The home favourite Ding Junhui has crashed out of the China Championships, losing out in a deciding frame to fellow Chinese star Yuan Sijun.
The pair had met previously this season with Yuan taking a 3-1 lead before falling to a 5-3 loss, but this time he was just able to hold his nerve and progress. Ding had led 3-2 but lost the next two frames and was on the verge of defeat in the eighth frame. Coming from snookers required, Ding eventually won that frame on the black, only for Yuan to eventually close the match out a frame later.
There was no upset though for World Champion Mark Williams who overcame Gary Wilson 5-2, despite unexpectedly playing on one of the non-TV tables for the second game in succession. Williams had a high break of 136 in the contest and will now be on one of the two TV tables in the last 16.
There were however another four top 16 casualties on day three in Guangzhou. Ryan Day fell to Iran's Hossein Vafei 5-3, which follows Hossein's 5-3 win against World Open runner-up David Gilbert in which he trailed 3-0. Stuart Bingham lost out to the ever improving Yan Bingtao 5-2, while Neil Robertson was defeated by the same scoreline against Graeme Dott. Mark Allen was another to go, going down 5-1 to Mark King.
John Higgins needed all of his experience to come through against China's Mei Xiwen. Mei had led 4-2 against Higgins but the Scot claimed all of the last three frames to set up an all-Scottish tie in the last 16. This comes after Scott Donaldson continued his 100% head to head record against Jack Lisowski with a 5-3 win.
Mark Selby also took down Chinese opposition with young wildcard Chang Bingyu. Bingyu had beaten Robert Milkins and Jimmy Robertson but was no match for Selby who came through 5-1. Shaun Murphy got in on the act too finishing with a century in his 5-2 win against Xiao Guodong booking his place in the last 16. In the final match to finish on the day, Shanghai Masters runner-up Barry Hawkins battled back from 4-2 down against Noppon Saengkham, not conceding a single point in the final three frames as he ran out a 5-4 winner.
Last 32 results:
Martin O'Donnell 5-4 Tom Ford
Liang Wenbo 5-2 Zhang Anda
Lu Haotian 5-3 Joe Perry
Shaun Murphy 5-2 Xiao Guodong
Judd Trump 5-2 Jamie Jones
Yan Bingtao 5-2 Stuart Bingham
Scott Donaldson 5-3 Jack Lisowski
John Higgins 5-4 Mei Xiwen
Mark Selby 5-1 Chang Bingyu
Hossein Vafei 5-3 Ryan Day
Mark King 5-1 Mark Allen
Yuan Sijun 5-4 Ding Junhui
Barry Hawkins 5-4 Noppon Saengkham
Graeme Dott 5-2 Neil Robertson
Zhao Xintong 5-2 Fergal O'Brien
Mark Williams 5-2 Gary Wilson
Last 16 draw: (Picks in bold)
Liang Wenbo Vs Martin O'Donnell
Shaun Murphy Vs Lu Haotian
Judd Trump Vs Yan Bingtao
John Higgins Vs Scott Donaldson
Mark Selby Vs Hossein Vafei
Mark King Vs Yuan Sijun
Barry Hawkins Vs Graeme Dott
Mark Williams Vs Zhao Xintong
Martin O'Donnell has already taken two good scalps this week with wins over Luca Brecel and Tom Ford and he should prove a good match for Liang Wenbo in this last 16 tie. China's number two struggled in his heldover last 128 match with Alfie Burden and should have been on his way out, but he seems to be building his way into the tournament after a 5-2 win against Zhang Anda. He will need to keep that up though because O'Donnell should be full of confidence and if he say any of the match between Liang and Burden he will know that Liang could well be there for the taking.
Shaun Murphy has looked good so far and after defeating Chinese opposition in Xiao Guodong in the last 32, he will now face Lu Haotian for a place in the quarter-finals. Murphy looked to be striking it well in his first two matches and will be looking to put a slightly slow start to the season behind him, in an event where he has a good record. Lu meanwhile had a walkover in the last 64 after the withdrawal of Kyren Wilson, before defeating Joe Perry 5-3. Perry would later say on Twitter that the tough sticky conditions on the outside tables played against him due to his lack of cue power. This match will be on one of the two TV tables tomorrow, where Murphy has played his first two games and that should give him a bit of an advantage as he will be more in tune with the conditions there.
Judd Trump has had two quick wins so far this week with a 5-0 win against Rhys Clark being followed by a 5-2 defeat of Jamie Jones. This will be his toughest test of the week so far though taking on Northern Irish Open runner-up Yan Bingtao. Yan battled hard in round one to beat Chris Wakelin 5-4 before a 5-2 win against Stuart Bingham has set up his first meeting with Trump. You would have to expect a pretty open and attacking affair between the two which will suit both players and mean that both have to be close to their best to secure a spot in the last eight.
Mark King is the next to face young Yuan Sijun. Both come into the match after good victories against top players. King defeated Mark Allen comfortably having also beaten the talented Sam Craigie in round one. Yuan of course took out Ding after his opening round win against Alexander Ursenbacher, but he will need to be at his best against the experienced King. There is a lot of talk about all the young Chinese players, including Yuan and his excellent talent, but smart and savvy match players like King always have that extra element that can put these players right up against it.
Barry Hawkins and Graeme Dott are two players that have had to fight hard to make it through the first couple of rounds. In the last 64, Dott was right up against it having lost three in a row from 4-1 up against Stuart Carrington before fighting back from 59-0 down in the decider to win the match on the black. His round two victory against Neil Robertson though featured some heavy scoring and if he repeats that in this match he will have Hawkins on the back foot. The Hawk was 4-2 down in the last 32 against the rising Noppon Saengkham before shutting his opponent out and not giving him a real chance to win. That finish will give him some confidence, not that he should be short of self-belief given his recent runs in China. The head to head between these two does favour Dott though and that could certainly come into play.
Finally, Mark Williams will take on the exciting young Zhao Xintong in a mouth-watering clash. Zhao has started this season strongly winning all of his qualifiers for the opening ranking events, as well as reaching the last 16 in Riga before repeating that here. This week he has seen off Anthony McGill and Fergal O'Brien to get to this stage and you know he will not hold back on his attacking style just because he is playing the World Champion. Williams has played three matches so far in Guangzhou, with his heldover last 128 tie, but only conceded the three frames against Rod Lawler, Ken Doherty and Gary Wilson. These two have met on four previous occasions with Williams winning them all and you have to believe that his added experience and superior safety player were the key factors in those games. If Zhao fails to get ahead early on the match will get away from him very quickly with the form Williams is in.
All last 16 matches will be played over the best-of-9 frames on Thursday with places in the quarter-finals and an extra £7,000 up for grabs.
Wednesday, 26 September 2018
Tuesday, 25 September 2018
Defending champion Luca Brecel crashes out of China Championship
Defending champion Luca Brecel has crashed out at the last 64 stage of the China Championship losing 5-3 to Martin O'Donnell. Brecel had come through his heldover last 128 match 5-1 against Joe O'Connor but was unable to keep it going against O'Donnell.
It has been plain sailing for world champion Mark Williams though over the opening two days. The Welshman has defeated Rod Lawler in his heldover last 128 tie and then seen off Ken Doherty without dropping a single frame. After winning the World Open earlier this season, the Welshman will have his sights set on back-to-back Chinese ranking titles.
World number one Mark Selby was made to battle hard before coming through his last 64 match with Akani Songsermsawad. Selby had trailed 2-1 before moving ahead 4-2 and eventually got over the line 5-3.
John Higgins also struggled early on in his game with Allan Taylor, falling 2-0 behind before closing out a 5-3 victory, while Jack Lisowski made a similar turnaround in his victory over Kurt Maflin.
Home favourite Ding Junhui is into the last 32 after beating Daniel Wells 5-1, while Shaun Murphy defeated Liam Highfield 5-1 in his first competitive match since the birth of his daughter Molly. Judd Trump wasted little time in beating Rhys Clark 5-0, closing out the match with a century break and Mark Allen was also a comfortable winner against Matthew Selt.
There were a few more upsets though. These included Marco Fu's exit as he relinquished a 3-0 lead to lose out 5-3 to Zhang Anda. Ali Carter made the high break of the tournament so far at 144, but would only win that frame as he fell 5-1 to Fergal O'Brien. Despite fighting back valiantly, Anthony McGill was also a big named casualty losing out in a deciding frame to the ever improving Zhao Xintong. The all-Scottish clash between Stephen Maguire and Scott Donaldson went the way of the outsider Donaldson 5-2 and wildcard Chang Bingyu is into the last 32 after wins over Jimmy Robertson and Robert Milkins.
Last 64 results:
Martin O'Donnell 5-3 Luca Brecel
Tom Ford 5-0 Nigel Bond
Zhang Anda 5-3 Marco Fu
Liang Wenbo 5-3 John Astley
Joe Perry 5-1 Mark Joyce
Lu Haotian W/O Kyren Wilson
Xiao Guodong 5-0 Mark Davis
Shaun Murphy 5-1 Liam Highfield
Judd Trump 5-0 Rhys Clark
Jamie Jones 5-4 Anthony Hamilton
Stuart Bingham 5-3 Peter Ebdon
Yan Bingtao 5-4 Chris Wakelin
Jack Lisowski 5-3 Kurt Maflin
Scott Donaldson 5-2 Stephen Maguire
Mei Xiwen 5-4 Michael White
John Higgins 5-3 Allan Taylor
Mark Selby 5-3 Akani Songsermsawad
Chang Bingyu 5-3 Robert Milkins
Ryan Day 5-1 Mike Dunn
Hossein Vafei 5-3 David Gilbert
Mark King 5-3 Sam Craigie
Mark Allen 5-1 Matthew Selt
Yuan Sijun 5-2 Alexander Ursenbacher
Ding Junhui 5-1 Daniel Wells
Barry Hawkins 5-3 Ashley Carty
Noppon Saengkham 5-2 Xu Si
Neil Robertson 5-2 Gerard Greene
Graeme Dott 5-4 Stuart Carrington
Fergal O'Brien 5-1 Ali Carter
Zhao Xintong 5-4 Anthony McGill
Gary Wilson 5-2 Luo Honghao
Mark Williams 5-0 Ken Doherty
Last 32 draw: (Picks in bold)
Tom Ford Vs Martin O'Donnell
Liang Wenbo Vs Zhang Anda
Joe Perry Vs Lu Haotian
Shaun Murphy Vs Xiao Guodong
Judd Trump Vs Jamie Jones
Stuart Bingham Vs Yan Bingtao
Jack Lisowski Vs Scott Donaldson
John Higgins Vs Mei Xiwen
Mark Selby Vs Chang Bingyu
Ryan Day Vs Hossein Vafei
Mark Allen Vs Mark King
Ding Junhui Vs Yuan Sijun
Barry Hawkins Vs Noppon Saengkham
Neil Robertson Vs Graeme Dott
Fergal O'Brien Vs Zhao Xintong
Mark Williams Vs Gary Wilson
Shaun Murphy is now the only top 16 player left in the opening quarter of the draw, but that does not mean things will be plain sailing for him. Next up he faces Xiao Guodong who has been in good form over the last year or so and defeated Mark Davis comfortably in round one. Xiao was also a comfortable winner when these two met at the 2016 Scottish Open and Murphy has lost four of his last five matches against Chinese opposition, though this may just be coincidental. Having not had the best of starts to the season, Murphy looked good against Highfield in the last 64 and he does have a good record at this event with appearances in a semi-final and final from the two stagings.
Judd Trump and Jamie Jones will be an interesting last 32 tie. Trump looked in good form to whitewash Rhys Clark but is in for a much tougher game here. Jones was a 5-4 winner against Anthony Hamilton, who has had a decent start to the season, in the opening round and should be full of confidence after the way he ended last season in Sheffield. Trump has had a quiet season to date, though it is early days, so it is by no means beyond the realms of possibility that he could fall foul of another big display from Jones.
Jack Lisowski and Scott Donaldson presents an intriguing tie. On paper Lisowski is a strong favourite having continued his rise at the start of the season by making the Riga Masters final, but he did have to battle hard for victory against Kurt Maflin in round one. After an awful start to last season, Donaldson is now back to the sort of form that saw him make the semi-finals of the 2017 Welsh Open. He opened up with a strong win against Maguire and has won both of his previous meetings against Lisowski, so he should be full of confidence and primed to cause another upset.
Another pick of the ties pits world number one Mark Selby against wildcard Chang Bingyu. Chang has at the very least picked up some good experience from this week already with wins over Jimmy Robertson (who he also beaten in the World Open) and Robert Milkins. A match with Selby is likely to be a step too far though, but it could be a very good marker for the future if he can get two or three frames off of the three-time world champion.
China's number one player Ding Junhui takes on fellow Chinese opposition in young Yuan Sijun on Wednesday. The pair met at the World Open and Yuan took the lead in the first half of the contest, before Ding came back to win 5-3. Ding looks in good form thus far, but it will be interesting to see how Yuan gets on this time around if he is able to put himself in position to potentially take Ding out.
Barry Hawkins will take on Noppon Saengkham in a repeat of February's Welsh Open semi-final. Noppon made another semi-final recently at the World Open, though he could have beaten Mark Williams in that game and potentially gone on to win the competition, which shows the threat he poses to the Englishman. Hawkins though is in good form in China of late, having been to two finals and a semi-final of his own in the last three Chinese events. Hawkins had to battle hard against Ashley Carty but came good late on for a 5-3 victory, while Noppon needed one less frame to get through against Xu Si in the last 64.
Fergal O'Brien and Zhao Xintong are set to meet for the second Chinese ranking event in a row after O'Brien overcame Zhao in the last 64 of the World Open. O'Brien went on to make the last 16 there and will be targeting the same again here with another win against the young Chinese player. I mentioned in my preview an expectation on them both to win their first round games against higher ranked opposition. Zhao led early before McGill came back at him, while O'Brien won easily against Carter and scored well making a century in the win.
Finally, world champion Mark Williams faces a tough tie against Gary Wilson. Williams has not been tested greatly so far having won both his matches without dropping a frame, while Wilson was a 5-2 winner against Luo Honghao in the last 64. In the first Chinese ranking event of the season, Wilson impressed making the quarter-finals and having previously been a finalist at the China Open he appears to perform well in China. Add in a semi-final at this year's Welsh Open and Wilson appears to be improving all the time, but Williams should be as confident as ever and will certainly not fear any of his opponents this year which will continue to make him incredibly dangerous.
All of these last 32 matches are over the best-of-9 frames on Wednesday, with places in Friday's last 16 and at least another £5,500 at stake.
It has been plain sailing for world champion Mark Williams though over the opening two days. The Welshman has defeated Rod Lawler in his heldover last 128 tie and then seen off Ken Doherty without dropping a single frame. After winning the World Open earlier this season, the Welshman will have his sights set on back-to-back Chinese ranking titles.
World number one Mark Selby was made to battle hard before coming through his last 64 match with Akani Songsermsawad. Selby had trailed 2-1 before moving ahead 4-2 and eventually got over the line 5-3.
John Higgins also struggled early on in his game with Allan Taylor, falling 2-0 behind before closing out a 5-3 victory, while Jack Lisowski made a similar turnaround in his victory over Kurt Maflin.
Home favourite Ding Junhui is into the last 32 after beating Daniel Wells 5-1, while Shaun Murphy defeated Liam Highfield 5-1 in his first competitive match since the birth of his daughter Molly. Judd Trump wasted little time in beating Rhys Clark 5-0, closing out the match with a century break and Mark Allen was also a comfortable winner against Matthew Selt.
There were a few more upsets though. These included Marco Fu's exit as he relinquished a 3-0 lead to lose out 5-3 to Zhang Anda. Ali Carter made the high break of the tournament so far at 144, but would only win that frame as he fell 5-1 to Fergal O'Brien. Despite fighting back valiantly, Anthony McGill was also a big named casualty losing out in a deciding frame to the ever improving Zhao Xintong. The all-Scottish clash between Stephen Maguire and Scott Donaldson went the way of the outsider Donaldson 5-2 and wildcard Chang Bingyu is into the last 32 after wins over Jimmy Robertson and Robert Milkins.
Last 64 results:
Martin O'Donnell 5-3 Luca Brecel
Tom Ford 5-0 Nigel Bond
Zhang Anda 5-3 Marco Fu
Liang Wenbo 5-3 John Astley
Joe Perry 5-1 Mark Joyce
Lu Haotian W/O Kyren Wilson
Xiao Guodong 5-0 Mark Davis
Shaun Murphy 5-1 Liam Highfield
Judd Trump 5-0 Rhys Clark
Jamie Jones 5-4 Anthony Hamilton
Stuart Bingham 5-3 Peter Ebdon
Yan Bingtao 5-4 Chris Wakelin
Jack Lisowski 5-3 Kurt Maflin
Scott Donaldson 5-2 Stephen Maguire
Mei Xiwen 5-4 Michael White
John Higgins 5-3 Allan Taylor
Mark Selby 5-3 Akani Songsermsawad
Chang Bingyu 5-3 Robert Milkins
Ryan Day 5-1 Mike Dunn
Hossein Vafei 5-3 David Gilbert
Mark King 5-3 Sam Craigie
Mark Allen 5-1 Matthew Selt
Yuan Sijun 5-2 Alexander Ursenbacher
Ding Junhui 5-1 Daniel Wells
Barry Hawkins 5-3 Ashley Carty
Noppon Saengkham 5-2 Xu Si
Neil Robertson 5-2 Gerard Greene
Graeme Dott 5-4 Stuart Carrington
Fergal O'Brien 5-1 Ali Carter
Zhao Xintong 5-4 Anthony McGill
Gary Wilson 5-2 Luo Honghao
Mark Williams 5-0 Ken Doherty
Last 32 draw: (Picks in bold)
Tom Ford Vs Martin O'Donnell
Liang Wenbo Vs Zhang Anda
Joe Perry Vs Lu Haotian
Shaun Murphy Vs Xiao Guodong
Judd Trump Vs Jamie Jones
Stuart Bingham Vs Yan Bingtao
Jack Lisowski Vs Scott Donaldson
John Higgins Vs Mei Xiwen
Mark Selby Vs Chang Bingyu
Ryan Day Vs Hossein Vafei
Mark Allen Vs Mark King
Ding Junhui Vs Yuan Sijun
Barry Hawkins Vs Noppon Saengkham
Neil Robertson Vs Graeme Dott
Fergal O'Brien Vs Zhao Xintong
Mark Williams Vs Gary Wilson
Shaun Murphy is now the only top 16 player left in the opening quarter of the draw, but that does not mean things will be plain sailing for him. Next up he faces Xiao Guodong who has been in good form over the last year or so and defeated Mark Davis comfortably in round one. Xiao was also a comfortable winner when these two met at the 2016 Scottish Open and Murphy has lost four of his last five matches against Chinese opposition, though this may just be coincidental. Having not had the best of starts to the season, Murphy looked good against Highfield in the last 64 and he does have a good record at this event with appearances in a semi-final and final from the two stagings.
Judd Trump and Jamie Jones will be an interesting last 32 tie. Trump looked in good form to whitewash Rhys Clark but is in for a much tougher game here. Jones was a 5-4 winner against Anthony Hamilton, who has had a decent start to the season, in the opening round and should be full of confidence after the way he ended last season in Sheffield. Trump has had a quiet season to date, though it is early days, so it is by no means beyond the realms of possibility that he could fall foul of another big display from Jones.
Jack Lisowski and Scott Donaldson presents an intriguing tie. On paper Lisowski is a strong favourite having continued his rise at the start of the season by making the Riga Masters final, but he did have to battle hard for victory against Kurt Maflin in round one. After an awful start to last season, Donaldson is now back to the sort of form that saw him make the semi-finals of the 2017 Welsh Open. He opened up with a strong win against Maguire and has won both of his previous meetings against Lisowski, so he should be full of confidence and primed to cause another upset.
Another pick of the ties pits world number one Mark Selby against wildcard Chang Bingyu. Chang has at the very least picked up some good experience from this week already with wins over Jimmy Robertson (who he also beaten in the World Open) and Robert Milkins. A match with Selby is likely to be a step too far though, but it could be a very good marker for the future if he can get two or three frames off of the three-time world champion.
China's number one player Ding Junhui takes on fellow Chinese opposition in young Yuan Sijun on Wednesday. The pair met at the World Open and Yuan took the lead in the first half of the contest, before Ding came back to win 5-3. Ding looks in good form thus far, but it will be interesting to see how Yuan gets on this time around if he is able to put himself in position to potentially take Ding out.
Barry Hawkins will take on Noppon Saengkham in a repeat of February's Welsh Open semi-final. Noppon made another semi-final recently at the World Open, though he could have beaten Mark Williams in that game and potentially gone on to win the competition, which shows the threat he poses to the Englishman. Hawkins though is in good form in China of late, having been to two finals and a semi-final of his own in the last three Chinese events. Hawkins had to battle hard against Ashley Carty but came good late on for a 5-3 victory, while Noppon needed one less frame to get through against Xu Si in the last 64.
Fergal O'Brien and Zhao Xintong are set to meet for the second Chinese ranking event in a row after O'Brien overcame Zhao in the last 64 of the World Open. O'Brien went on to make the last 16 there and will be targeting the same again here with another win against the young Chinese player. I mentioned in my preview an expectation on them both to win their first round games against higher ranked opposition. Zhao led early before McGill came back at him, while O'Brien won easily against Carter and scored well making a century in the win.
Finally, world champion Mark Williams faces a tough tie against Gary Wilson. Williams has not been tested greatly so far having won both his matches without dropping a frame, while Wilson was a 5-2 winner against Luo Honghao in the last 64. In the first Chinese ranking event of the season, Wilson impressed making the quarter-finals and having previously been a finalist at the China Open he appears to perform well in China. Add in a semi-final at this year's Welsh Open and Wilson appears to be improving all the time, but Williams should be as confident as ever and will certainly not fear any of his opponents this year which will continue to make him incredibly dangerous.
All of these last 32 matches are over the best-of-9 frames on Wednesday, with places in Friday's last 16 and at least another £5,500 at stake.
Saturday, 22 September 2018
China Championship Preview
Following the recent Shanghai Masters, snooker is once again heading to China this week for the China Championship in Guangzhou.
This will be the second time that this event has been staged as a ranking event, and the third time overall. Luca Brecel is the defending champion after winning this title in August last year by defeating Shaun Murphy in the final to win his maiden ranking title. John Higgins was the winner a year earlier when the event was played as an invitational, with Stuart Bingham losing out in the final on that occasion.
Unfortunately for the event, recent Shanghai Masters champion Ronnie O'Sullivan is not in the field after deciding not to enter the last 128 qualifiers that were held in August. Paul Hunter Classic and Six-Reds World champion Kyren Wilson is also not in Guangzhou after withdrawing from the event for personal reasons.
The rest of the biggest and best names that snooker has to offer will be making the journey over with £150,000 and the fourth ranking title of the season up for grabs, as the season really starts to heat up with lots of action coming up on the calendar. The event also presents an opportunity to get into the Champion of Champions in November, with a number of top players such as Judd Trump, Ding Junhui and Barry Hawkins all yet to secure their places in Coventry. Though with a number of repeat winners of the qualifying events Ding, Hawkins and Trump are all well placed to qualify if the organisers decide to award any remaining spots via the world ranking list.
With so many players to look out for, here is how the draw looks for the upcoming week:
This will be the second time that this event has been staged as a ranking event, and the third time overall. Luca Brecel is the defending champion after winning this title in August last year by defeating Shaun Murphy in the final to win his maiden ranking title. John Higgins was the winner a year earlier when the event was played as an invitational, with Stuart Bingham losing out in the final on that occasion.
Unfortunately for the event, recent Shanghai Masters champion Ronnie O'Sullivan is not in the field after deciding not to enter the last 128 qualifiers that were held in August. Paul Hunter Classic and Six-Reds World champion Kyren Wilson is also not in Guangzhou after withdrawing from the event for personal reasons.
The rest of the biggest and best names that snooker has to offer will be making the journey over with £150,000 and the fourth ranking title of the season up for grabs, as the season really starts to heat up with lots of action coming up on the calendar. The event also presents an opportunity to get into the Champion of Champions in November, with a number of top players such as Judd Trump, Ding Junhui and Barry Hawkins all yet to secure their places in Coventry. Though with a number of repeat winners of the qualifying events Ding, Hawkins and Trump are all well placed to qualify if the organisers decide to award any remaining spots via the world ranking list.
With so many players to look out for, here is how the draw looks for the upcoming week:
Quarter 1
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Luca Brecel or Joe O'Connor Vs Martin O'Donnell
Tom Ford Vs Nigel Bond
Marco Fu Vs Zhang Anda
Liang Wenbo or Alfie Burden Vs John Astley
Joe Perry Vs Mark Joyce
Lu Haotian W/O Kyren Wilson
Xiao Guodong Vs Mark Davis
Shaun Murphy Vs Liam Highfield
Shaun Murphy has had two close calls in the previous staging of this event. Last year he was a big favourite to win as the experienced player going into the final with Brecel but came out on the wrong side after falling away after taking an early lead to lose 10-5. In 2016 he lost out a round earlier in a high quality semi-final where Stuart Bingham edged him 9-8. Under normal circumstances with that sort of past tournament form you would make Murphy a good shout for a big run this week. However, he missed the recent Shanghai Masters to be with his family after newborn baby daughter Molly was ill in hospital. Fortunately things have improved since and it was noted that Murphy competed in an Irish pro-am this week which featured the likes of Mark Allen and Ken Doherty, but Murphy took the title with a 4-0 win over Fergal O'Brien in the final.
Liang Wenbo is perhaps someone that could contend in this section now after the withdrawal of in-form Kyren Wilson. It has been a quiet start to the season for Liang and he will start here with yet another heldover last 128 clash. It did not work out as planned in the World Open when James Cahill took him down 5-1. He has work ahead of him in order to stay as the number two Chinese player and avoid trips to the UK qualifiers for future Chinese events. Even though you would expect him to get through the first couple of rounds there is no reason why he may not fall prior to a potential last 32 meeting with Marco Fu, who you would make favourite to beat Liang if that arises.
Luca Brecel is the defending champion in what will be a special period for him. This week he arrives as a defending champion of a ranking event for the very first time and next week he will be playing a ranking event on home turf at the European Masters. It all means that, like Liang, he has a heldover last 128 match to start his week off in Guangzhou. His draw is not straightforward though, as it would be no surprise to see Martin O'Donnell cause him problems in the last 64 or Tom Ford do the same in a potential last 32 clash before possibly playing Fu or Liang in the last 16. He has not had a good time of it in China recently either, losing in the preliminary round of the Shanghai Masters to Zhou Yuelong and relinquishing a 4-0 lead against Fergal O'Brien in the World Open. His appearance in the semi-finals of the Six-Reds is really the only positive from his season and he may be putting a lot of pressure on himself given what these next two events bring.
Marco Fu is my first quarter choice for the China Championship. It has been a long road back for Fu and now his task is to recover the ranking he had after one of his best ever seasons in 2016/2017. There are positives coming here having made the quarter-finals of the World Open before falling to eventual runner-up David Gilbert. The quality of his scoring is still as high as ever and once he gets a few more events under his belt he could be right back to the sensational form he was displaying in that aforementioned period. At the 2016 Scottish Open he was simply unplayable and it is eye trouble that has halted progress in the last 12 months rather than any kind of form loss. Looking at the draw, he is probably the player you would look at most favourably, even though he has some tough names to negotiate, though even Murphy has a tough route despite no top 16 players standing between him and a place in the quarter-finals potentially. Over the next couple of months I think Fu will really start building up his confidence with a run of good results starting here in Guangzhou.
Liang Wenbo is perhaps someone that could contend in this section now after the withdrawal of in-form Kyren Wilson. It has been a quiet start to the season for Liang and he will start here with yet another heldover last 128 clash. It did not work out as planned in the World Open when James Cahill took him down 5-1. He has work ahead of him in order to stay as the number two Chinese player and avoid trips to the UK qualifiers for future Chinese events. Even though you would expect him to get through the first couple of rounds there is no reason why he may not fall prior to a potential last 32 meeting with Marco Fu, who you would make favourite to beat Liang if that arises.
Luca Brecel is the defending champion in what will be a special period for him. This week he arrives as a defending champion of a ranking event for the very first time and next week he will be playing a ranking event on home turf at the European Masters. It all means that, like Liang, he has a heldover last 128 match to start his week off in Guangzhou. His draw is not straightforward though, as it would be no surprise to see Martin O'Donnell cause him problems in the last 64 or Tom Ford do the same in a potential last 32 clash before possibly playing Fu or Liang in the last 16. He has not had a good time of it in China recently either, losing in the preliminary round of the Shanghai Masters to Zhou Yuelong and relinquishing a 4-0 lead against Fergal O'Brien in the World Open. His appearance in the semi-finals of the Six-Reds is really the only positive from his season and he may be putting a lot of pressure on himself given what these next two events bring.
Marco Fu is my first quarter choice for the China Championship. It has been a long road back for Fu and now his task is to recover the ranking he had after one of his best ever seasons in 2016/2017. There are positives coming here having made the quarter-finals of the World Open before falling to eventual runner-up David Gilbert. The quality of his scoring is still as high as ever and once he gets a few more events under his belt he could be right back to the sensational form he was displaying in that aforementioned period. At the 2016 Scottish Open he was simply unplayable and it is eye trouble that has halted progress in the last 12 months rather than any kind of form loss. Looking at the draw, he is probably the player you would look at most favourably, even though he has some tough names to negotiate, though even Murphy has a tough route despite no top 16 players standing between him and a place in the quarter-finals potentially. Over the next couple of months I think Fu will really start building up his confidence with a run of good results starting here in Guangzhou.
Best of the rest: Luca Brecel
Quarter choice: Marco Fu
Quarter 2
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Judd Trump Vs Rhys Clark
Anthony Hamilton Vs Jamie Jones
Stuart Bingham Vs Peter Ebdon
Yan Bingtao Vs Chris Wakelin
Jack Lisowski Vs Kurt Maflin
Stephen Maguire Vs Scott Donaldson
Michael White Vs Mei Xiwen
John Higgins Vs Allan Taylor
Judd Trump is one of the big names in this second section of the draw, but so far there has been little to talk about in his 2018/2019. Non entries in the Riga Masters and Paul Hunter Classic mean he has only played in two events so far, both of which were in China. At the World Open he was defeated in the last 32, 5-3 by an in-form Gary Wilson, before another in-form Wilson in the shape of Kyren took him down 6-2 in the last 16 of the invitational Shanghai Masters. It would not be a surprise if this was possibly another more quiet week for him as he builds his game towards events to come, such as the European Masters in Belgium where he will be looking to win for the third year in a row, and the English Open that is also coming up in October. He has a tough draw in a section that is packed from top to tail in class players, so a run to the semi-finals or beyond this week could be a huge boost in kick starting his season.
John Higgins has not had much tournament time as yet this season. Last time out in Shanghai he was beaten in the opening round by Ryan Day, having skipped the first three events of the new season. That may well have helped the Scot recover from another tough World final loss in May, allowing him to come back fresh and hungry to play once again. He is a former winner here, having won the invitational version of this event in 2016 but it is probably a little unrealistic to expect him to blaze through this section having only played three matches since losing to Mark Williams at the Crucible nearly five months ago.
Stuart Bingham has had a slow start to the new campaign and will be hoping to kick start things here in Guangzhou. He failed to qualify for the first two events in Riga and Yushan and was very nearly knocked out of this event in Preston by Craig Steadman, who led Bingham 4-2 before losing 5-4. In Shanghai recently, he won 6-0 against a Chinese wildcard, before the withdrawal of Murphy put him into the quarter-finals where he lost out 6-2 to Ronnie O'Sullivan. His draw is far from easy either, facing up to recent Paul Hunter Classic finalist Peter Ebdon in the last 64 with Yan Bingtao or the surging Chris Wakelin his last 32 opposition if he comes through.
Anthony Hamilton is someone who could put some good results together this week and see off some of the big boys. Much like Fu in the top quarter, he had one of his best ever seasons in 2016/2017 but back problems last year ruined what could have been a potential run back into the top 16. Now he needs good results this year to stay on tour, but has started brightly by making the last 16 of the first two events in Riga and Yushan, as well as winning his three August qualifiers for the loss of just one frame. Jamie Jones in the last 64 is a tough opponent but an in-form Hamilton should be the favourite there in my view and would have a very good chance of sending Trump home early in a potential last 32 outing. He has made breaks for fun so far in the new campaign with 24 breaks of 50 or above, baring in mind his frames won tally is 41 thus far.
Could this be the week that Jack Lisowski picks up a ranking title? It is hardly a secret that he is in the form of his life having followed a career best season in 2017/2018 with a run to the final of this season's first tournament. Following that he has added back-to-back quarter-finals, both of which could have seen him go on further and maybe even pick up that illusive silverware. Lisowski is my second quarter pick as the form man that is in Guanghzhou. He starts off in the last 64 against the unpredictable Kurt Maflin. The Norwegian could overcome Lisowski just as easily as he could be soundly beaten, but if Lisowski focuses on his own game, rather than worrying about which Maflin will turn up on Monday, he is the worthy favourite. From there, plenty of top players stand in his way but none that he would be scared of as he seems to be pretty fearless right now.
John Higgins has not had much tournament time as yet this season. Last time out in Shanghai he was beaten in the opening round by Ryan Day, having skipped the first three events of the new season. That may well have helped the Scot recover from another tough World final loss in May, allowing him to come back fresh and hungry to play once again. He is a former winner here, having won the invitational version of this event in 2016 but it is probably a little unrealistic to expect him to blaze through this section having only played three matches since losing to Mark Williams at the Crucible nearly five months ago.
Stuart Bingham has had a slow start to the new campaign and will be hoping to kick start things here in Guangzhou. He failed to qualify for the first two events in Riga and Yushan and was very nearly knocked out of this event in Preston by Craig Steadman, who led Bingham 4-2 before losing 5-4. In Shanghai recently, he won 6-0 against a Chinese wildcard, before the withdrawal of Murphy put him into the quarter-finals where he lost out 6-2 to Ronnie O'Sullivan. His draw is far from easy either, facing up to recent Paul Hunter Classic finalist Peter Ebdon in the last 64 with Yan Bingtao or the surging Chris Wakelin his last 32 opposition if he comes through.
Anthony Hamilton is someone who could put some good results together this week and see off some of the big boys. Much like Fu in the top quarter, he had one of his best ever seasons in 2016/2017 but back problems last year ruined what could have been a potential run back into the top 16. Now he needs good results this year to stay on tour, but has started brightly by making the last 16 of the first two events in Riga and Yushan, as well as winning his three August qualifiers for the loss of just one frame. Jamie Jones in the last 64 is a tough opponent but an in-form Hamilton should be the favourite there in my view and would have a very good chance of sending Trump home early in a potential last 32 outing. He has made breaks for fun so far in the new campaign with 24 breaks of 50 or above, baring in mind his frames won tally is 41 thus far.
Could this be the week that Jack Lisowski picks up a ranking title? It is hardly a secret that he is in the form of his life having followed a career best season in 2017/2018 with a run to the final of this season's first tournament. Following that he has added back-to-back quarter-finals, both of which could have seen him go on further and maybe even pick up that illusive silverware. Lisowski is my second quarter pick as the form man that is in Guanghzhou. He starts off in the last 64 against the unpredictable Kurt Maflin. The Norwegian could overcome Lisowski just as easily as he could be soundly beaten, but if Lisowski focuses on his own game, rather than worrying about which Maflin will turn up on Monday, he is the worthy favourite. From there, plenty of top players stand in his way but none that he would be scared of as he seems to be pretty fearless right now.
Best of the rest: Anthony Hamilton
Quarter choice: Jack Lisowski
Quarter 3
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Mark Selby Vs Akani Songsermsawad
Robert Milkins Vs Jimmy Robertson or Chang Bingyu
Ryan Day Vs Mike Dunn or Luo Zetao
David Gilbert Vs Hossein Vafei
Mark King Vs Sam Craigie
Mark Allen Vs Matthew Selt
Alexander Ursenbacher Vs Yuan Sijun
Ding Junhui or Lee Walker Vs Daniel Wells
Mark Selby as you would expect is one of the tournament favourites this week. The two major events he has played in this season so far have both been in China and have seen rare final frame defeats. At the World Open he was beaten in the last 16 5-4 by Noppon Saengkham. Then last week in Shanghai, he was beaten in the quarter-final 6-5 by Ding Junhui. His draw is far from easy with young Akani Songsermsawad providing his first threat in Guangzhou, with Robert Milkins, Jimmy Robertson, Ryan Day and David Gilbert all sitting between him and a potential quarter-final spot. In top battling form though Selby will more than likely still take care of business, but with events being sporadic in the early season, it feels as though you would need to see his first match or two to judge how he is going to do both in this event, but also for the tournaments that come quickly after this.
Mark Allen has had an inbetween start to his season thus far. In the events he has featured in, he reached the last 16 in Riga, made the last 32 in the World Open before losing to Lisowski and then lost out in the Shanghai Masters last 16 to Ding Junhui. His first round opponent this week is Matthew Selt who beat Allen at the German Masters, in his first outing since winning the Masters earlier this year. Looking further ahead, a potential last 16 repeat against Ding is a possibility who he really does not have a great overall record with either.
David Gilbert is going to be out for redemption when he kicks off his campaign here this week. Last time out in China, Gilbert was a finalist and was well ahead in the final against Mark Williams, before the world champion came through 10-9. That will have hurt greatly as his search for a ranking title continues, having also reached the International Championship final three years ago. Perhaps if he could make another ranking final in China or indeed elsewhere it would be third time lucky, as someone with his break-building skill and pure ball-striking is still more than capable of picking up multiple trophies in the remainder of his career.
Ryan Day has become a tournament contender much more in the last 18 months and again he could be one to watch this week. His results at the start of the season have seen him lose in the last 64 in Riga, but 4-3 to Ali Carter, and in the last 32 of the World Open, though that was 5-2 to eventual semi-finalist Noppon Saengkham. Last time out he defeated John Higgins in Shanghai before losing a tight quarter-final with the in-form Kyren Wilson where he was 3-1 ahead at one stage. His draw is by no means easy with a potential second round tie with David Gilbert in what you would expect to be a tight game if it were to arise. Should he come through though, there is no reason why he could not have another big run.
Ding Junhui is my third quarter choice for the China Championship. When looking at the quarter in full the first thing that came to mind was that Ding had just beaten potential last 16 opponent Allen and potential quarter-final opponent Selby in the same rounds of the Shanghai Masters, where he would eventually lose a very tight semi-final with Barry Hawkins. Looking at his opponents in his first three matches, if the Chinese number one is somewhere near his best you would expect him to come through unscathed and make the last 16. He did lose in the last 32 of the World Open, though that was his first event of the season and his wife was due to give birth at any time. Since then he has also played in the Six-Reds losing the final to Wilson. His game looks to be in good shape which on home soil obviously makes him a very solid choice.
Mark Allen has had an inbetween start to his season thus far. In the events he has featured in, he reached the last 16 in Riga, made the last 32 in the World Open before losing to Lisowski and then lost out in the Shanghai Masters last 16 to Ding Junhui. His first round opponent this week is Matthew Selt who beat Allen at the German Masters, in his first outing since winning the Masters earlier this year. Looking further ahead, a potential last 16 repeat against Ding is a possibility who he really does not have a great overall record with either.
David Gilbert is going to be out for redemption when he kicks off his campaign here this week. Last time out in China, Gilbert was a finalist and was well ahead in the final against Mark Williams, before the world champion came through 10-9. That will have hurt greatly as his search for a ranking title continues, having also reached the International Championship final three years ago. Perhaps if he could make another ranking final in China or indeed elsewhere it would be third time lucky, as someone with his break-building skill and pure ball-striking is still more than capable of picking up multiple trophies in the remainder of his career.
Ryan Day has become a tournament contender much more in the last 18 months and again he could be one to watch this week. His results at the start of the season have seen him lose in the last 64 in Riga, but 4-3 to Ali Carter, and in the last 32 of the World Open, though that was 5-2 to eventual semi-finalist Noppon Saengkham. Last time out he defeated John Higgins in Shanghai before losing a tight quarter-final with the in-form Kyren Wilson where he was 3-1 ahead at one stage. His draw is by no means easy with a potential second round tie with David Gilbert in what you would expect to be a tight game if it were to arise. Should he come through though, there is no reason why he could not have another big run.
Ding Junhui is my third quarter choice for the China Championship. When looking at the quarter in full the first thing that came to mind was that Ding had just beaten potential last 16 opponent Allen and potential quarter-final opponent Selby in the same rounds of the Shanghai Masters, where he would eventually lose a very tight semi-final with Barry Hawkins. Looking at his opponents in his first three matches, if the Chinese number one is somewhere near his best you would expect him to come through unscathed and make the last 16. He did lose in the last 32 of the World Open, though that was his first event of the season and his wife was due to give birth at any time. Since then he has also played in the Six-Reds losing the final to Wilson. His game looks to be in good shape which on home soil obviously makes him a very solid choice.
Best of the rest: Ryan Day
Quarter choice: Ding Junhui
Quarter 4
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Barry Hawkins Vs Ashley Carty
Noppon Saengkham Vs Xu Si
Neil Robertson Vs Gerard Greene
Graeme Dott or Bai Langning Vs Stuart Carrington or He Guoqiang
Ali Carter Vs Fergal O'Brien
Anthony McGill Vs Zhao Xintong
Gary Wilson Vs Luo Honghao
Mark Williams or Rod Lawler Vs Ken Doherty
Neil Robertson started the season in perfect fashion by taking the first ranking title of the year in Riga. Since then, the Australian has had two outings in China, losing in the last 32 of the World Open to Ricky Walden and then having the misfortune to draw Ronnie O'Sullivan in the last 16 in Shanghai. He starts this week against Gerard Greene before a potential run-in with Graeme Dott who has had a pretty quiet start to the new season. Robertson's scoring has been unbelievable at the start of this season, having made 17 centuries in just 14 matches, though even in his out of form period a year or so ago, he was still scoring heavily but was not putting his play together for a full match and leaving the door open for his opponents.
Mark Williams returns to China having won the World Open earlier this season, to put an early exit in Riga to the back of his mind. His exit to amateur Mohammed Shehab in the first knockout round of the Six-Reds will not trouble him either and there is no shame at all in the 6-4 loss he suffered in the quarter-finals of the Shanghai Masters to Barry Hawkins. His draw for the first couple of rounds in Guangzhou features plenty of experience, but he should be able to come through comfortably to the last 32. There he could face Gary Wilson who made the quarter-finals of the World Open and could really cause the world champion some problems. If the early rounds are negotiated though, there is certainly potential for another title to add to his growing collection.
Ali Carter and Anthony McGill are two top players that I could very easily see losing early on this week. Starting with Carter, he faces solid Fergal O'Brien who will pounce if Carter is not at his best. The Captain was not in Shanghai and has only played two events this season where he lost in the last 32 on both occasions so does not bring much form to Guangzhou. O'Brien meanwhile has already had some good results in the new season, defeating Luca Brecel and Zhao Xintong in tough matches on the way to the last 16 in Yushan as well as beating Shaun Murphy in the Paul Hunter Classic. McGill meanwhile faces up to Zhao Xintong who has gotten off to a much more solid start. McGill lost out in the last 64 in Riga and failed to qualify for the World Open, as well as then failing to qualify for the delayed Indian Open in August. Zhao meanwhile has won every qualifier he has played, and made the last 16 in Riga with a whitewash of Murphy on the way that featured two centuries. He has also beaten Matthew Stevens (twice), Graeme Dott and Ricky Walden so big name players do not seem to be bringing any fear out in the youngster.
Barry Hawkins is my fourth and final quarter choice this week and in all-honesty he is one of the stand-out stars of the new season. In the past, Hawkins has been a bit of a slow starter to a season, but that is not the case this time around. His last three trips to China have seen him reach two finals (the China Open and recent Shanghai Masters) and a semi-final (at the World Open) so he is certainly the form man in this part of the world right now. Add in his World Championship semi-final and Welsh Open final from the end of last season and he has reached at least the semi-finals in five of his last eight events (the Gibraltar Open, Romanian Masters and Riga Masters being the odd ones out). Out of the 31 frames Hawkins won on the way to an 11-9 final loss in Shanghai he made 19 breaks of 50 or more, with seven of those passing the century mark which is the sign of a man at the very top of his game and will make him incredibly tough to beat if he re-creates that here in Guangzhou. The only thing missing from Hawkins recent play is a trophy and if he kicks into gear again here then that tournament victory might not be far away.
Mark Williams returns to China having won the World Open earlier this season, to put an early exit in Riga to the back of his mind. His exit to amateur Mohammed Shehab in the first knockout round of the Six-Reds will not trouble him either and there is no shame at all in the 6-4 loss he suffered in the quarter-finals of the Shanghai Masters to Barry Hawkins. His draw for the first couple of rounds in Guangzhou features plenty of experience, but he should be able to come through comfortably to the last 32. There he could face Gary Wilson who made the quarter-finals of the World Open and could really cause the world champion some problems. If the early rounds are negotiated though, there is certainly potential for another title to add to his growing collection.
Ali Carter and Anthony McGill are two top players that I could very easily see losing early on this week. Starting with Carter, he faces solid Fergal O'Brien who will pounce if Carter is not at his best. The Captain was not in Shanghai and has only played two events this season where he lost in the last 32 on both occasions so does not bring much form to Guangzhou. O'Brien meanwhile has already had some good results in the new season, defeating Luca Brecel and Zhao Xintong in tough matches on the way to the last 16 in Yushan as well as beating Shaun Murphy in the Paul Hunter Classic. McGill meanwhile faces up to Zhao Xintong who has gotten off to a much more solid start. McGill lost out in the last 64 in Riga and failed to qualify for the World Open, as well as then failing to qualify for the delayed Indian Open in August. Zhao meanwhile has won every qualifier he has played, and made the last 16 in Riga with a whitewash of Murphy on the way that featured two centuries. He has also beaten Matthew Stevens (twice), Graeme Dott and Ricky Walden so big name players do not seem to be bringing any fear out in the youngster.
Barry Hawkins is my fourth and final quarter choice this week and in all-honesty he is one of the stand-out stars of the new season. In the past, Hawkins has been a bit of a slow starter to a season, but that is not the case this time around. His last three trips to China have seen him reach two finals (the China Open and recent Shanghai Masters) and a semi-final (at the World Open) so he is certainly the form man in this part of the world right now. Add in his World Championship semi-final and Welsh Open final from the end of last season and he has reached at least the semi-finals in five of his last eight events (the Gibraltar Open, Romanian Masters and Riga Masters being the odd ones out). Out of the 31 frames Hawkins won on the way to an 11-9 final loss in Shanghai he made 19 breaks of 50 or more, with seven of those passing the century mark which is the sign of a man at the very top of his game and will make him incredibly tough to beat if he re-creates that here in Guangzhou. The only thing missing from Hawkins recent play is a trophy and if he kicks into gear again here then that tournament victory might not be far away.
Best of the rest: Zhao Xintong
Quarter choice: Barry Hawkins
Tournament winner selection: Barry Hawkins
The tournament if played over the best-of-9 frames from the last 64 through to the best-of-11 semi-finals and the best-of-19 frame final. Full coverage of the tournament will be available on Eurosport TV and Eurosport Player.
Wednesday, 19 September 2018
FANTASY SNOOKER: Points update and China Championship info
Following the postponement of the Indian Open, it has been four weeks since the last counting event to the fantasy snooker concluded with Kyren Wilson winning the Paul Hunter Classic. While Wilson was a popular pick for the three days in Furth, only one participant chose runner-up Peter Ebdon in what was an inspired selection.
Next up is the China Championships which begins on Monday. The first thing for participants to remember is that, with qualifying having already taken place, points for any heldover matches will not count towards a final player for the tournament. So, for example, do not pick out defending champion Luca Brecel in the hope of stealing a few extra points from his last 128 game.
As well as this, keep in mind that this is only the third of event of the season and there are still plenty of events on the schedule, given the rule that you can only pick any player up to three times during the 2018/2019 campaign.
This is how the table looks after the first two events:
The Cue View is still out in front after a successful opening two events but the chasing pack behind are certainly close behind with a long way to go in the season. Those nearer the bottom half of the table are by no means out of it either and three events in the next four weeks can certainly change the look of these standings.
The deadline for all picks in the China Championship is before the first matches on Monday 24 September at 2.30am UK time.
PLEASE NOTE: For those waiting for an update prior to the fourth round of picks, be aware that the European Masters starts the day after the China Championship final, and the deadline for picks there will be Monday 1 October at 12pm UK time.
Good luck to all the Fantasy Players for the next two weeks!
Next up is the China Championships which begins on Monday. The first thing for participants to remember is that, with qualifying having already taken place, points for any heldover matches will not count towards a final player for the tournament. So, for example, do not pick out defending champion Luca Brecel in the hope of stealing a few extra points from his last 128 game.
As well as this, keep in mind that this is only the third of event of the season and there are still plenty of events on the schedule, given the rule that you can only pick any player up to three times during the 2018/2019 campaign.
This is how the table looks after the first two events:
The Cue View 152
Dani M (esnukero) 141
Ryan Duckett 133
Voihelevettisua 133
FAM147 125
Shaun Hunt 118
Daniela Reich 116
Andy (APB147) 111
Kellie Barker 103
Rob Chipp 102
Cluster of Reds 101
Rob Francis 100
Matt Butler 98
LTD Syndicate 96
Daz Muckian 94
Martin Pearlman 91
Phil Mudd 90
Tungsten Darts 90
Chris Watts 86
Steven Bunn 85
Kim Kristensen 84
Stephen McCabe 83
Andrew Devonshire 83
Anthony (antow73) 82
Pete Tscherewik 77
Daniel Gavin 75
Gary Freeman 75
Alex Abrahams 73
Debbie Dymott 70
GaryOnCue 64
Kevin Platten 64
Square Sausage 61
Anatole Compton 60
Markus 57
Twit Torr Terry 56
Munraj Pal 53
Phil Robinson 51
The Cue View is still out in front after a successful opening two events but the chasing pack behind are certainly close behind with a long way to go in the season. Those nearer the bottom half of the table are by no means out of it either and three events in the next four weeks can certainly change the look of these standings.
The deadline for all picks in the China Championship is before the first matches on Monday 24 September at 2.30am UK time.
PLEASE NOTE: For those waiting for an update prior to the fourth round of picks, be aware that the European Masters starts the day after the China Championship final, and the deadline for picks there will be Monday 1 October at 12pm UK time.
Good luck to all the Fantasy Players for the next two weeks!
Wednesday, 22 August 2018
Paul Hunter Classic Preview
This week sees the return of a very special tournament on the World Snooker calendar. The tournament that pays tribute to one of the game's most popular players who was taken from us too soon. The Paul Hunter Classic in Furth.
As the year's have gone by the landscape of this tournament has changed and this will now be the third year that it has full ranking status. Michael White is the defending champion after his victory against Shaun Murphy in the final 12 months ago. With only three top 16 players entering this event in 2018, there could be a surprise winner or a first-time ranking champion waiting to be crowned.
With the large amount of non-entries, this tournament will also showcase some of the talent that is not currently on the tour, with 47 spots in the draw going to amateur players who will compete in Pre-Qualifying on Wednesday and Thursday, to make up the full field of 128. On top of that there are two German amateurs who have been given wildcard invitations to the professional stages, so Stefan Joachim and Kilian Baur-Pantoulier will join pros Lukas Kleckers and Simon Lichtenberg with hopes of glory on home soil.
Further mainland European hopes include Poland's Adam Stefanow, Switzerland's Alexander Ursenbacher and Belgian Luca Brecel who is also the fourth seed this week. Also in the field of pros are former runners-up Tom Ford, Gerard Greene, Joe Swail and Mark Davis, as well as 2015 and 2017 runner-up Murphy, who also won this title in 2008 and 2009 when the tournament was classed as a pro-am.
As the year's have gone by the landscape of this tournament has changed and this will now be the third year that it has full ranking status. Michael White is the defending champion after his victory against Shaun Murphy in the final 12 months ago. With only three top 16 players entering this event in 2018, there could be a surprise winner or a first-time ranking champion waiting to be crowned.
With the large amount of non-entries, this tournament will also showcase some of the talent that is not currently on the tour, with 47 spots in the draw going to amateur players who will compete in Pre-Qualifying on Wednesday and Thursday, to make up the full field of 128. On top of that there are two German amateurs who have been given wildcard invitations to the professional stages, so Stefan Joachim and Kilian Baur-Pantoulier will join pros Lukas Kleckers and Simon Lichtenberg with hopes of glory on home soil.
Further mainland European hopes include Poland's Adam Stefanow, Switzerland's Alexander Ursenbacher and Belgian Luca Brecel who is also the fourth seed this week. Also in the field of pros are former runners-up Tom Ford, Gerard Greene, Joe Swail and Mark Davis, as well as 2015 and 2017 runner-up Murphy, who also won this title in 2008 and 2009 when the tournament was classed as a pro-am.
Quarter 1
Last 128 draw: (Picks in bold)
Michael White Vs Thor Chuan Leong
Rory McLeod Vs Allan Taylor
Zhang Anda Vs George Pragnall
Dominic Dale Vs Itaro Santos
Mark Joyce Vs Michael Wild
Sean O'Sullivan Vs Brian Cini
Alexander Ursenbacher Vs Barry Pinches
Harvey Chandler W/O Fan Zhengyi
Sam Baird Vs Kevin VanHove
Andy Lee Vs Reggie Edwards
Ian Burns Vs Oliver Brown
Zhou Yuelong Vs Jackson Page
Niu Zhuang Vs James Cahill
Scott Donaldson Vs Sam Craigie
Ross Muir Vs Patrick Einslie
Tom Ford Vs Luke Pinches
Not only is Michael White the defending champion here in Furth this week but he's also the highest ranked player in this quarter at world number 30, signalling the opportunity that is out there for someone this week. White won two of his three qualifiers last week in Preston, while his best finish from the first two tournaments this year is a last 32 finish in Riga. Coming back as defending champion is always a special feeling and despite the lack of top players in the field last year, he still overcame Mark Selby and Murphy on the final day. If he is in good scoring form as he was last year, he could well be the man to take advantage in this section.
Tom Ford is another man who will be looking to take advantage of the lack of top players in this section, and go one better than his runner-up finish from two years ago. At 33 in the world Ford is the third highest ranked player in this section, though he has not gotten off to a fast start this season. He failed to qualify for Riga at the season's start as well as missing out on European Masters qualifying last week and struggling in his Indian Open qualifier. There may not be many ranked higher in quarter number one, but there may be a few in better form heading into this week.
Sam Craigie is one of the lower ranked players that could worth looking out for this week. After missing the first two tournaments of the season, he made his first appearance last week in Indian Open qualifying, whitewashing Jimmy White before making two centuries in his next qualifier against Ashley Carty. Craigie certainly has the potential to put a really exciting run together in Furth, but if he is going to do so he will need to win a tough first round match with Scott Donaldson. The Scotsman has had a much better start to this season than he did a year ago. Last season it took Donaldson until the UK Championship to win a match, but this season has won all five of the last 128 qualifiers he has played in, showing how tough a task Craigie will face in round one.
Another exciting young player to keep an eye on this weekend is Alexander Ursenbacher. The Swiss has had a good week of qualifying in Preston, taking three wins from three including a 4-1 defeat of Michael White and a 5-0 thrashing of Ben Woollaston. Ursenbacher showed his immense talent on the way to the semi-finals of last season's English Open, and despite struggling for a while thereafter, he demonstrated that he is capable of big runs to the latter stages. With the draw as it is, this could be a big opportunity for him to do that again.
Zhou Yuelong is my first quarter choice though, despite the world number 32 not getting past the last 64 of his opening two events this season. The 20-year-old did not have the best finish to last season either, but it was around this stage of last season that he had a couple of impressive runs. First in August he made the quarter-finals of the China Championship, matching his best ranking event finish, but then beating that in early October with a semi-final appearance at the European Masters. Zhou is one of a group of players I think could make a maiden ranking final within the next year or two, as I rate both very highly. This feels like a week where we can see a new ranking winner and a lot of players achieving their best finishes, and Zhou can certainly be one of those.
Best of the rest: Alexander Ursenbacher
Quarter choice: Zhou Yuelong
Quarter 2
Last 128 Draw: (Picks in bold)
Mark King Vs Martin O'Donnell
Jack Bradford W/O Stuart Carrington
Peter Ebdon Vs Ben Jones
Basem Eltahhan Vs Andreas Ploner
Ben Woollaston Vs Alex Taubman
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Vs Christopher Watts
Michael Georgiou Vs Umut Dikme
Zhang Yong Vs Elliot Slessor
Craig Steadman Vs Oliver Lines
Jamie Clarke Vs Kishan Hirani
Lee Walker Vs Regis D'Anna
Jamie Jones Vs Nigel Bond
Chris Wakelin Vs Luke Simmonds
Stefan Joachim Vs Aaron Busuttil
Chen Zifan Vs Duncan Bezzina
Luca Brecel Vs Curtis Daher
Mark King is the fifth seed here in Furth this week and a former semi-finalist in this competition three years ago. In this season's first event he reached the last 16, in an event with the same format as this one so that too bodes well for the former Northern Ireland Open winner. King does face a potential second round tie with Stuart Carrington who was a semi-finalist in Riga and could do some damage of his own this week. Overall, I think for an experienced player and ranking winner like King, this week provides a big opportunity to collect a lot of ranking points.
Luca Brecel is the lone top 16 player in this section, and it will be interesting to see how he responds following his last 32 exit in the World Open. Brecel was 4-0 up in that match against Fergal O'Brien before losing 5-4, which is probably a sign that he is not in the same form that he was this time last year, when he won the China Championship crown. In fact the early signs are that he is starting the season in a similar fashion to how he finished the 2017/2018 season, with some disappointing performances and early exits, but this could be the week where he turns things around.
Brecel's potential last 32 opponent Chris Wakelin could have something to say about that though. High on confidence after qualifying for the Crucible, and fighting back to push Judd Trump all the way, the 26-year-old has successfully won all of his last 128 qualifiers, including the three played in the last week. In his opening event in Latvia, Wakelin made the quarter-finals beating Jamie Jones and Mark King, which is a good sign for Wakelin fans especially as both of those players are in this section. If he can keep that form going, another quarter-final is well within reach.
My second quarter choice this week is Jamie Jones. Jones has had a reasonable start to the campaign making the last 32 of the first two events following his run to the last 16 of the World Championship last season. A year ago he was a semi-finalist in this event before a Shaun Murphy comeback narrowly denied him a final meeting with his good friend Michael White. Jones is a player who on his day performs well above his current ranking of 38, but he has not quite kicked on following the Australian Open semi-final he reached three years ago. After good performances both in World qualifying and at the Crucible, now he should be looking to break into the top 32 and reach the latter stages more consistently. This week is a big opportunity for a lot of players and Jones is one who I could see taking advantage, as he did 12 months ago in Furth.
Best of the rest: Mark King
Quarter choice: Jamie Jones
Quarter 3
Last 128 draw: (Picks in bold)
Kyren Wilson Vs Chen Feilong
Ashley Carty Vs Jake Nicholson
Liam Highfield Vs Sergey Isaenko
Kilian Baur-Pantoulier Vs Ryan Davies
Gary Wilson Vs John Astley
Jordan Brown Vs Philip Ciantar
Hammad Miah Vs Jurian Heusdens
Gerard Greene Vs Soner Sari
Matthew Selt Vs Vetter Luis
Joe O'Connor Vs Sompoi Saetang
Daniel Wells Vs Juergen Kesseler
Robert Milkins Vs Sanderson Lam
Adam Stefanow Vs Ben Mertens
Andrew Higginson Vs Fabian Monnin
Billy Castle Vs Iulian Boiko
Xiao Guodong W/O Yuan Sijun
The highest ranked player in the third quarter is Kyren Wilson and you have to say he is in the top two favourites to win this title. Wilson's form is good, starting the season with a quarter-final in Riga and a last 16 appearance at the World Open before a narrow loss to Jack Lisowski. As good as those results are, you can tell that Wilson is hungry for more and he always comes across as a hard working player who is putting in a lot of energy to improve. His three finals and a world semi-final from last season will not satisfy at all, especially as the three-year anniversary of his first and to date only ranking title is nearly upon us. All signs point to the fact that another title is not far from his grasp and you would not be at all surprised if he won multiple titles in the 2018/2019 campaign. Even though top players are lacking in this week's field, dominating in their absence would lay down a marker to everyone else.
If you're looking for a young player to break through this week Liam Highfield could be the man. He's had a remarkable 12 months, battling Crohn's disease but still managing his best ranking performance by making the Indian Open quarter-finals, and nearly repeating that in the Welsh Open before qualifying for his Crucible debut. A 5-4 loss in World Open qualifying in July is his only last 128 defeat after a clean sweep in the last week of qualifying in Preston. Recently I watched back Highfield's UK Championship loss to Shaun Murphy from December and there is so much of his game to be impressed with. He comes across very confidently, but also incredibly passionate as you will see any time he is unhappy with one of his shots - which is a sign he wants more and there could be plenty on the horizon with the talent he has.
Given that this is a week where it is entirely possible that a first time ranking winner will be crowned, it is worth noting Robert Milkins who is often overlooked in my view. To be a six-time ranking event semi-finalist you have to be a very good player, and he is also a former European Tour event finalist so there is no reason why he cannot thrive this week with the short format. Victory over Ding Junhui put him into the last 16 of the World Open earlier on this month, though he did only win one of his three qualifiers in Preston recently.
Someone who is certainly one to watch on recent form is Gary Wilson after his run to the quarter-finals of the World Open. In doing so he beat Tom Ford and more notably Judd Trump with exceptional scoring power that would be enough to beat anyone in this week's field if he can re-produce the goods. Following that he has won all of his three recent qualifiers, including a 4-3 defeat of Shaun Murphy, after requiring snookers in frame six at 3-2 down. Wilson also ended last season strongly making the semi-finals of the Welsh Open beating Mark Allen and his first round opponent this week - John Astley - in the last 16, as well as beating Ali Carter and Joe Perry to make the China Open last 16. He should be full of confidence and with a current ranking of 35, it would be a surprise if he is not soon back in the top 32, so do not discount him for this week.
Xiao Guodong is my third quarter choice for this weekend. Xiao should be right up there as one of the favourites this week given his return to form over the last year or so and his return to the top 32 in the world rankings. His run to the quarter-finals of the World Open in Yushan adds to the three quarter-finals he reached last season as well as the last 16 of two further events. Any concerns over Xiao following his withdrawal from Indian Open and European Masters qualifying have hopefully been answered by a 5-1 China Championship qualifying win over Zhang Yong. An extra boost for this week is that he has a walkover into the last 64 after the withdrawal of Yuan Sijun. Given the amount of matches the players have to play in a short space of time in this event, any energy that can be conserved is a bonus. When all is considered, Xiao is not just a contender for this quarter but a serious shout to win the whole event.
Best of the rest: Gary Wilson
Quarter choice: Xiao Guodong
Quarter 4
Last 128 draw: (Picks in bold)
Jack Lisowski Vs Dylan Emery
Zhang Jiankang Vs Felix Frede
Lu Ning Vs Daniel Williams
Eden Sharav Vs Daniel Holoyda
Jimmy Robertson Vs Chris Totten
Joe Swail Vs Paul Davison
Rod Lawler Vs Florian Nuessle
Lukas Kleckers Vs Ng On Yee
Alfie Burden Vs Marcin Nitschke
Simon Lichtenberg Vs Wayne Brown
Ashley Hugill Vs Andrew Pagett
Mark Davis Vs Markus Hertle
Kurt Maflin Vs David Grace
Peter Lines Vs Yun Fung Tam
Noppon Saengkham Vs Robbie Williams
Shaun Murphy Vs Fergal O'Brien
In quarter four, Noppon Saengkham is a man who will be on a mission after his difficult semi-final loss in the World Open. Getting there is obviously a massive achievement, but to then lose from 5-2 up will have hurt and may have affected him in the Indian Open and European Masters qualifiers where he lost to two lower ranked opponents. His run to the last four in Yushan included victories over Ryan Day, Xiao Guodong and Mark Selby and it comes pretty soon after his run to the semi-final in Cardiff. Noppon's certainly on the up and growing in confidence all the time, and with his aggressive style of play it makes him even more dangerous. There are not many players in the field with a tricky draw this week but Noppon may be one of them, as he has not been fortunate enough to avoid playing a pro in round one and may then face Shaun Murphy in round two.
Mark Davis is a player that could do well under the radar in Furth. He has won all five of his last 128 matches in the new season, and made the last 16 in Riga with victories over Luca Brecel and Marco Fu. Similarly to Milkins mentioned earlier, Davis has been in five full ranking semi-finals and made the final of this event when it was a minor ranking event in 2011. He may be down at 42 in the world rankings but that all takes a back seat this week with so many big names missing. Do not be surprised at all to see Davis in the draw for the last 16 on Sunday morning and keep a close eye on him from there.
One big name that is going to be a huge threat this week is Jack Lisowski who has started the season strongly by making his first ranking final, before backing that up by making the quarter-finals in the next event. His confidence could barely be higher and his ranking is heading in the same direction. At world number 21 he is a serious contender to make it into January's Masters and with the way he is playing at the moment, I would certainly back him to be at the Alexandra Palace - possibly as a ranking event winner. The most impressive thing with his form in the last year is that the consistency that his game has been crying out for is starting to come, which mixed with the talent he has is bad news for anyone that is drawn against him.
My fourth and final quarter selection for the Paul Hunter Classic is a twice runner-up here in the last three stagings in Shaun Murphy. The Magician has not gotten off to the best of starts this season, failing to win two of his four qualifiers this season, albeit in deciding frames, and losing out in the last 32 of his only full event so far. Long suffering Murphy fans know that slow starts are not unusual for him though, and when he reached two finals in one week last August, culminating with the loss to Michael White in Furth, he remarked that it was one of his best ever starts to a season. Whatever it is about this tournament, the venue or the surroundings, something seems to get Murphy on top form. Over the years he has won the event twice as a pro-am, as well as reaching last year's final and losing out to Ali Carter in the finale of the 2015 edition. Murphy's last ranking title came in the 2017 Gibraltar Open, where the format is the same as this, which goes alongside the continued success he had in the European Tour events of this style. If you like the theory of there being horses for courses, then Murphy is one that jumps off the page. His scoring in the two qualifiers he played last week was good, even in the 4-3 loss to Gary Wilson (making four breaks of above 60) and if he can bring his best scoring to Germany he will take some stopping.
Best of the rest: Jack Lisowski
Quarter choice: Shaun Murphy
Tournament winner selection: Shaun Murphy
The format for the three days of professional stages will be the same as recent years, with all matches played over the best-of-7 frames. The top half of the draw will play their opening three rounds on Friday, the bottom half will do the same on Saturday before the last 16 right through to the final is played out on Sunday.
As well as taking home the trophy, Sunday's champion will earn £20,000 which could be big for quite a few players on the ranking list. To watch the action throughout the three days, Eurosport Player will have full coverage online.
The format for the three days of professional stages will be the same as recent years, with all matches played over the best-of-7 frames. The top half of the draw will play their opening three rounds on Friday, the bottom half will do the same on Saturday before the last 16 right through to the final is played out on Sunday.
As well as taking home the trophy, Sunday's champion will earn £20,000 which could be big for quite a few players on the ranking list. To watch the action throughout the three days, Eurosport Player will have full coverage online.
Monday, 20 August 2018
FANTASY SNOOKER: Points Update and Paul Hunter Classic Info
The first event of the Fantasy Snooker season has been and gone with Mark Williams winning the World Open in China, beating David Gilbert in the final. Early shocks in this early season event left a line-up that not many dared to predict.
Only two participants dared to pick World Champion Williams, while one was brave enough to look outside of the box and pick Gilbert - who lost from 9-5 ahead to cost that player at least 10 points. However, with plenty of tournaments left and more than enough points to play for, it is far too early to worry about your position in the overall standings and panic pick for the next event.
It may be an ominous sign that last season's champion Kellie Barker is lurking inside the top ten after the first event, a very respectable start. It is another blogger that has taken an early 24 point lead at the top though, after picking winner Williams and semi-finalist Hawkins, while six of the top 10 in the early standings have World Open quarter-finalist Gary Wilson as a season selection.
Current Table:
Only two participants dared to pick World Champion Williams, while one was brave enough to look outside of the box and pick Gilbert - who lost from 9-5 ahead to cost that player at least 10 points. However, with plenty of tournaments left and more than enough points to play for, it is far too early to worry about your position in the overall standings and panic pick for the next event.
It may be an ominous sign that last season's champion Kellie Barker is lurking inside the top ten after the first event, a very respectable start. It is another blogger that has taken an early 24 point lead at the top though, after picking winner Williams and semi-finalist Hawkins, while six of the top 10 in the early standings have World Open quarter-finalist Gary Wilson as a season selection.
Current Table:
The Cue View 89
Daniela Reich 65
Stephen McCabe 64
FAM147 63
Andy (@APB147) 55
Steven Bunn 50
Phil Mudd 48
Pete Tscherewik 48
Kellie Barker 48
Cluster of Reds 46
Andrew Devonshire 46
Ryan Duckett 46
Shaun Hunt 42
Dani M (@esnukero) 40
Daniel Gavin 39
Rob Chipp 39
Debbie Dymott 37
GaryOnCue 37
Phil Robinson 34
Matt Butler 33
Anatole Compton 32
Daz Muckian 30
Tungsten Darts 30
Twit Torr Terry 30
Gary Freeman 29
Markus 28
Kim Kristensen 25
Kevin Platten 24
LTD Syndicate 23
Alex Abrahams 23
Martin Pearlman 22
Munraj Pal 21
Voihelevettisua 21
Chris Watts 21
Rob Francis 16
Square Sausage 16
Players previous selected are available on request
This week's second event comes from Furth in the form of the Paul Hunter Classic. With only three top 16 players involved this week in Germany, it will force players to look further outside of the box for their picks and could produce some intriguing selections. Don't forget that you can only pick each player a maximum of three times over the season, and another rule that is notable for this week is that you cannot pick any of the amateur qualifiers that will make up the field.
The deadline for your two Paul Hunter Classic is before the first matches in the professional stages of the tournament on Friday morning. Good luck!
Sunday, 5 August 2018
World Open Preview
After Neil Robertson's season opening victory in the Riga Masters, attention now turns to the first big Chinese ranking event of the season as a number of top players return to action at the World Open in Yushan.
The likes of Mark Selby, Ding Junhui and Judd Trump who all skipped the Riga Masters will be competing for the title and a very healthy first prize of £150,000. Ding is the defending champion having eased to victory in the final against Kyren Wilson last September, and he will now be hoping to add another title to his collection on home soil.
Neil Robertson will be hoping to make it back-to-back titles, while Jack Lisowski will want to build on his first ranking final appearance, after losing to the Australian 5-2 in Latvia. Others eyeing success in Yushan will be former champions Ali Carter and Mark Allen (when the tournament was staged on the Hainan island), while a total of 10 Chinese pros will be bidding for home glory, with a further two Hong Kong representatives and four Chinese amateur wildcards hoping to make a name for themselves.
It's set up to be a very interesting and exciting in Yushan, with so many capable winners in all sections of the draw.
The likes of Mark Selby, Ding Junhui and Judd Trump who all skipped the Riga Masters will be competing for the title and a very healthy first prize of £150,000. Ding is the defending champion having eased to victory in the final against Kyren Wilson last September, and he will now be hoping to add another title to his collection on home soil.
Neil Robertson will be hoping to make it back-to-back titles, while Jack Lisowski will want to build on his first ranking final appearance, after losing to the Australian 5-2 in Latvia. Others eyeing success in Yushan will be former champions Ali Carter and Mark Allen (when the tournament was staged on the Hainan island), while a total of 10 Chinese pros will be bidding for home glory, with a further two Hong Kong representatives and four Chinese amateur wildcards hoping to make a name for themselves.
It's set up to be a very interesting and exciting in Yushan, with so many capable winners in all sections of the draw.
Quarter 1
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Ding Junhui or James Wattana Vs Yuan Sijun
Robert Milkins Vs David Lilley
Marco Fu Vs Peter Ebdon
Liang Wenbo or James Cahill Vs Andrew Higginson
David Gilbert W/O Matthew Stevens
Ali Carter Vs Rory McLeod
Ricky Walden Vs Dominic Dale
Neil Robertson or He Guoqiang Vs Andy Lee
Ding Junhui is the defending champion this week and one of the leading contenders when it comes to playing in China. This will be his first outing of the new season so a little bit of rust can be expected. When he won the title last year it was played in a September slot that he has had much success in, having won the Shanghai Masters multiple times during that period. If he overcomes James Wattana in his heldover last 128 match, it will be intriguing to see how young Yuan Sijun gets on against him, but with the pressure of playing a Chinese hero on home soil could be too much for Yuan. With plenty of top players in this section though it is tough to pick Ding out for a big run having not seen him yet this season.
Neil Robertson got his season off to a flyer again last week by winning the Riga Masters for a second time, and taking the first ranking event of the season for the fourth time in six years. I expected him to do well, after seeing that he had changed cues and been practising a lot to get use to the new equipment. With the confidence of knowing that the change has worked, the Australian will now be looking to keep the ball rolling and add yet another Chinese ranking title to his collection. Robertson has twice won the Wuxi Classic which used to be played around this time of year, so he knows all about playing in Chinese conditions at this time of year, and given his performance in Latvia he has to be a front runner again this week.
Ali Carter and Liang Wenbo are two players who can consider themselves unlucky with how they lost out in Latvia last week. Both fell in tough matches to Mark Allen and Robertson respectively, and that came after Carter had already beaten Ryan Day. Carter is a former winner of this title, overcoming Joe Perry in a close final two years ago. Of Carter's four ranking titles, two have come in China and over the last couple of seasons his best performances have come over in Asia. Liang Wenbo was one of many tour players to enter the unsanctioned Haining Open in the lead up to this event, though footage emerged during the week of him walking out of one his matches, conceding the tie in just the second frame. Liang will need to have much more patience here this week, though he often struggles to keep his emotions under control so this is not new. His holdover opponent James Cahill can cause him problems, and out of Carter and Liang you have to think the Englishman is the much bigger contender in Yushan.
Ricky Walden has started the season brightly, making the quarter-finals in Riga, beating Mark Allen before losing out to the eventual champion Robertson. The pair would meet again in the last 32 if they safely negotiate their opening ties, and Walden would have every chance of coming out of that one on the right side. Like Robertson, Walden has had early season success in the past, having been a former winner of the Wuxi Classic himself. As is well documented, Walden is a bit of a China specialist, with all of his three ranking titles coming in China, while five of his six ranking finals have been in Asia. Now that he is coming back to top form, and after scoring really well in Latvia, he may not be far away from that one really big run that puts him back close to the top 16 in the world rankings, as he certainly has the quality to get back there. Given his past performances and current form, Walden has to be a dark horse for this week.
My opening quarter choice though is Hong Kong's Marco Fu. Fu is a player working his way back to form after eye surgery and it may not seem inviting for this pick that he lost in the last 32 in Latvia to Mark Davis. He had beaten Xiao Guodong a round previously though and Davis has a good record against a number of top players so that is hardly a surprise. With Liang proving unpredictable, while Ding is in his first tournament of the season, Fu looks the best pick from the top half of this section to make the quarter-finals. If he can pick up a couple of good wins early on in the week, that could give him the confidence to know his change to SightRight methods and recent eye surgery is all working out well and that he can really kick on and get back to his best. It is only about a year and half since Fu was playing some of the best snooker of his career, winning the Scottish Open and reaching the Players Championship final, so that sort of form is hardly a distant memory. So, this could be a very big week for Fu.
Best of the rest: Ricky Walden
Quarter choice: Marco Fu
Quarter 2
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Barry Hawkins Vs Akani Songsermsawad
Michael Holt Vs Mark Davis
Matthew Selt Vs Lee Walker
Yan Bingtao or Ashley Carty Vs Stuart Carrington
Fergal O'Brien Vs Zhao Xintong
Luca Brecel Vs Scott Donaldson
Tom Ford Vs Gary Wilson
Judd Trump Vs Martin O'Donnell
The second quarter of the draw looks like a pretty open one in all, and will feature the first tournament venue appearance of Judd Trump. The former China Open and International champion has a good record in the big China events, including the Shanghai Masters where he has lost in three finals. In this event though or the China Championship which are newer to the scene and have slightly less prestige perhaps, he does not quite seem to have as good a record. There are certainly plenty of potential hurdles for Trump in the early stages of the draw, so if he is not quite on his game an early exit could loom. Equally, with the likes of Higgins and O'Sullivan not involved this week he could see this is as an early opportunity to lay down his own marker for the upcoming 2018/2019 campaign.
Yan Bingtao and Zhao Xintong are two young Chinese players that will have a lot of support and expectation on them this week. Yan is highly touted as the next potential Chinese ranking winner but after an early withdrawal from last week's Riga Masters, and a potential last 64 tie against one of the losing Latvia semi-finalists, it will be interesting to see how he gets on in Yushan. Zhao meanwhile has shown some early promise with a last 16 appearance in Riga, thrashing Shaun Murphy along the way, while defeating Graeme Dott to qualify for this tournament. However, in his last 64 tie with Fergal O'Brien he faces someone who made a couple of centuries in his qualifying round win over Robin Hull, and will test every part of Zhao's tactical play and patience in what will be a tough match for the young man.
Luca Brecel was a semi-finalist here last year before losing to eventual winner Ding Junhui, and that run came shortly after his win at the China Championship, showing how much the Belgian enjoys playing in China and seems to embrace the challenge. After a poor end to the 2017/2018 season though, and an early exit in Latvia last week, his confidence will not be quite as high. Looking at the draw, he could easily lose in either of his first two matches if he is just off his game, but equally he could have a run right through to the latter stages if he plays solidly. Looking at his social media he has arrived in China early, spending some time in Shanghai prior to the tournament, so that should help him in terms of jet lag and acclimatising to conditions ahead of the event, a reason many players chose to play in the unsanctioned Haining Open this week.
My second quarter choice is one of those players to feature in Haining, Barry Hawkins. The left-hander has been in a China for a while already after playing the unsanctioned event last week, so that will have helped him get over any jet lag and acclimatise ahead of the much more important event this week. Even though his success there was limited, it is always a good move to play in China the week before a big event, much like American golfers playing the Scottish Open the week before the Open Championship on UK soil. Notoriously Hawkins is a slow starter to a season and this seems like a much less assured pick when you consider he lost 4-3 in the last 64 in Latvia to Li Hang (who was the losing finalist this week in Haining). With question marks over the other top players in this section for this week, Hawkins may be able to take advantage if the draw opens up, and he is far too good a player to continue struggling every year for the first few months of the season.
Best of the rest: Luca Brecel
Quarter choice: Barry Hawkins
Quarter 3
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Mark Selby Vs Elliot Slessor
Zhou Yuelong Vs Jamie Jones
Ryan Day Vs Robbie Williams
Noppon Saengkham Vs Rod Lawler
Xiao Guodong Vs Michael Georgiou
Zhang Anda Vs Jak Jones
Anthony Hamilton Vs Mark Joyce
Mei Xiwen Vs Simon Lichtenberg
The third quarter is where the likes of Shaun Murphy and Stuart Bingham would have been but both were beaten in lats 128 qualifying. That leaves Ryan Day as the second highest ranked player in this section and someone who will be looking to have a strong week. His Riga defence last week did not go too well, after losing in the last 128 albeit against Ali Carter. If he turns up with his high scoring and with a minimum of the unforced errors that have cost him dearly in the past, then the three time tournament winner has every chance in a very open section of the draw.
Anthony Hamilton is another player to keep an eye on. Last season was a struggle for him given some back problems, but he has started the year brightly by qualifying here and making the last 16 in the Riga Masters. Looking at the section of the draw he finds himself in, he is a good bet to get a couple of wins again this week to make back-to-back last 16 appearances and possibly go a few better from there.
Xiao Guodong is one of the players on my internal list of players that could step up and win a ranking title this season, or make it to another final like he did in Shanghai in 2013. His opening match against Michael Georgiou could be one of his toughest in a section of the draw that he could easily come through to make the last eight, should he be close to top form. After several runs to quarter-finals during last season it would hardly be a surprise if he added another he continues to surge back up the world rankings.
My third quarter choice though is the rightful tournament favourite Mark Selby. The world number one is in full tournament action for the first time since his first round exit and after a few early exits in the back half of last season, he may feel like he has a point to prove. After his failings in the triple crown events, some would have written Selby's 2017/2018 off as a bad season, but he did win the second highest paying events of the season, which was held in China. He was also a winner in November's International Championship in China, the week after winning the unsanctioned Haining Open, a tournament that has been going on again this week and Selby has gone on to defend his title. It is very hard to ignore someone who has won five Chinese ranking events in the last three years, and been runner-up in another (his only ranking final defeat since losing the final of this tournament in Haikou in 2014). All in all, if Selby can get through the first couple of rounds he'll get stronger and any early season rust will be dealt with, making him the man to beat once more.
Best of the rest: Xiao Guodong
Quarter Choice: Mark Selby
Quarter 4
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Kyren Wilson Vs Paul Davison
Kurt Maflin Vs Harvey Chandler
Mark Allen Vs Lu Haotian
Jack Lisowski Vs Chris Wakelin
Joe Perry Vs Mike Dunn or Luo Zetao
Stephen Maguire Vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
Ben Woollaston or Bai Langning Vs Jimmy Robertson or Chang Bingyu
Mark Williams or Lukas Kleckers Vs Alexander Ursenbacher
World champion Mark Williams is the headline act in this quarter of the draw and once again he has a holdover match to get his week started. His experience alone should prove a big factor against his first two opponents Lukas Kleckers and Alexander Ursenbacher, but his start in Latvia was shaky. The Welshman lost in the last 32 to Zhang Yong and has made a point of mentioning all over his Twitter how little practice he has been putting in over the summer. That in itself is good enough reason to hold fire on any picks for Williams to do well in the first few events of this season, though his draw for the first two or three rounds this week is inviting, not that his draw in Riga was not similar in many ways.
Mark Allen's draw is almost the complete opposite with a very tough opener coming up against Lu Haotian, who has made it into the top 64 after just one year back on tour. He can cause Allen a lot of problems in the first round, while his second round opponent would be last week's runner-up Jack Lisowski, or an equally as confident Chris Wakelin who made the last eight in Latvia. Allen himself made the last 16 in Riga beating Ali Carter before losing to Ricky Walden in another very tough draw, that also saw him sneak past Peter Lines 4-3 in the last 64. The Northern Irishman may sight this event as when his season really kicked into gear last year, making the semi-finals here, prior to making the International final and winning the Masters a few months afterwards. To cap off a tough draw though, his last 16 opponent could be the man that put him out in that World Open semi last year, Kyren Wilson. So, if Allen is to repeat his 2017 efforts in Yushan or go even better, he will certainly have done it the hard way.
I have already briefly mentioned Jack Lisowski after his final in Latvia last week. Prior to his run there I tipped him to win his quarter and said it was time for him to make the next big step after a good season, by making a ranking final or going one better. Now that he's done that he returns to China having had quite a good time of things there last season, making the last 16 of the International Championship, the quarter-finals of the China Open and the semi-finals in Shanghai. You certainly would not put another big run past him because his confidence, like his world ranking, is surely at an all-time high. Tough opposition stands in his way from the start this week, but with the form he is in that will help him ensure he is focused and at his best from ball one in Yushan.
Stephen Maguire was one of Lisowski's victims in Latvia, losing to him 5-1 in the semi-finals, just falling short of making back-to-back finals in the season's first ranking event. The Scotsman has just leapfrogged Ryan Day to move back up to 16 in the world rankings, and is projected to move to 14 after this week, which is more than enough to get him in the invitational Shanghai Masters. Consistency has been Maguire's main issue in recent years, but it is also the issue of his first round opponent Thepchaiya Un-Nooh who could win this match 5-0 or 5-1 just as easily as he could lose by the same margin. With question marks over Williams early season practice, Maguire looks like a solid choice in the bottom half of this section to make it through to at least the quarter-finals, and potentially kick on from there.
My fourth and final quarter selection though is Kyren Wilson. Last year's losing finalist made the quarter-finals in Latvia last week before losing to Maguire and has already made consistency his number one target of the new season. He is looking more and more consistent all the time, and a good week here would see him overtake Shaun Murphy to get into the world's top eight. The only thing missing from his performances over the past 12 months is a trophy, and it is amazing that he has not added another title since winning in Shanghai three years ago. You would expect him to beat Paul Davison in the last 64 this week and then to be too strong for Kurt Maflin before the draw really heats up. After beating Allen in the World Championship quarter-finals at the end of last season, and here in Yushan last season, Wilson would relish another meeting with the Northern Irishman in the last 16. He also overcame Lisowski in the China quarter-finals in April from way behind so would be confident facing him. Wilson thrives off of the big challenges and he would certainly have a few of those after the first round or two, but his form over the last year is too good to ignore.
Best of the rest: Stephen Maguire
Quarter choice: Kyren Wilson
Tournament winner selection: Mark Selby
All matches up to and including the quarter-finals this week will be played over the best-of-9 frames, with the semi-finals being over the best-of-11 and the final a best-of-19 frame affair. For UK and European viewers, the event will be televised in full by Eurosport and Eurosport Player, in what is the first week-long event of the new snooker season.
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