 27
PPS: Carter, Fu, Murphy, Perry

Andy Brooker: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 67   IO: 18
PPS: Carter, Day, Maguire, Bingham

Daniela Reich: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 57   IO: 32
PPS: Ding, Fu, Murphy, Allen

Rob Francis: SEASON: Mark Davis and Cao Yupeng   Points: 57   IO: 32
PPS: Ding, Robertson, Murphy, Allen

Ben Summers: SEASON: Noppon Saengkham and Sam Craigie    Points: 57    IO: 45
PPS: McGill x2, Day, Dott

FAM147: SEASON: Zhao Xintong and Xiao Guodong   Points: 56   IO: 12
PPS: Carter, Hawkins, Woollaston

John McBride: SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Sam Craigie   Points: 54   IO: 49
PPS:  Holt, Liang, Bingham, King

Matthew Lowson: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Alexander Ursenbacher   Points: 52   IO: 25
PPS: Ding, Fu, Maguire, Bingham

Kjetil: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and John Astley   Points: 51    IO: 7
PPS: Carter, Perry, Woollaston, Dott

Isitan Bakar: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Scott Donaldson   Points: 46   IO: 36
PPS: Wenbo, Robertson, Murphy, Bingham

D. Muckian: SEASON: Tian Pengfei and Zhang Anda    Points: 45    IO: 34
PPS: Ding, Perry, Maguire, Allen

Voihelevettisua: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and John Astley   Points: 43   IO: 19
PPS: Ding, Trump, Dott, Allen

GaryOnCue: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie   Points: 42   IO: 22
PPS: Hawkins, Robertson, Maguire, Murphy

Protoursnooker: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Cao Yupeng    Points: 42   IO: 22
PPS: Ding, Allen, Maguire, Murphy

Anthony: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and Michael Georgiou   Points: 40    IO: 22
PPS: Higgins, Day, Maguire, Murphy

Beat the Boss (Me): SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Robin Hull   Points: 38   IO: 24
PPS: Maguire, Holt, Allen, Ford

Munraj: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Michael Georgiou   Points: 36   IO: 12
PPS: Ding, Trump, Allen, Ford

Phil Mudd: SEASON: Jimmy Robertson and Sam Craigie   Points: 30   IO: 12
PPS: Ding, Fu, Woollaston, Allen

Cluster of Reds: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley   Points: 30   IO: 12
PPS: Ding, Perry, Allen, Ford

Mark Taylor: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie    Points: 18   IO: 9

PPS: Allen, Robertson, Maguire, Perry



The World Open starts in the early hours in the UK making the deadline MONDAY 18TH SEPTEMBER at 2.30AM UK TIME for all World Open picks. Not long to go so get picking. Don't forget you can only pick the same player three times through the season and that now might be a good time to use one of your Captain's picks for double points on a selected player. Enter your picks via Twitter in the usual ways. 


My beat the boss picks (as tweeted a couple of days ago) are Mark Williams and Marco Fu 

All the best!

Friday 15 September 2017

McGill, King, Higgins and Xu make up Indian Open final four

Defending champion Anthony McGill, number two seed John Higgins, Northern Irish Open champion Mark King and tour rookie Xu Si are the four remaining players left competing for the Indian Open title after a thrilling Friday in Visakhapatnam.

The last 16 matches took place in the morning and these saw a number of the big names exit the competition. Shaun Murphy was the most notable casualty as he fell victim to Elliot Slessor, who had already beaten Joe Perry 4-3 the night before. Slessor won three straight frames from 1-1 with breaks including a 67 and 77.

Meanwhile, Mark King produced a stunning final frame clearance to see off Stuart Bingham from 2-0 and 3-2 behind. King made breaks of 79 and 72 to level up after initially falling behind, and after Bingham regained the lead King came back again with a run of 84 to take the match all the way. Bingham came within a ball of winning the match, but a 43 clearance from King under the pressure was the decisive factor.

David Gilbert took care of Mark Allen in the last 16 in an excellent final three frames from 1-1 to win 4-1. Breaks of 61, 69 and a closing century of 102 saw Gilbert take the match out with Allen only scoring one point in the final three frames as the Englishman took control.

China's Xu Si produced his first upset of the day by beating Ricky Walden 4-3 in the last 16 with a run of 78. He joined Elliot Slessor as another of the four players that would make the quarter-finals of a ranking tournament for the first time. Liam Highfield was another as he beat one of last year's first time quarter-finalists in India, Akani Songsermsawad. Highfield took an early 2-0 lead but was shut out of the next two frames, with the Thai making breaks of 52 and 80. He added to that with a 56 in the fifth but it was not enough to win a key tight frame, and Highfield would soon win a tight sixth frame to close out victory.

Zhang Anda completed the quartet of first time quarter-finalists with a 4-3 win against the resurgent Ken Doherty. He then faced Anthony McGill after McGill had completed a simple victory 4-1 against Hossein Vafei.


In that quarter-final McGill was again dominant in a 4-0 win over Zhang. The Chinese player would only score 39 points in the match and was completely shut out of the final two frames. McGill's top breaks in the match were 57, 62 and 74 as he continued his strong defence of the title, and you would certainly not bet against him winning back to back Indian Opens now.

His semi-final opponent will be Mark King, after King saw off Elliot Slessor in the only quarter-final that did not end up being a whitewash. King did go 2-0 up and came close to making it 3-0, but Slessor was able to stay in the game by winning the tight third frame on the colours and get back to 1-2. King regained his two frame lead, before a run of 68 saw Slessor peg him back again to 2-3. However, it was the experienced man that finished things in style with a break of 110 completing a very good day at the office for King.

Xu Si was the only one of the first time quarter-finalists to make it through, as he completed yet another very impressive victory, whitewashing David Gilbert. The more experienced Gilbert would only score a total of 40 points in the match as Xu started well with a break of 72 and would then finish with runs of 52 and 60 to show why I tipped him as one of my players to watch at the beginning of the season here.

Xu will face an uphill task in the semi-finals though taking on tournament favourite John Higgins. The Scot had already beaten Michael Holt 4-1 in the morning before seeing off Liam Highfield 4-0. Highfield had his chances in the first two frames that both went close, but after that Higgins grabbed the game by the scruff of the neck with a 122 to lead 3-0 and then closing the match out with the assist of a 57.


Semi-Final Draw:  

Anthony McGill Vs Mark King
John Higgins Vs Xu Si


You have to say that Higgins is a massive favourite in the second semi-final against Xu Si, but could the Chinese rookie have another big upset in him? Meanwhile the opening semi between McGill and King looks a lot tighter with both showing good form this week so far. McGill has not exactly had to play too many top seeded players up to this point, but he has still faced players that can cause trouble on their day. King meanwhile started the week with a walkover but has seen off an in-form Graeme Dott and one of the higher seeds in Stuart Bingham since then, before then making sure not to fall victim to another Slessor giant-killing.


The semi-finals are again over the best-of-7 frames format which means that anything could happen and the final that will follow later in the day is only a best-of-9 frames affair which again does not offer the top players a huge advantage. Having made the semi-finals the players are already guaranteed £15,000 which is a huge start for Xu Si, while the eventual runner-up takes home £25,000 and the overall winner taking the cheque for £50,000.

Thursday 14 September 2017

Shaun Murphy continues fine form to reach India last 16

Shaun Murphy was one of the stars of day three at the Indian Open as he reached the last 16 with a 4-1 win over Fergal O'Brien. After coming behind to steal the first frame on the colours, the back to back ranking finalist doubled his lead with a run of 97. O'Brien stayed in the hunt as he won the third frame on the colours after an earlier 51 break, closing the gap to 1-2. Murphy finished in style though with a 125 total clearance to move within one at 3-1 and then got straight back in and made it consecutive centuries to finish with a 105 for the 4-1 win.

John Higgins made it through with a 4-2 win against Martin O'Donnell. The Scot made a high break of 74, while O'Donnell kept the game close with runs of 61 in the second and 82 in the fifth, before Higgins comfortably won the sixth frame to close out victory. Defending champion Anthony McGill is also into Friday's last 16 after beating Rory McLeod 4-1 with highs of 59 and 63.

Mark Allen backed up his flying form of the last 64 against Niu Zhuang with a 4-2 win over Alexander Ursenbacher. Allen took a 3-0 lead in the match with breaks of 58 and 75 along the way but the young Swiss prospect kept himself in the match with a match high 99 in the fourth before then winning a tight fifth to put some pressure on the Northern Irishman. The sixth frame was another close affair but it was Allen who was able to get over the line.

Stuart Bingham made the last 16 in pretty comfortable fashion beating Matthew Selt 4-1 with high breaks of 65, 67 and 68 along the way. He will now play Mark King, who was playing his first match of the week today after a last 64 walkover, as King beat Graeme Dott by the same scoreline.

Riga Masters semi-finalist Ken Doherty continued on his brilliant start to the season by winning his second decider of the week, this time seeing off Sam Baird in a tight affair. Doherty will now play Zhang Anda who won four frames in a row from 2-0 down in the all-Chinese clash with Tian Pengfei.

In a day that featured a few nice turnarounds, Michael Holt also claimed four frames in a row to beat Gary Wilson from 2-0 behind. Wilson opened up in confident fashion with runs of 95 and 79 to take the lead, but from there Holt was dominant with Wilson only scoring a further 31 points in the match. Liam Highfield made the last 16 after turning around a 3-1 deficit to beat Yu De Lu, while David Gilbert claimed the fightback of the day beating Kurt Maflin from 3-0 down, with Maflin earlier making the high break of the day at 135.


Last 16 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Anthony McGill Vs Hossein Vafei 
Zhang Anda Vs Ken Doherty
Stuart Bingham Vs Mark King
Shaun Murphy Vs Elliot Slessor
Ricky Walden Vs Xu Si
Mark Allen Vs David Gilbert
Liam Highfield Vs Akani Songsermsawad
John Higgins Vs Michael Holt 


In the morning session there are a lot of very interesting last 16 matches. The defending champion McGill has a tough test against Iran's Hossein Vafei who I continue to rate very highly and this feels like a week where he could now have a very good run. He has plenty of confidence and always seems to score heavily amongst the balls. Ken Doherty overcame Zhang Anda in the last 16 of the Riga Masters earlier this season on his way to the semi-finals, and for me I still think Zhang lacks a little bit of the consistency required to make the latter stages of tournaments.

Stuart Bingham has quietly gone about his business this week but has had two very comfortable wins and he looks to be playing and scoring better so far this week. He faces a tougher test this time with Mark King but if he can score well I would expect him to just about get the better of King. Shaun Murphy has really hit form in the last couple of rounds with high scoring in his matches with Fergal O'Brien and Hammad Miah, in which he has only dropped one frame and made three centuries. Elliot Slessor has had two nice wins so far against Alan McManus and Joe Perry, winning both matches in deciding frames. Although, after a late finish against Perry he may find it difficult to come back and repeat the dosage against an in-form Murphy.

It is nice to see Ricky Walden getting a couple of good results beating Alfie Burden and Ben Woollaston with some decent scoring. Today against Woollaston he had highs of 61, 71 and 91 as he comes back from back trouble and looks to re-climb the rankings. The 2015 Indian Open runner-up faces Xu Si in the last 16 who is in his debut season and will take a lot of confidence from having a good week so early on. However, you have to favour the class and experience of Walden to get over the line.

Mark Allen and David Gilbert looks like a very tough match to call. Allen has been scoring well so far this week, and as I have mentioned he has been scoring well for a while but hasn't quite been able to put it together for a tournament win. For me, his big week is coming soon and if he carries on as he has been so far in India he could go all the way.

Akani Songsermsawad will be eyeing making the quarter-finals in India for the second season in a row having seen off Dominic Dale comfortably today in the last 32. Add that to his win over Maguire and he is clearly playing well. Liam Highfield has played well against slightly lower ranked opposition and if he scores as well as he can he may be able to hold the unorthodox Akani.

Finally, John Higgins and Michael Holt is going to be another cracking match over the short format. Higgins came back strongly against Zhao Xintong in round one which suggested he was here for the long haul this week. Holt meanwhile has had to recover from slow starts in his matches with Ian Preece and Gary Wilson and scored well in the process against opponents that were doing similar. Over a best-of-7 you have to give Holt a better chance than most players would have against Higgins in the longer formats, especially with some of the results Holt has had in the last year, and I think that a maiden ranking title may not be a million miles away for the Hitman.



Later on Friday in the evening session, the quarter-finals will follow over the same best-of-7 frames format. Here is how the draw looks with the either/or's.

Quarter-Final Draw: 

Anthony McGill or Hossein Vafei Vs Zhang Anda or Ken Doherty
Stuart Bingham or Mark King Vs Shaun Murphy or Elliot Slessor
Ricky Walden or Xu Si Vs Mark Allen or David Gilbert
Liam Highfield or Akani Songsermsawad Vs John Higgins or Michael Holt



At the end of tomorrow's play then we will know the final four that will play for the trophy on Saturday and it is shaping up well with the top seeds playing nicely in good conditions out in Visakhapatnam. As always, the event is available to watch on Eurosport Player.

Wednesday 13 September 2017

John Higgins survives scare to reach Indian Open last 32

The highest ranked player in the field this week, John Higgins, came from 2-0 down to come through a very tough match against Zhao Xintong in the last 64 at the Indian Open. The incredibly talented Chinese youngster Zhao opened up with breaks of 73 and 78 to surge ahead, before being pulled back to all square at 2-2 with the Scot making two big breaks of his own, 77 and 88. Zhao was a big favourite for much of frame five after an early 60 break but Higgins came back to steal it and get the crucial 3-2 advantage. Another break of 60 was enough this time for Zhao to force a decider, but Higgins showed all of his experience by putting together a contribution of 87 and squeezing through in a seven frame thriller, that he could easily have lost. 

However, his fellow Scot Stephen Maguire could not come through his own decider and was sent packing by Thailand's Akani Songsermsawad, despite making a century break in the second frame, while Akani's highest break in the match was 51. Continuing on the Scottish theme, defending champion Anthony McGill made it through to the last 32 very comfortably winning his heldover last 128 clash 4-0 against home favourite Aditya Mehta before winning the last four frames of his 4-1 win over Ashley Hugill. Equally, 2006 world champion Graeme Dott hit three 50+ breaks in a comfortable 4-1 win over Jack Lisowski to continue some of his good recent form, though Alan McManus perished 4-3 at the hands of Elliot Slessor. 

Recent China Championship winner Luca Brecel could not kick on here in India as he fell to a good performance from Gary Wilson, who had runs of 62, 64 and a closing 103 to complete a 4-1 win. There was also a defeat for Zhou Yuelong despite him making the highest break of the tournament so far. His 141 inconsequential to the overall outcome with Kurt Maflin booking his place in Thursday's last 32 with a 4-2 triumph. 

However, top players in Shaun Murphy, Mark Allen and Joe Perry all had easy enough routes into the round of 32. Back to back ranking finalist Murphy was made to battle in his heldover wildcard game but came through 4-2, before upping his standard in a 4-0 beating of Hammad Miah that included runs of 80 and 102. Allen was also in heavy scoring form against Niu Zhuang, who only scored 30 points in this 4-0 defeat. Breaks of 79, 83 and 89 demonstrated that the Northern Irishman could be one of the leading players this week. Joe Perry meanwhile had a high break of 93 among four breaks of over 50 in his 4-1 defeat of Daniel Wells. 

Ricky Walden came from 3-1 down against Alfie Burden to end avoid losing five straight matches against Burden, while Tian Pengfei came from the very brink at 3-0 down to see off Tom Ford 4-3 in a very closely fought contest that saw most frames come down to the final colours. 


Last 32 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Anthony McGill Vs Rory McLeod
Hossein Vafei Vs Gerard Greene
Tian Pengfei Vs Zhang Anda
Sam Baird Vs Ken Doherty
Stuart Bingham Vs Matthew Selt
Mark King Vs Graeme Dott
Joe Perry Vs Elliot Slessor 
Shaun Murphy Vs Fergal O'Brien
Sean O'Sullivan Vs Xu Si
Ricky Walden Vs Ben Woollaston
David Gilbert Vs Kurt Maflin
Mark Allen Vs Alexander Ursenbacher
Yu De Lu Vs Liam Highfield 
Dominic Dale Vs Akani Songsermsawad
Michael Holt Vs Gary Wilson 
John Higgins Vs Martin O'Donnell 


At the top of the draw I fancy defending champion McGill and Hossein Vafei to carry on while I just favour the more fluent Zhang Anda in the battle of the Chinese players against Tian Pengfei. Ken Doherty's run continues and I fancy another close game against Sam Baird, but I have to carry on sticking with Ken given his results this season. Mark King has not had a game yet after a last 64 walkover, and he comes in to a difficult opponent in Dott who is in good touch at the moment so that will make life difficult for King. Murphy will not have things all his own way against O'Brien but he knows exactly what to expect there and will be well equipped if he can keep scoring well among the reds. 

Ricky Walden may have turned a corner by coming back to beat Alfie Burden in round one, but he faces another very tough match against Ben Woollaston who has looked in decent form over the last few weeks so I give him the edge in this one. Gilbert against Maflin looks like a heavy scoring clash where I expect some heavy hitting. Gilbert looked good with a 90 and a ton in round one and has come on nicely as a player in the last couple of years, so this presents an opportunity to have a good run this week. Keep your eyes on Mark Allen this week if he carries on scoring heavily, he has scored pretty nicely for the last year or so but has not necessarily had everything come together or get that bit of good fortune needed to have a really good run. If Liam Highfield can score well against Yu then he probably may well get a win against the odds there against a player who I think is quite hit and miss. Dominic Dale has quietly been going along but doing quite well and with that section opening up a little he could be just the man to take advantage. 

Finally, Gary Wilson is someone who I think could has grown in confidence in the last few months and is scoring really well at the moment so it would not surprise me at all if he sent another couple of higher ranked players packing before his week in India is over. Michael Holt will certainly provide tough opposition and all seven frames may be needed to separate these two. Given the form shown in round one and how he fought off Zhao Xintong, I would suggest that Higgins is here for the long haul this week and will certainly take some beating. 


All matches in the last 32 are played on Thursday over the best-of-7 frames with coverage continuing throughout the week on Eurosport Player.  

Sunday 10 September 2017

Indian Open Preview

Snooker returns to India this week with the fourth staging of the Indian Open which takes place in its fourth different location, Visakhapatnam starting on Tuesday.

Nicknamed the "City of Destiny" it could well be someone's destiny to win their very first ranking title out in Visakhapatnam. Of the players in the field there are not a whole host of big names, with only defending champion Anthony McGill in attendance of the three previous winners of the title. Of the provisional top 16 only John Higgins, Shaun Murphy, Stuart Bingham, Mark Allen and Luca Brecel are in the field this week, with Ali Carter and last year's runner-up Kyren Wilson losing in qualifying. 

The tournament is played out mostly over the best-of-7 frames, with the final being upgraded to best-of-9 frames with the winner taking home £50,000, so the structure in many ways is similar to that of the Riga Masters early in the season and it is not a great surprise to see a few big names sitting it out because of that. 

Quarter 1

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Anthony McGill or Aditya Mehta Vs Ashley Hugill
Rory McLeod Vs Jackson Page 
Anthony Hamilton Vs Hossein Vafei
Li Hang or Srikrishna Vs Gerard Greene
Tom Ford Vs Tian Pengfei
Zhang Anda Vs Soheil Vahedi 
Mark Davis or Laxman Rawat Vs Sam Baird or Lucky Vatnani 
John Astley Vs Ken Doherty 

The top quarter features both the defending champion and lone Indian tour player, though unfortunately for the event they were drawn to play each other in round one, which of course saw the match held over to the venue. Anthony McGill is the reigning champion, and he will be looking to get his season going after quite a quiet start so far. Aditya Mehta will be helped on by the home crowds and memories of making the final in the first staging of the event four years ago, and over the short format it will be a tough match for McGill. Jackson Page came through the qualifying rounds just over a month ago though as you would expect, his results have been hit and miss and against the more solid tactical players he has struggled, so his opener against Rory McLeod will certainly be a difficult one. Anthony Hamilton was last in action at the China Championship where he withdrew halfway his last 32 clash with Shaun Murphy, unable to cope with his back injury any longer. With tough first round opposition in Hossein Vafei, anything short of full fitness to play will probably not be enough. Hossein has impressed me greatly every time I have watched him and I think he and fellow Iranian Soheil Vahedi spur each other on greatly. Hossein is the one more likely to go on deep runs in tournaments and if he can get past Hamilton early this week he has shown enough already to be a serious contender in this section.

Ken Doherty will be hoping to continue his very impressive start to the season so far. After reaching the Riga Masters semi-finals, he then won each of his three August qualifying matches sending Hawkins and Carter packing in the process. More recently he exited both in the China Championship last 64 and Paul Hunter Classic last 32 at the hands of Murphy, who was the eventual runner-up in both tournaments. Li Hang could also be a huge danger man in the draw after narrowly missing out on making the China Championship final. He beat some top players that week and if he can carry on from where he left off in Guangzhou there is no reason why he could not make it to the semi-finals once again.

My opening quarter choice though is someone I'm really looking at to kick on this season and that is Tom Ford. Ford comes into this event from consecutive last 16's at the China Championship, where he overcame John Higgins comfortably in the last 32, and the Paul Hunter Classic. He had a similar good run of form at a similar point last season where he reached the final in Furth and then had back to back last 16's at the European Masters and English Open (losing both to Higgins). He's such a good player when he's scoring that I'm amazed that he doesn't have good runs more often and he certainly has a ranking title in him in my view. The section of the draw he is in is not exactly the toughest and if he can find his rhythm there is no reason why he cannot make it to the last 8 at the very least. 

Best of the Rest: Hossein Vafei
Quarter Choice: Tom Ford

Quarter 2

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Stuart Bingham Vs Duane Jones
Matthew Selt Vs Cao Yupeng
Mark King Vs Adam Duffy
Graeme Dott Vs Jack Lisowski 
Alan McManus or Malkeet Singh Vs Elliot Slessor 
Joe Perry Vs Daniel Wells
Jimmy Robertson Vs Fergal O'Brien 
Shaun Murphy or Pandurangaiah Vs Hammad Miah

The second quarter of the draw is one filled with a lot of experience and some high quality players. Joe Perry is far too good to be kept down for too long and so his next big run and a surge back into the top 16 may not be far away if he keeps plugging away. Stuart Bingham has not been in the best of form either, losing in the last 128 in Furth and the last 64 in Guangzhou and not having too much good to say on his performance on social media. This week could be the catalyst for a good run though, with plenty of snooker to get stuck into over the next few weeks. Fergal O'Brien recently made the quarter-finals at the China Championship which may give him a bit of extra confidence and I would favour him in what looks a tight opening round clash with Jimmy Robertson. 

Meanwhile, Graeme Dott has sparked into life in the last couple of weeks and shown that there is life in the old dog yet. At the China Championships he defeated Robert Milkins and Judd Trump in two tough matches to make it to the last 16 and he comes into this fresh from a narrow quarter-final loss in the six-reds where he was on fire in the group stages with three comprehensive wins. His first round opposition here is no push over though. Jack Lisowski is quickly becoming a forgotten man though with so many other big young talents passing him by in the ranking list. Although it is early days, on the provisional end of season list he is 66th despite winning all of his August qualifiers.

However, I am sticking with the form man for my second quarter choice and that of course is Shaun Murphy. The key to this choice is purely Murphy's recent form. Making back to back finals in the same week with a days worth of travelling in between is really some effort, and even though the field in Furth was not as strong, with the standard as it is you still have to play well to beat whoever is put in front of you. Again this is not the strongest field ever this week, and on top of that we have the short format which appears to suit Murphy if you look at his European Tour record and his performance at the Paul Hunter Classic, as well as winning in Gibraltar in March. The other thing to point out here is that Murphy made the semi-finals in India last year before losing out to eventual champion McGill. Like most top players, when Murphy gets on a run of form and gets his confidence up he is very tough to stop, putting several good runs together in quick succession and usually with a trophy thrown in to the mix. Despite making back to back finals Murphy was disappointed to have not bagged a trophy and will be determined to put that right this week, and I think he has a great chance. 

Best of the Rest: Graeme Dott
Quarter Choice: Shaun Murphy

Quarter 3

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Robin Hull Vs Xu Si
Josh Boileau Vs Sean O'Sullivan 
Ricky Walden Vs Alfie Burden
Ben Woollaston W/O Yan Bingtao 
Zhou Yuelong Vs Kurt Maflin
David Gilbert Vs Wang Yuchen 
Andrew Higginson or Asutosh Padhy Vs Alexander Ursenbacher
Mark Allen Vs Niu Zhuang

Quarter number three has a similar look to the opening quarter where there are a number of experienced names lurking but not necessarily a stand-out favourite in what looks a tight section. Opportunity knocks for the top four in the section who are all well outside of the worlds current top 64, though one of them will make it to at least the last 16 this week (which is worth a valuable £6,000). Robin Hull is probably the best and most experienced of those four. He has threatened to have a big run in the last year or so with the odd good result. It was in the 2015 version of this tournament where Hull played an extraordinary match against Graeme Dott in the last 64. Between them they had nine 50+ breaks in seven frames, with Hull twice clearing up from over 50 points behind, before Dott came from 3-1 behind in the match, and 55 behind in the decider to win 4-3. Matches like that demonstrate both how good Hull can be but also some of the bad luck he has had at times in his career.

Further down we have a very intriguing tussle between Ricky Walden and Alfie Burden. Burden has won each of the last four times the two have met, including three times in the last year at 2016 European Masters qualifying, March's Gibraltar Open and the European Masters qualifying for 2017 that took place a month ago. Couple that with Walden's struggles over the last year and you could have a recipe for further success for Burden. Heavy scoring Zhou Yuelong and Kurt Maflin is another thrilling match-up. Zhou has the form having made the quarter-finals of the China Championship and beating Mark Selby along the way, and he is now starting to have a few more of these deep tournament runs to climb inside the top 32. David Gilbert could be another to watch but the big name in the bottom half of this quarter is Mark Allen. It feels like I have been saying for a long time that Allen is due a big run and another ranking title, and I would now say he is overdue some success. The signs have been there with him digging in to get victories in the August qualifiers, while also showing some very heavy scoring, that if he produced consistently this week he could blow the field away, because there are not many that can match the levels he is capable of reaching.

My choice in this quarter though is someone who also benefits from a first round walkover and that is Ben Woollaston. Woollaston is a player who has impressed me in the last month or so. I watched his qualifier for this tournament against Sam Craigie and for the most part both players could not quite get into their stride. However, from 2-2 in that match Woollaston then won 11 successive frames to close out his week in Preston, tearing Ian Burns apart 4-0 a couple of days after the Craigie win in no time at all, before then overpowering Peter Lines 5-0. In his last 64 loss at the China Championship he went down to someone playing quite well in Mark Davis, before making the quarter-finals at the Paul Hunter Classic by dropping just two frames in his opening four matches. The first round bye this week is an obvious help, as that is one tough game that he does not have to worry about, and for me he is the form horse of the players in the top half of this quarter and certainly the one that jumped at me. 

Best of the Rest: Mark Allen and Zhou Yuelong
Quarter Choice: Ben Woollaston 

Quarter 4

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold) 

Liam Highfield Vs Boonyarit Kaettikun 
Robert Milkins Vs Yu De Lu
Stephen Maguire Vs Akani Songsermsawad
Dominic Dale Vs Rod Lawler
Luca Brecel Vs Gary Wilson 
Michael Holt Vs Ian Preece
Mike Dunn Vs Martin O'Donnell 
John Higgins Vs Zhao Xintong

In terms of sheer quality, this bottom quarter of the draw is probably the best and most eye catching. Among those hunting glory are John Higgins who is just warming into the season and is probably more likely to peak in a couple of months with some of the big tournaments that come up in late October and November, a similar time to when he thrived last season. At his best, he is the best player in the bottom half by a country mile of anyone else, even as he reaches the back half of his career. In two visits to India Robert Milkins has had a last 16 and a quarter-final and he is the favourite out of the top four names in the draw to reach at least the last 16 again this week.

China Championship winner Luca Brecel will still be on a high from his maiden ranking success and he may still be coming to terms with his new life as a big time player who everyone wants a piece of. His first round opponent Gary Wilson is someone who I have had my eye on in recent months since his return to form having kept his tour card and qualifying for the Crucible. His heavy scoring ability is far better than his ranking may suggest and he showed some good form by making the quarter-finals in the recent Paul Hunter Classic. The name Michael Holt is one that seems to be getting mentioned a lot at the moment as the next player we think will break the door down and enter the ranking event winners club. He has not had too much to shout about at the start of this season with some tough first round draws leading to a couple of early exits.

Someone else who is long overdue another ranking title is my final quarter choice Stephen Maguire. The Scotsman is someone who I have already touted a couple of times this season but having not won a big title for as long as he has, a recent return to form is good to see and suggests he could be back in the winners circle soon. Making the quarter-finals of the World Championship seemed to be the catalyst, and I think having to go to the qualifiers to do so was perhaps the wake-up call he needed. Since then he has started the season by making the Riga Masters final, which I mentioned at the top of the preview is a similar event in format to this one, but it shows that he is still more than capable of picking up trophies. The only event he has played since was the China Championship where he started with two comprehensive victories before running into Shaun Murphy. If you don't fancy his fellow Scot Higgins this week, then the choice for me is to look to Maguire who has a draw that is easy enough but will still keep him on his toes and mean he has to play well in each round and focus. The other thing I have noticed with Maguire is that he looks like he wants to win again and with the right mentality he is an incredibly dangerous animal. 

Best of the Rest: Gary Wilson
Quarter Choice: Stephen Maguire

Winner Selection: Stephen Maguire 


The tournament this week is not broadcast on TV but will be on the Eurosport Player throughout the tournament from Tuesday to Saturday and it should be a very good watch. Given all the first time ranking winners of the last year or so, these are exciting times on the tour as you wonder who could be next and I hope that feeds across to the players themselves.


Friday 8 September 2017

FANTASY SNOOKER UPDATE: China points and India Info

The first event on the Fantasy Snooker season has come and gone after the China Championship concluded a few weeks ago, and the next event is fast approaching with the Indian Open commencing on Tuesday morning.

It's very early days in the table, but for those at the top well played but there is still a long way to go. All players still have their three "captains picks" available and don't forget that you can only pick the same player three times over the course of the fantasy snooker season.



Here's how the table stands after Event 1: (PPS= Players Previously Selected)

Igor Snooker: SEASON: Matthew Stevens and Ken Doherty   Points: 53
PPS: Ding, O’Sullivan

Andy Brooker: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 49
PPS: Carter, Day

Alex Abrahams: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley    Points: 49
PPS: Carter, Fu

FAM147: SEASON: Zhao Xintong and Xiao Guodong   Points: 44
PPS: Carter, Hawkins

Kjetil: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and John Astley   Points: 44
PPS: Carter, Perry

Couge: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 42
PPS: Williams, Ding

Gary: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 42
PPS: Carter, Robertson

LTD: SEASON: Robert Milkins and Ken Doherty    Points: 33
PPS: Perry, Carter

Jake: SEASON: Mark Davis and Zhao Xintong   Points: 33
PPS: Hawkins, Ding

Colin Dellaney: SEASON: Ken Doherty and Yan Bingtao   Points: 33
PPS: Higgins, Maguire

TungstenDarts: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 25
PPS: Fu, Hawkins

Daniela Reich: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Sam Craigie   Points: 25
PPS: Ding, Fu

Munraj: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Michael Georgiou   Points: 24
PPS: Ding, Trump

Voihelevettisua: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and John Astley   Points: 24
PPS: Ding, Trump

Rob Francis: SEASON: Mark Davis and Cao Yupeng   Points: 23
PPS: Ding, Robertson

GaryOnCue: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie   Points: 20
PPS: Hawkins, Robertson

Protoursnooker: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Cao Yupeng    Points: 20
PPS: Ding, Allen

Phil Mudd: SEASON: Jimmy Robertson and Sam Craigie   Points: 18
PPS: Ding, Fu

Cluster of Reds: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and John Astley   Points: 18
PPS: Ding, Perry

Anthony: SEASON: Xiao Guodong and Michael Georgiou   Points: 18
PPS: Higgins, Day

TY: SEASON: Yan Bingtao and Zhang Anda   Points: 18
PPS: Ding, Robertson

Beat the Boss (Me): SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Robin Hull   Points: 14
PPS: Maguire, Holt

Mark Taylor: SEASON: Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Sam Craigie    Points: 9
PPS: Allen, Robertson

SnookerChicago: SEASON: Andrew Higginson and Zhang Anda    Points: 9
PPS: Ding

D. Muckian: SEASON: Tian Pengfei and Zhang Anda    Points: 9
PPS: Ding, Perry

Kellie Barker: SEASON: Jack Lisowski and Alex Ursenbacher   Points: 7
PPS: Allen, Fu

Ben Summers: SEASON: Noppon Saengkham and Sam Craigie    Points: 7
PPS: McGill, Day

John McBride: SEASON: Hossein Vafei and Sam Craigie   Points: 0

PPS:  Holt, Liang



A number of you have competed well in the "Beat The Boss" stakes in event one, with only 6 out of 27 players in the contest failing to do so. 

My two picks in India this week are: Tom Ford and Mark Allen 


The deadline to submit picks by in the usual way (usually via Twitter) is 5am UK TIME on TUESDAY 12th SEPTEMBER 


Good luck everyone!