Tuesday, 16 February 2016

Welsh Open: Day 2: Live Blog

9am - Back again and nearly time for me to grab some breakfast but before I do it's time to introduce my live blog for the day. I'll be spending most of my day on the front five tables today, as there will only be three games on out at the back as we go down to eight tables. Then in the evening we're down to four so i'll park up nice and early to see the best action. These are some of the games i'll have an eye on.

In the morning session I will obviously be watching Shaun Murphy again as he takes on Mitchell Mann. I'd like to see Michael Holt and Jimmy Robertson at the same time but fear that could be on the back tables.

At 1pm I like the match up between Luca Brecel and Mark King a lot, think that could be a cracking game (and my mate is a massive Luca fan who'll want updates). Wouldn't mind watching Mark Davis and James Cahill if that is nearby after watching both of those guys yesterday.

Then at 2pm we have Ding Junhui against Joe Swail, I fancy that to be a great match and would like to get to watch it, though if it's on table two it may be tough with Ronnie being on the main table to get anywhere near it for Rocket fans, especially after yesterday. Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Anthony McGill could be a good one too.

At 7pm we go down to four tables so i'll find a spot to have a view of all four. In that session we have Neil Robertson against Stuart Carrington which will probably be my focus.

Following that in the designated 8pm session I will watch Robin Hull after missing his first round and trying to watch over my shoulder. He takes on Mark Allen in a match that could go the distance.

That's what you can look forward to hearing from and I know none of my picked out matches are on the TV table so it should be a good day to keep you all informed.

10.30am - All set and ready here to watch the Magician. Just popped up to the Players lounge and had a good laugh with Holty. He's out on table seven unfortunately.

11.40am - All going well for Murphy so far. Cueing nicely. Highlight a 135 early on. Mann not done much wrong. Missed a pink when in in frame four which has proved the difference at 3-1. Walden just now making a nice break after losing a 40 minutes second frame but still trails 1-2. Gilbert not got going this morning and the usual stuff from Doherty sees him 2-0 ahead. Wenbo and Wilson both cueing nicely but particularly Wenbo. One to watch this week.

1pm - Murphy through. Made a bit of hard work of it there but a cool break in the decider to get through. Mann played well took the chances he had. Just one bad positional shot in the decider costing him. Wenbo looked great value for his 4-1 win. Saw from afar that Michael White got through a quality affair with Tom Ford and we've got a couple of deciders coming in now as I pop up to the lounge to congratulate Shaun.

1.40pm - slow start to the afternoon with Mark Davis and Mark Kings matches just starting out. Hawkins has just made a lovely 87 to level with Robbie Williams who is a little bit scratchy so far. King looking good for 1-0 on Luca. Higgins and Baird a really scrappy start.

2pm - Mark Davis is playing as well as he ever has. Seniors win seems to have given him great confidence, brilliant yesterday and started with a 134 today. Higgins and Baird still grinding away the opener. 50 minutes and counting. After a bit of bad luck potting a red going into them from the pink, Luca comes back for a second chance and makes the most of it for 1-1.

Just as I'm about to submit Higgins has got a snooker and potted the green. Should clear for 1-0... And does. 52 minutes in all.

2.30pm - May have been a slow start for Higgins but he's just gone with consecutive centuries to lead 3-0. Haven't got the exact numbers as there's been scoreboard issues on that match in the arena. Davis still looking good at 2-0. Mark King had chances in frame three but Luca took it. He is in now though to try and level at 2-2. Also 2-2 with Williams and Hawkins. Reckon that will go the distance.

2.55pm - Higgins through in style and that means Matthew Stevens and Martin O'Donnell are now on table 2. Both Luca and King are missing balls as that goes close. 3-2 Brecel but you just fancy a decider. Robbie Williams now looking the stronger player against Hawkins 3-2 and in with another decent chance. Frame three been a battle with Davis and Cahill but Mark now has a chance for 3-0. A chance he's missed. Battle on the green continues.

3.05pm - 3-3 King and Brecel and looks the same is coming in the Hawkins game. Who do I fancy? Luca and Robbie. Don't hold me to it. Cahill just won a marathon to stay in his match with Davis at 1-2.

3.35pm - Luca wins it. King didn't really have a chance and the Belgian knocked in some great pots. Hawkins looking good to beat Williams. Mark Davis has breathing space again at 3-1.

4pm - Lovely start from Joe Swail against Ding Junhui, cueing just as well as he did yesterday. Ronnie blitzing it on the TV. Stevens coming back at O'Donnell well. Mark Davis has just beaten James Cahill 4-1 in what turned into a scrap. Hawkins doubled the last red to win his decider with Robbie Williams and now Marco Fu Vs Daniel Wells is on that table.

4.25pm - Ding Junhui absolutely flying now. 80 followed by a 98 clearance to lead Swail 2-1. Could he go under the radar this week. Dott has taken the opener against Ross Muir and Wells is 1-0 on Fu, though Fu has a great chance to level up.

7pm - Swail will be disappointed to lose tonight but there was nothing much he could've done in the last couple of frames. Fu was as solid as ever against Wells.

Was a little gutted for Joe as he played well and was pulling out all the shots. Quick in and out after that match finished to grab food and I'm ready for tonight focusing probably on Neil Robertson and Joe Perry but I have a nice view of all four matches.

7.30pm - Opening frames done on all tables. Robertson business like to lead, Li Hang took what was there after getting a chance with reds spread. Day was the most impressive in his break of 70+ to lead Mike Dunn

7.50pm - Dunn has levelled after a scrappy second with Day, who conceded when needing a snooker on the pink thinking he'd accidentally potted, and getting the brown out of the pocket to signal a concession. Only then did he realise that the pink had wobbled and gone safe. Oops.

Perry has also levelled in a frame where both players missed chances.

It also seems the match I really want to see this evening between Hull and Allen is going on the spare arena table, table 5 on time at 8pm to save time later it seems. Looking forward to that. Hull actually played on that same table yesterday against Hossein Vafei Ayouri.

8.15pm - Quick opener in the Allen match goes his way. Very much a case of little in large in terms of the vast height difference. Perry looked more comfortable in going 2-1 up as Hang missed another easy ball on the way. Neil Robertson is 2-0 up after a scrappy second when the reds ended up on the side cushion.

8.35pm - Robin Hull really is a joy to watch when he's like that. Magnificent 114 clearance with some great shots and perfect positional play to make it 1-1. You could almost feel the sigh of relief from Day as he potted the blue to stop Dunns continued search for snookers and go 2-1 ahead.

8.50pm - Allens just as good to watch after a missed long pot from Hull leaves him in. 65 does the job to lead 2-1 after some good recovery pots. Perry will be glad to go 3-1 after Hang had a huge battle for snookers which he nearly got. Day goes 3-1 up to capitalising on a Dunn error with an 85 break.

9pm - This really is sensational. Allen misses a long pot this time and Hull shows his break building prowess with a 77 to make it 2-2. Best shot of the break really was the first black. Was a tough shot thin but played it confidently and into the reds. Match of the tournament for me of the one's I've seen.

9.15pm - Snooker really is a cruel game. Hull going well on 55, great pack opener but a red falls in, Allen brings the red off of the cushion early and clears with 60 to lead 3-2. Stunning standard. Frightening.

10.10pm - Match of the tournament all done here. Mark Allen gets through 4-3. Frame six was an interesting one as Allen had a great chance before missing a red just as Ryan Day won and about 962,000 people charged down the stairs like it was black Friday at the Trafford Centre.

Hull went on to clear much later with a cool 46 and had a great chance in the decider but missed a brown trying to force his way around the table and Allen did the rest with 65 to leave the Fin needing snookers.

On the night though they both did themselves proud and I'm glad I concentrated on this match solely. My favourite of the event so far.

10.25pm - As if the standard couldn't get better Selby opens up with a 133 on table two against Lines in a match not being filmed despite being on a TV table.

Even more bizarrely Lisowski Vs Gould and Woollaston Vs Burden are out on tables 8 and 9 around the back. No idea.

1am - A bizarre evening finishes with a granite display from Mark Selby, the snooker on the green was genius and near impossible to escape from in frame five for Lines. Tough on him as he really could do nothing more. Back at the hotel and after some sleep before we go again tomorrow for the Last 32.

Monday, 15 February 2016

Last 64 Preview from Cardiff

At the time that I start writing this it is 1am after a very long first day of the Welsh Open here in Cardiff. It's been a good one with plenty of snooker viewed and plenty of players that impressed.

If you want the rough idea of what I saw the link to my live blog of day one is here: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/02/welsh-open-day-1-live-blog.html

The main story is the exit of the world champion to Anthony Hamilton, but if you read my preview you, like myself, will not be too surprised by that one. Stephen Maguire (my tournament tip) lost out too to Martin O'Donnell 4-3, very disappointed with that one.

There was also a huge comeback from Kurt Maflin to beat Hammad Miah from 3-0 down and an equally big one from Leo Fernandez to do the same to Kyren Wilson damaging his Crucible hopes, but not as much as Maguire's have been damaged.

Ronnie O'Sullivan turned down a 147 chance to make a 146 instead, I did not see this live as I was watching the back 7 tables but quickly gathered what had happened and have since watched it back. The thing I find ironic about this is that over the last few days on Twitter Ronnie has been going on and on about a con man that supposedly did him out of £125,000. Well I bet a few people in Cardiff feel like they've been conned after that.

Here is a full round-up of today's results:

John Higgins 4-0 Andy Hicks
Sam Baird 4-2 Thor Chuan Leong
Peter Ebdon 4-0 Zhang Anda
Michael Georgiou 4-0 Jamie Jones
Liang Wenbo 4-0 Hatem Yassen
Gary Wilson 4-1 Jimmy White
Michael White 4-2 Joe O'Connor
Tom Ford 4-1 Jason Weston
Mike Dunn 4-3 Chris Wakelin
Ryan Day 4-0 Vinnie Calabrese
Robin Hull 4-2 Hossein Vafei Ayouri
Mark Allen 4-0 Sam Craigie
James Cahill 4-1 Xiao Guodong
Mark Davis 4-2 Zhao Xintong
Robbie Williams 4-3 Luke Simmonds
Barry Hawkins 4-2 Lee Walker
Shaun Murphy 4-1 Itaro Santos
Mitchell Mann 4-2 Zhou Yuelong
Mark King 4-0 Scott Donaldson
Ding Junhui 4-1 Steven Hallworth
Joe Swail 4-1 Zak Surety
Matt Selt 4-0 Nigel Bond
Sydney Wilson 4-3 Gerard Greene
Ross Muir W/O Jamie Burnett (Burnett was a no show)
Graeme Dott 4-1 Darryl Hill
Daniel Wells 4-2 Andrew Higginson
Marco Fu 4-0 Joel Walker
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 4-2 Paul Davison
Anthony McGill 4-3 Liam Highfield
Stuart Carrington 4-0 Jordan Brown
Neil Robertson 4-3 Fraser Patrick
Mark Selby 4-0 Duane Jones
Peter Lines 4-2 David Grace
Fergal O'Brien 4-3 Noppon Saengkham
Ali Carter 4-1 Cao Yupeng
Leo Fernandez 4-3 Kyren Wilson
Kurt Maflin 4-3 Hammad Miah
Rod Lawler 4-3 Sanderson Lam
Mark Williams 4-3 Lu Chenwei
Dechawat Poomjaeng 4-1 Craig Steadman
Robert Milkins 4-3 Sean O'Sullivan
Yu De Lu 4-3 Ian Glover
Ricky Walden 4-3 James Wattana
Jimmy Robertson 4-3 Michael Wild
Michael Holt 4-3 Hamza Akbar
Tian Pengfei 4-2 Ashley Hugill
Ronnie O'Sullivan 4-1 Barry Pinches
Judd Trump 4-0 Michael Leslie
Rory McLeod 4-3 Michael Wasley
Mark Joyce 4-0 Gareth Allen
Alan McManus 4-3 Rhys Clark
Joe Perry 4-0 Tony Drago
Li Hang 4-0 Chris Melling
David Gilbert 4-0 Zhang Yong
Ken Doherty 4-0 Lu Ning
Matthew Stevens 4-2 David Morris
Martin O'Donnell 4-3 Stephen Maguire
Jack Lisowski 4-2 Eden Sharav
Martin Gould 4-1 Adam Duffy
Alfie Burden 4-3 Dominic Dale
Ben Woollaston 4-0 Jamie Cope
Allan Taylor 4-1 Oliver Lines
Anthony Hamilton 4-1 Stuart Bingham

Last 64 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

John Higgins Vs Sam Baird
Peter Ebdon Vs Michael Georgiou
Liang Wenbo Vs Gary Wilson
Michael White Vs Tom Ford
Ryan Day Vs Mike Dunn
Mark Allen Vs Robin Hull
Mark Davis Vs James Cahill
Barry Hawkins Vs Robbie Williams
Shaun Murphy Vs Mitchell Mann
Luca Brecel Vs Mark King
Ding Junhui Vs Joe Swail
Matt Selt Vs Sydney Wilson
Graeme Dott Vs Ross Muir
Marco Fu Vs Daniel Wells
Anthony McGill Vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
Neil Robertson Vs Stuart Carrington
Mark Selby Vs Peter Lines
Ali Carter Vs Fergal O'Brien
Mark Williams Vs Rod Lawler
Kurt Maflin Vs Leo Fernandez
Robert Milkins Vs Dechawat Poomjaeng
Ricky Walden Vs Yu De Lu
Michael Holt Vs Jimmy Robertson
Ronnie O'Sullivan Vs Tian Pengfei
Judd Trump Vs Rory McLeod
Alan McManus Vs Mark Joyce
Joe Perry Vs Li Hang
David Gilbert Vs Ken Doherty
Matthew Stevens Vs Martin O'Donnell
Martin Gould Vs Jack Lisowski
Ben Woollaston Vs Alfie Burden
Anthony Hamilton Vs Allan Taylor


That's all from me on what has been an extremely long day. Back tomorrow with the first session at 10.30am for some more.

Sunday, 14 February 2016

Welsh Open Day 1: Live Blog

Morning all, an early one here at the hotel as I prepare for the 9am start in at the Motorpoint Arena for the Welsh Open Last 128. All 64 first round games are being played today and looking at the schedule 12 tables will be in use at different times.

What i'm going to *attempt* to do today is some kind of Live Blog from the venue. This is purely experimental and depending how long we last depends on how much Mobile Data I end up using!!!

I will try to focus on the ymatches not televised and give that extra insight that those of you watching from your armchair will not get.

Up at 9am this morning Mark Davis takes on Zhao Xintong so I wouldn't mind looking in on that one while my tournament tip Stephen Maguire also plays in this session, as well as the "KingDog" Mark King.

I will be watching some of my favourite players later on in the day with newly crowned Shoot-Out champion Robin Hull due on at 1pm against Hossein Vafei Ayouri, Michael Holt plays in the second afternoon session against Hamza Akbar. Then in the evening we have one of the blogs great supporters Shaun Murphy against Itaro Santos, and then two more in the second evening session with Joe Perry and World Champion Stuart Bingham (arguably match of the day there with Hamilton after his game the other day).

7.30am - Anyway my stomachs certainly woken up now so it's time for breakfast before I head literally across the road to the venue.

9am- Plonked myself in a nice position to see all the outside tables. As you'd expect there's a growing group by the Jimmy White/Gary Wilson table. No play yet on the TV table of course. Mark Davis Vs Zhao Xintong looks a good match to be following, and I'll also have eyes for Mark King.

9.45am - Mark King playing some decent stuff this morning. 51 clearance in the opener and then a break of 60 odd to go 2-0. Few distractions with people trying to come in a fire door just behind that match. Davis playing well to take advantage of any silly errors from Xintong. Ford just won a 45 minutes opening frame. Cahill and Xiao Guodong both struggling.

10.30am- Cahill found his range now and playing really nicely. Runs of 54 and 68 to go 3-1 on Guodong. Can't see much of Wilson and White but seems Gary is playing nicely. Then again you have to with that haircut. Century from Ford to put him 2-1 on Weston who nearly went in-off on the pink when clinching frame two. They've also just started a fan or heater up in the arena. Loud is an understatement.

10.50am - few winners here on the back tables. Wilson through with a century to finish off Jimmy. Cahill played nicely with two brilliant long range plants to finish off Guodong 4-1. Davis finished with an 85 and had to play well to beat Xintong 4-2. Meanwhile Fu and Joel Walker have just come on to table 11. Walker of course a quarter-finalist in Newport in 2014. King all done with a 45 minute closing frame but still played well to beat Donaldson 4-0.

11.15am - Fu started off nicely against Walker though Joel isn't playing too well. McGill underway against Highfield with Angles in the crowd watching. Dunn and Wakelin heading for a decider. Battle of the Leeds boys Grace and Peter Lines underway too. Sydney Wilson is on the far table playing Gerard Greene and Syd seems to have started well.

12pm - Mike Dunn has just won on a re-spot against Chris Wakelin after needing a snooker on the pink in that decider. Meanwhile Weston missed a pink on the rail to stay in his match with Ford and after a long battle Ford potted pink and black to win 4-1. Fu had an easy ride against Joel Walker winning 4-0. Thor Chuan Leong appears to be going well too. Leading Sam Baird 2-1 there after Sam took the first.

1pm- Just had a quick break while not much was happening to have a bite of food. Come back and McGill makes a century for 2-2. Mann levels at 1-1 with Yuelong. King and Angles in watching while Dunn and Lines junior are watching Lines senior and Grace. Battling on the green in frame three but Grace needs snookers. Peter needs the win there desperately.

1.45pm - Highfield now 3-2 ahead but finding any excuse to wave his arms in disgust. Grace has just made a century clearance to stay in it. Swail going nicely against Surety. Luca and Higginson are underway after playing in the Shoot-out last night. Getting tight between Mann and Yuelong. Not watched much but it's been a great standard.

2.30pm - Joe Swail racing here and playing well much to the enjoyment of his good friend Mark Allen who's watching from the front row. McGill has missed a red along the rail in the decider to give Highfield a great chance until he plants one red to the other and they both drop. Ian Burns getting plenty of chances against Luca but seems to be playing well. Higginson has been rattled by a bad mistake on the pink to gift Wells frame two. Still way behind here as Lines and Grace are still going from an 11am ish start. Grace needs a snooker though or Peter has won a huge battle.

3.10pm - bit of a quiet period really. Lawler and Lam having a marathon second frame after the reds grouped near a corner pocket. Ricky Walden and Ali Carter should be out to start their matches soon meanwhile after wins for Swail and McGill.

3.40pm - Big win for Daniel Wells 4-2 against Higginson who just missed too many today. Miah is in control against Kurt who looks very unhappy in his chair. Luca has his chance in the decider now having forced it from 1-3 behind. Trying to keep an eye on Hull on table 5 proving tough but the Shoot-out champion is looking good.

4.10pm - Another good comeback from Luca Brecel who after being 3-1 behind and only a ball from losing clears blue, pink and black after a long safety battle to win 4-3. Carter in full control against Yupeng leading 2-0 while Kyren is dominant also at 3-0. Should be 2-0 Walden coming up also.

4.45pm - Hammad Miah had a couple of really good chances to kill off his match with Maflin 4-0 but he's got a real test on now at 3-2 ahead and behind in the sixth. Maflin looks the most likely there now. Carter's still in full control of Cao. The Chinaman just not looked threatening. Walden starting to look a little frustrated against Wattana who's won the third there. Lawler and Lam slowing the afternoon down massively. Still only 2-2 there. Yu DeLu meanwhile got Ian Glover in a horrible snooker and has gained enough points to leave Ian needing a snooker of his own. Looks like 1-1 there.

5.40pm - Going to have to go for food soon so I'll make it quick. Just wish everyone else would. Lawler and Lam still going. Decider coming there. Holt now in action against Hamza Akbar. Wattana has levelled after a mammoth battle on the colours against Walden. Though Walden looks good in frame five here. Wilson in a decider from 3-0 up. Fernandez must have him shellshocked. Leo with a chance to clear and he does with a brilliant pink. Wilson is out.

7pm - All set and ready to watch Mr Murphy this evening. Just watched a bit of Holt also. Made a joke of how cold it is in here.

9pm - Murphy through a 4-1 winner. Played nicely with a century in there while Santos missed the final red for a maximum in the only frame he won. Gould seemed to be carrying on his German Masters form in a 4-1 win over Duffy. Higgins nice and quick for his win. Robertson in a match with Patrick who's played quite nicely from what I've seen.

Tony Drago meanwhile is wearing a red backed waistcoat and a red shirt. Watching too much Caddyshack? "See the ball Tony. Be the ball".

9.15pm - Great snooker on the yellow just now from Poomjaeng behind the brown close to the baulk cushion. Went on to clear the colours and beat Steadman 4-1. Meanwhile home favourite Matthew Stevens is now set to begin, while Fraser Patrick is taking Neil Robertson to a decider.

9.40pm - As ever it's a professional and gutsy finish from Neil Robertson to win 4-3. Good break from Stevens to lead 1-0. Dale and Burden are underway and Trump will be underway soon.

12.40am - Back to the hotel and we're all done for the day here in Cardiff. An unlucky in-off in the decider gave Burden the chance to build a lead against Dale and he didn't let up. Eventually falling over the line after potting the pink with Dominic needing snookers.

The big story of course is the exit of the World champion to a fine performance from Anthony Hamilton and a great clearance in the last. I also called that result in my preview so can't say I'm surprised.

It's not good night yet though as I will be doing a very quick last 64 Preview

Friday, 12 February 2016

Welsh Open Preview

Monday will see the start of the "Crucible straight" with the next seeding cut off being the one for the World Championships, which will be done after the China Open. That leaves five events between now and then (and just two before the cut off for the World Grand Prix) the first of which is the Welsh Open from the Motorpoint Arena.

Last year Cardiff saw a resurgent John Higgins pick up the title by beating first time ranking finalist Ben Woollaston in the final. Mark Williams was yet again the number one home player as he lost a deciding frame semi-final against Ben, while Luca Brecel reached his first ever semi-final (something he topped just a week ago by reaching the German Masters final.

In fact, since Woollaston's failed attempts to win his first ranking title there have been four first time ranking winners (Michael White at the Indian Open, Joe Perry at the Players Championship, Kyren Wilson in the Shanghai Masters and Martin Gould at the German Masters). With the early stages of this event being played over the best-of-7 frames until the quarter-finals which are best-of-9 frames, while the semi-finals are over the best-of-11 frames and the final is best-of-17 frames we could easily see the draw open up once again for someone new to walk through and take the £60,000 top prize.

In addition, it is an important week down at the bottom of the rankings as the fight for tour survival continues and after the China Open qualifiers were completed this week, we now only see all 128 at a venue in this event and the Gdynia Open before things all come to a head for the boys around the 64 mark in the rankings at the World Championship qualifiers.

As for myself, I will be at the venue in Cardiff for the opening three days of the event when things will take place over a multi-table set-up. On Monday 12 tables will be operation with all 64 matches take place on the opening day starting from 9am. Tuesday will see things go down to 8 tables for the 32 Last 64 matches and play starts at the much more pleasant hour of 10.30am. Then Wednesday will see the Last 32 matches take place, with play going down to four tables for the first three sessions starting at 10.30am, before the evening session will see play go down to two tables to get the four remaining matches completed on a roll-on roll-off basis.

For those of you not at the venue BBC Wales will be covering the event, while according to the BBC Sport Website it should also be available on the Red Button and through the website. Eurosport will also be covering the event for those of you in Europe.

So then, with five events to go the players will all be looking to go to the World Championships with a title under their belts, but who has the best chance this week? Let's take a look at the draw:

Quarter 1:

Last 128 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

John Higgins Vs Andy Hicks
Sam Baird Vs Thor Chuan Leong
Peter Ebdon Vs Zhang Anda
Jamie Jones Vs Michael Georgiou
Liang Wenbo Vs Hatem Yassen
Gary Wilson Vs Jimmy White
Tom Ford Vs Jason Weston
Michael White Vs Joe O'Connor
Ryan Day Vs Vinnie Calabrese
Mike Dunn Vs Chris Wakelin
Robin Hull Vs Hossein Vafei Ayouri
Mark Allen Vs Sam Craigie
Xiao Guodong Vs James Cahill
Mark Davis Vs Zhao Xintong
Robbie Williams Vs Luke Simmonds
Barry Hawkins Vs Lee Walker

In the very top section of the draw we of course have the defending champion John Higgins, as well as Masters runner-up Barry Hawkins, UK runner-up Liang Wenbo, Champion of Champions runner-up Mark Allen and some of the main home contenders in Jamie Jones, Michael White and Ryan Day.

Mark Allen has had a mixed time of things over the course of the season. After beating Shaun Murphy in the Masters he has struggled to a first round exit at the venue in Berlin last week and this week he failed to qualify for the China Open. Before Christmas he made it to the Champion of Champions final and took a European Tour title but he has failed to re-create much of that form since then. He is more than likely going to have a tough second round match on his hands with two good players battling in Robin Hull and Hossein Vafei Ayouri battling for the right to possibly meet Allen in the Last 64, and if he comes through that Ryan Day could be waiting for him, and Ryan is always a tough player to beat.

Liang Wenbo suffered a first round exit at the German Masters to Ryan Day and at the Masters to John Higgins who are both in this section, which the Chinaman will hardly be delighted with. He could face Welsh Michael White in the Last 32 which presents very tough opposition, particularly in a best-of-7. On top of that Higgins would be his possible last 16 opponent if he got through such a tough match and he's never beaten John in his entire career. The pressure is on Wenbo too as he fights for a spot in the top 16 at the Crucible, whilst also trying to prove that after his run to the UK final that he is not necessarily a one hit wonder.

John Higgins loves it here in Wales having won four titles, three of which have come in the last six years. He had a pretty comfortable warm up in China Open qualifying as he took on Michael Wasley and won 5-2 after Wasley was docked the fifth frame for returning late from the interval. That was the first time we had seen Higgins since the Masters where he played poorly in his quarter-final exit after a brilliant performance in the last 16. Failure to qualify for Berlin prior to Christmas came as a surprise but when it comes to Wales his record is more than good enough to suggest he can have a run this week.

Barry Hawkins is a former semi-finalist here in Wales, as well as coming into form at the start of the year in the Masters. He starts off this week with a testing match against Lee Walker but his 5-0 win in China qualifying this week suggests he is playing well going forward and should be able to get over such early obstacles. In Germany he was unlucky to lose out in a tight one with Graeme Dott which I suspected may happen after the form Dott showed in the early parts of that week but I think Hawkins is ready to hit back this week in Cardiff and if he can get through the early rounds there's nothing stopping him going all the way.

Quarter Winner: Barry Hawkins

Quarter 2

Last 128 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Shaun Murphy Vs Itaro Santos
Zhou Yuelong Vs Mitchell Mann
Luca Brecel Vs Ian Burns
Mark King Vs Scott Donaldson
Ding Junhui Vs Steven Hallworth
Joe Swail Vs Zak Surety
Gerard Greene Vs Sydney Wilson
Matt Selt Vs Nigel Bond
Graeme Dott Vs Darryl Hill
Jamie Burnett Vs Ross Muir
Andrew Higginson Vs Daniel Wells
Marco Fu Vs Joel Walker
Anthony McGill Vs Liam Highfield
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Vs Paul Davison
Stuart Carrington Vs Jordan Brown
Neil Robertson Vs Fraser Patrick

Quarter number two is packed with top stars. We get a first look at struggling Ding Junhui since his first round Masters exit, recent German Masters semi-finalist in Graeme Dott and finalist in Luca Brecel. That's all on top of World numbers 3 and 4 Neil Robertson and Shaun Murphy, and Gibraltar Open champion Marco Fu.

Ding Junhui is playing his first match since the very beginning of January in the Masters, where he lost in the first round to Stuart Bingham in a low quality affair. Since then Ding has not played in the Championship League, failed to qualify for Germany before Christmas, and did not even have to play his China Open qualifier this week as that was held over to the venue in Beijing. After a Last 128 exit in the UK Championship and failure to qualify for the Champion of Champions as well as only appearing once on the European Tour, where he was handed a Last 128 walkover only to lose to Stuart Bingham in the Last 64 the questions are all about where Ding has gone. It will be of great interest to see if he has found something in the last month that he has had off. His issue is clearly confidence because you can see his heavy body language in his chair anytime that something goes wrong. A possible second round tie with Joe Swail does not look appealing over best-of-7 frames, nor does a last 32 match with Matt Selt when you are struggling like Ding is. This could be the week where he turns things around but it's very hard to say that for certain when there is no evidence to back up such a view.

Marco Fu is not in the best of form at the start of 2016. He ended the year with a win on the European Tour in Gibraltar, but the turn of the year has been a different story. At the Masters he was suffering from a virus in a 6-0 loss to Neil Robertson, before turning up for group three of the Championship League and continuing to struggle. Following that was a first round exit to Kurt Maflin at the German Masters and with the short format he could easily lose early on this week if he fails to re-capture the snooker that took him the distance in Gibraltar, as a possible Last 32 match with Graeme Dott does not look appealing for him.

Then we come to a man who I have no idea on for this tournament in Shaun Murphy. Speaking to Shaun ahead of this tournament he says that he's "convinced" that he's going to have a good run in Wales this week. This comes from a man who has failed to get past the Last 32 in the Welsh Open in five of his last six appearances. This also comes from a man that lost in the first round of the Masters to Mark Allen and in the first round of the German Masters at the venue to Ben Woollaston, although he did make two centuries and a 90 in his China Open qualifier and has not exactly played badly, just falling in tight matches of late. There's no reason why he shouldn't do well in this event, so perhaps this week he'll turn things around (and shut me up in the process). Having said that his prospective draw looks tough with a possible Last 64 tie with young Zhou Yuelong, a possible Last 32 tie with Luca Brecel or even Mark King and a possible Last 16 with Ding Junhui who could easily find form himself this week.

Neil Robertson may be a former champion at the Welsh Open, winning in 2007, but since then he has only gotten past the last 16 once in eight attempts as I pick out in my stat attack preview. Absent from Germany after failing to qualify and losing out in a classic at the Masters there's not much to judge Neil on since Christmas. He managed to get over the line in a tough qualifier against Hossein Vafei Ayouri, but his draw this week looks tricky. A possible second round tie with Stuart Carrington would not necessarily be straight forward over the best-of-7 frames and both of Thepchaiya Un-Nooh and Anthony McGill present themselves as possible last 32 opposition and even if he gets through that, Marco Fu or Graeme Dott could be waiting in the Last 16 making this one of the toughest quarters in the draw to call.

Quarter Winner: Neil Robertson

Quarter 3

Last 128 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Mark Selby Vs Duane Jones
David Grace Vs Peter Lines
Fergal O'Brien Vs Noppon Saengkham
Ali Carter Vs Cao Yupeng
Mark Williams Vs Lu Chenwei
Rod Lawler Vs Sanderson Lam
Kurt Maflin Vs Hammad Miah
Kyren Wilson Vs Leo Fernandez
Robert Milkins Vs Sean O'Sullivan
Dechawat Poomjaeng Vs Craig Steadman
Yu De Lu Vs Ian Glover
Ricky Walden Vs James Wattana
Michael Holt Vs Hamza Akbar
Jimmy Robertson Vs Michael Wild
Tian Pengfei Vs Ashley Hugill
Ronnie O'Sullivan Vs Barry Pinches

On to the bottom half of the draw and many people will say it's all about world number on Mark Selby and his ongoing rivalry with Masters champion Ronnie O'Sullivan whom he could meet in the quarter-finals. There's plenty of hurdles to get over before then with the likes of Ali Carter, Kyren Wilson and number one Welsh hope Mark Williams in Selby's section, while Ronnie may have to face Ricky Walden or Robert Milkins (both of whom have horrendous records against him mind you).

Ricky Walden needs a big run here in Wales this week if he is to qualify for the World Grand Prix in March, such is the poor quality season that he has had. A first round exit in the Masters to Mark Selby does not look too bad until you see that it was 6-0, and he failed to qualify yet again for the German Masters, before scraping over the line in China Open qualifying 5-4 from 4-3 down against Barry Pinches. Even prior to Christmas he suffered a Last 128 exit in the International Championship and a Last 64 exit in York. This week his draw does not look awful and he could well make the Last 16 but if his opposition is Ronnie O'Sullivan that is as far as he will get.

Mark Williams has had a mixed time of things since the start of 2016. He has played well in the Championship League at Crondon Park but failed to convert that form anywhere else. In the Masters he lost out 6-5 in the first round to eventual champion O'Sullivan, and he lost in the first round of the German Masters 5-4 to eventual champion Martin Gould which is not all that bad but he did suffer a surprise 5-3 loss in China qualifying to Martin O'Donnell this week. He should not have any problem in the first couple of rounds this week but his possible last 32 opponent Kyren Wilson will be a big challenge. On top of that Williams continues to shoulder the burden of expectation remaining the number one Welsh player so the pressure will be on him to perform once again this week at his home tournament.

Kyren Wilson turned his disappointing performance in last weeks German Masters semi-final, into a record breaking performance this week at in China Open qualifying. Across the entire German Masters from the Last 32 right through to his last 4 loss to Luca Brecel he only made five breaks of 50+ with a highest of 61. In China qualifying the confident young man beat Anthony Hamilton 5-3 making four centuries and a 68, while Hamilton had two of his own to make it the most centuries in a best-of-9. Getting his first ranking title this year was huge for his confidence and the performance against Hamilton will do more than enough to help him over Berlin and get back to his best here in Cardiff.

Mark Selby is someone who I have tipped to do well in almost everything since Christmas because I think that a big run for him is surely not too far away. He is striking the cue ball superbly at the moment and got his rhythm when scoring amongst the balls and it has taken some brilliant performances to beat him. Maguire was excellent against him in the German Masters as was Ronnie in the Masters. Even before Christmas he lost in the semi's to the eventual International and UK champions. He has a good record in Wales having won the title in 2008 and regularly reached the latter stages since. If he continues playing as he is i'm sure a title is only just around the corner for him.

Ronnie O'Sullivan is the big name in this quarter. Many wondered if he would even enter this tournament after referring to it as a "car boot" and looking like he enjoyed his time at the Motorpoint arena as much as I enjoy my time on boats (sea sickness is not a laughing matter). In 2016 he won Group 1 of the Championship League without losing a match and then went on to win the Masters. He failed to qualify for the German Masters but still turned up as a pundit and i'm sure he will play well this week. If he is at the top of his game I cannot see an opponent that he would lose to before a possible quarter-final with Mark Selby which will be the make or break match for both.

Quarter Winner: Mark Selby

Quarter 4

Last 128 Draw: (Picks in Bold)

Judd Trump Vs Michael Leslie
Rory McLeod Vs Michael Wasley
Alan McManus Vs Rhys Clark
Mark Joyce Vs Gareth Allen
Joe Perry Vs Tony Drago
Li Hang Vs Chris Melling
David Gilbert Vs Zhang Yong
Ken Doherty Vs Lu Ning
Matthew Stevens Vs David Morris
Stephen Maguire Vs Martin O'Donnell
Jack Lisowski Vs Eden Sharav
Martin Gould Vs Adam Duffy
Dominic Dale Vs Alfie Burden
Ben Woollaston Vs Jamie Cope
Oliver Lines Vs Allan Taylor
Stuart Bingham Vs Anthony Hamilton

Last but not least it's quarter number four with world champion Stuart Bingham, joining him is Judd Trump, Joe Perry, recent German Master Martin Gould and former champion Stephen Maguire as well as two more seasoned Welsh campaigners in Dominic Dale and Matthew Stevens.

Stuart Bingham has had a continually tough time as world champion failing to get to the latter stages in any of the major ranking events. You feel like it will have to turn around soon, but equally many have pointed to the time commitments of being world champion interrupting his practice routines and causing the dip in form. In round one he faces Anthony Hamilton for the third time this season and I think this may be third time lucky for Anthony. Two centuries against Kyren showed he still had it, but unfortunately what Wilson had was snooker from the Gods. When they met in the UK's Stuart won but it could have been much closer on the day, but in German Masters qualifying Hamilton lost 5-4 having led 4-3 and missed match ball yellow in frame eight. This time I think the 'Sheriff of Pottingham' will be able to go one better.

Martin Gould will be on a high after winning his maiden ranking title at the German Masters last weekend and it will be interesting to see if he is able to come down from that and play well here in Wales. With a win under his belt and a place back in the top 16 it makes him more of a serious contender than ever for tournaments, but whether he can repeat that two weeks in a row is another question entirely as he is far from a multiple ranking winner, and in a tough section that contains Stephen Maguire and plenty of capable players I am going to rule him out.

Judd Trump continues his inconsistent play throughout tournaments this season after his German Masters quarter-final exit. At the Masters he made four centuries to beat Neil Robertson in the quarter-finals before losing to Barry Hawkins in the semi's and being a shadow of the man from the day before, and the same was true in Berlin after he made three centuries in the last 16 and lost in the quarters. I think his draw for the opening few rounds this week looks easy enough but he could come unstuck in the last 16 if he were to meet Joe Perry or in the quarters against somebody like Stephen Maguire.

Joe Perry is due a good run after failing to qualify for Berlin and losing in the first round of the Masters and the Last 64 of the UK Championships. He should not have much trouble in getting over Tony Drago in round one and I think if he can play the consistent snooker he exhibited this time last year then he will make it to at least the last 16 and possible then the quarter-finals and beyond, but after only playing a China Open qualifier and getting relegated from group three in the Championship League since his Masters exit there is little to go on other than gut feeling, and mine is that Perry will play some decent stuff this week and threaten for the quarter but I do not make him a serious contender.

One man that should be a serious contender for the title is Stephen Maguire. Maguire was a winner in Wales in 2013 and made the quarter-finals last year before losing out to eventual champion John Higgins, but with how the draw opened up that week that match felt like a final at the time in all honesty. Stephen won group three of the Championship League and was going well in the German Masters before a quarter-final loss to Dott who he has a poor record against. The feeling is certainly that Stephen is gearing up for a big run and three years on from his last full ranking title this could be his week, looking at the way he is striking the ball right now.

Quarter Winner: Stephen Maguire

Predicted Tournament Runner-Up: Neil Robertson

Predicted Tournament Winner: Stephen Maguire

Those are my predictions for the week ahead and it should be an exciting one. For the first half of the week, while I am at the Motorpoint arena I will be trialling a new "Live Blog" feature to give you regular updates on anything of note that the TV is not focussed on. I will also be back as usual with previews ahead of each round, so I hope you all enjoy that.

STAT ATTACK: Welsh Open

With the Welsh Open upcoming, there's never a bad time for some statistics in an event that has changed over the years to what we have now with 128 players at the venue. As always the idea of this blog is to offer up some statistics that balance or back up the opinions of my regular preview.

The 128 at the venue format for the Welsh Open came into effect in 2014, so plenty of the following stats will be relevant to that change, and there will always be some facts and figures from the season so far to give a clearer idea of form.


I'm going to start off by dealing with Shaun Murphy who himself has certainly recognised his struggles at this tournament. The first four times he played at the venue from 2006-2009 he was a runner-up on one occasions, a losing semi-finalist twice and reached the quarter-finals in the other. In his six appearances since then he has only gotten past the Last 32 once, reaching the semi-finals in 2012.

That is a big contrast with defending champion John Higgins. John has won the Welsh Open four times, with three of those wins coming within the last six years, and in 2014 he lost out in the quarter-finals.

Ding Junhui has struggled a lot since winning five ranking events in the 2013/2014 season, but that could all end this week in Wales. While there is a big contrast in the last two appearances (runner-up to O'Sullivan in 2014 and Last 128 exit to Lee Walker in 2015) he had gotten to at least the quarter-finals for four years in a row from 2011-2014.

Mark Selby was Welsh Open champion in 2008 and in his 7 appearances since then he has reached one final, one semi-final and three further quarter-finals so his record in Wales is far from bad either.

Murphy isn't the only one to have struggled at the Welsh Open in recent times. Neil Robertson, since winning the title in 2007, has only gotten past the last 16 once from eight attempts.

Another man who has a particular fondness for playing in Wales at this time of year is Stephen Maguire. In six of the last seven events, the Scot has reached at least the quarter-finals with one title and one runners-up finish.

Amazingly, when you look at matches played in the Welsh Open, John Higgins and Ronnie O'Sullivan have almost identical records. Higgins has played in 23 tournaments, 81 matches, winning 62 while the Rocket has played in 22 events, 80 matches winning 61.

Ronnie O'Sullivan has also partaken in many a decider over the years. 27 is his overall total played, from which he has won 17. Meanwhile, his first round opponent Barry Pinches is joint fifth on the list for deciders played, winning 10 out of 17 in the Welsh Open. Surely not?

Keep an eye on Alan McManus this week in the draw, he has lost to the eventual winner of the Welsh Open on six occasions in the events history, while Ronnie O'Sullivan, John Higgins, Peter Ebdon and Anthony Hamilton are all tied in second losing to the eventual winner on five occasions.

When it comes to the opening round this week, the likes of Michael Holt, Kyren Wilson and Zhou Yuelong, Tian Pengfei and Martin Gould have all won 100% of their first matches in a tournament so they'll be hoping to keep that up.

Best-of-7 frame matches will produce plenty of deciders, and Tom Ford has been impressive in final frames this year with 6 wins from 7 played, while Ben Woollaston has 8 from 10.

The centuries table for this season is also getting interesting and very close. Selby, Fu and Mark Williams all have 23, while Mark Allen and Neil Robertson both have 25, John Higgins is in second position with 27 and Judd Trump tops the pile with 31.

At the Welsh Open in the last two years (with a 128 flat draw at the venue) there was 58 centuries in 2015 slightly bettering 54 from 2014 and after the lack of centuries at the recent German Masters it will be interesting to see how 2016 aligns with the previous two tournaments.


When it comes to the final, in both of the last two years the score was 9-3 and on three of the last six occasions the final has been won by a margin of at least five frames so it may not be a close finish to the event.

There's not a great deal to see in terms of head to heads for the Last 128 round, but it is worth mentioning that Ronnie O'Sullivan last met first round opponent Barry Pinches in 2014, in an Ronnie went on to win.

Meanwhile, when Li Hang takes on Chris Melling it will be their second appearance, with the first coming in 2015 World Championship qualifying and finishing 10-1 to Li Hang. Emphatic.

As for Stuart Bingham and Anthony Hamilton this will be their ninth proper meeting and third in the space of three months after Bingham beat Hamilton 6-3 in the UK Championship and 5-4 in German Masters qualifying. Prior to this season Bingham had only won two of the previous six.


Those are the stats coming into the week then, some may come into play again while others could be blown out of the water. That's the beauty of it. Hopefully these stats together with my preview can influence who you pick out for the Welsh Open this week.

Thursday, 11 February 2016

Fantasy Snooker: Points update and Welsh Open Players

With the German Masters in Berlin all done and dusted, while the Welsh Open is nearly upon us it is time for another update on the Fantasy Snooker League. First of all here is the updated points table, with who scored what from Berlin and who has money leftover or has a deficit to make up with not long to go until the World Championships.


1st: Igor: 584 +3.2 million Allen (2)

2nd: Gorkem Kurt: 563 +6 million Allen (2)

3rd: SnookerFollower: 525 -1.8 million Selby (7) and Wilson (17)

4th: Gary: 501 +1.4 million Selby (7) and Burden (0)

5th: Michael Coudray: 463 +4.5 million Trump (22)

6th: Chris Watts: 457 -0.7 million Allen (2) and Wilson (17)

7th: TungstenDarts: 441 +9.4 million Bingham (9)

8th: Kjetil: 431 +2.2 million Maguire (12) and Brecel (31)

9th: Anthony Ward: 422 +1.1 million Trump (22) and Gould (47)

10th: Guillermo: 389 -5.8 million Trump (22) and Wilson (17)

11th: Josh Cooper: 365 +0.6 million Murphy (0) and Pengfei (0)

12th: Spanish Snooker Blog: 335 +4.5 million Brecel (31) and Xintong (0)

13th: LTD: 319 +3.2 million Allen (2)

14th: Ezgi Ulutas: 299 +8.4 million

15th: Phil Mudd: 297 +-0 million Selby (7) and Wilson (17)

16th: John McBride: 279 +12.6 million Trump (7) and Williams (0)

17th: Andrew Brooker: 276 +19.8 million Holt (5)

18th: Kai: 265 +3.6 million Selby (7) and Carter (0)

19th: Kellie Barker: 235 +0.7 million Pengfei (0) and Maguire (12)
 
Most of you are doing alright money wise, but Guillermo has a lot to make up or face not having any money to spend for the Crucible.
Same as always, players are given 8 million to spend on up to two players for the Welsh Open with the deadline being on Monday February 15th at 9am before the first matches get underway.
Welsh Open Players:
John Higgins – 6 million 
Stuart Bingham – 5.8 million
Mark Selby – 5.6 million
Neil Robertson – 5.5 million
Shaun Murphy – 5.4 million
Ronnie O'Sullivan – 5.3 million
Judd Trump – 5.2 million
Barry Hawkins – 5 million
Mark Allen – 4.9 million
Joe Perry – 4.8 million 
Ricky Walden – 4.6 million
Ding Junhui– 4.5 million
Marco Fu – 4.3 million
Mark Williams – 4.2 million
Martin Gould – 4.1 million
Liang Wenbo – 4 million
Players Seeded 17-32 – 3.5 million
Players Seeded 33-48 – 3 million
Players Seeded 49-64 – 2.5 million
Players seeded 65- 80 – 2 million
Players seeded 81 or below – 1 million
Those are your players then. As usual tweet you choices to me @CueActionBlog otherwise enjoy your tipping!!!

Snooker Shoot-Out Preview

This weekend it's time for the players to let their hair down as the Snooker Shoot-out rolls into town. This year the event has moved from the Blackpool Tower to the Hexagon Theatre in Reading, which has plenty of history with the game of snooker but of course the Snooker Shoot-out is not snooker as we know it.

There is another change this year as ITV4 take over the broadcasting rights from Sky Sports so the usual team of Clive Everton and Neal Foulds will join presenter Jill Douglas to front the coverage and I am sure that they will get more guys like Alan McManus in the commentary box if and when they are knocked out of the competition.

It's always tough each year to remember the rules as they are so different so here's a reminder of some of the key ones:

- Each match will be played over one frame, which will last no longer than 10 minutes.
- Any fouls result in a "ball in hand" where the opposing player can place the ball anywhere on the table for his next shot.
- It will also be deemed a foul if a shot is played where either a ball does not enter a pocket or touch a cushion. (This stops players rolling up for snookers behind baulk colours and other negative safety play)
- A shot clock of 15 seconds will be employed for the first five minutes of the frame, and this will then shorten to give players 10 seconds a shot for the second half of the frame.
- If the scores are level after the 10 minutes are up, the result will then be decided by a sudden death 'blue ball shoot-out'.


I actually enjoy the Shoot-out which is contrary to the opinions of many. It's exciting and is a good opportunity for the people at home to see more of the players that are not usually on their screens. On top of this it is also a good opportunity for the players to let their hair down and have a bit of laugh like an exhibition event, which is always nice in the middle of a busy period of serious ranking events either side of this taking place.

Even the Snooker Smurf mascot and his owners will be making the journey (a little further than they would like) to watch this weekend so hopefully we'll see the recognisable stuffed toy on our screens once more.

This is how the draw shapes up then for the event:

Friday evening matches (6.30pm start) (*Speculative* picks in bold)

Michael White Vs Mark King
Mark Davis Vs Gary Wilson
Zhou Yuelong Vs Michael Georgiou (Georgiou replaces Aditya Mehta who has withdrawn)
Ken Doherty Vs Tom Ford
Ali Carter Vs Liam Highfield
Graeme Dott Vs Ben Woollaston
Cao Yupeng Vs Joe Perry
Mark Joyce Vs David Gilbert
David Grace Vs Jimmy Robertson
Mark Allen Vs Yu De Lu
David Morris Vs Alan McManus
Stuart Bingham Vs Ricky Walden
Mike Dunn Vs Luca Brecel
Michael Holt Vs Ryan Day
Sam Baird Vs Jack Lisowski
Dominic Dale Vs Shaun Murphy

Saturday Afternoon Matches (12.30pm start) (More attempted picks in bold)

John Higgins Vs Andrew Higginson
Peter Lines Vs Kurt Maflin
Robert Milkins Vs Marco Fu
Mark Williams Vs Rory McLeod
Tian Pengfei Vs Joe Swail
Jamie Jones Vs Martin Gould
Liang Wenbo Vs Anthony McGill
Robin Hull Vs Craig Steadman
Rod Lawler Vs Dechawat Poomjaeng
Kyren Wilson Vs Li Hang
Anthony Hamilton Vs Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
Stuart Carrington Vs Matthew Stevens
Barry Hawkins Vs Peter Ebdon
Xiao Guodong Vs Matt Selt
Oliver Lines Vs Ian Burns
Judd Trump Vs Gerard Greene


As far as the schedule goes thereafter the Last 32 will take place on Saturday evening from 6.30pm, before the Last 16 takes place on Sunday afternoon from 1.30pm, with the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final taking place on Sunday evening.

The draw for each of the following rounds will take place at random as part of the live coverage.

The Shoot-out is always something of a lottery with the one frame matches and a random draw but that will not stop me from trying to pick out some of the CONTENDERS:


There is certainly a category that winners of this event usually fit into. The five previous winners are Nigel Bond, Barry Hawkins, Martin Gould, Dominic Dale and Michael White. Those five have never been notoriously big winners, and while all of them have now won ranking events, Hawkins, Gould and White all won theirs after winning this fun invitational event. They were also outside of the top 16 when they won but certainly not too low down the rankings either, and are all quite attacking players. So using that formula and looking back at previous shoot-outs here are some of my 'ones to watch'.

Michael Holt and Ryan Day face off in round one this year and both of these two guys have good records in the shoot-out, are two of the best players left without ranking titles and are in and around the mid-twenties in the world rankings. Both are attacking players and heavy scorers and seem to thrive on the atmosphere at this event and if you're willing to wait, the winner out of these two has a great chance of taking the £32,000 top prize home with them.

Kurt Maflin is another big hitting attacking player who has what it takes to go all the way this weekend. He scores heavily and is more than capable of blitzing anyone over a single frame (but most of the players are). He has had a run at the event and it is good to have that experience of playing with the rules and shot clock which is why you would not fancy many of the debutants to play well this weekend. As a non-ranking winner who just needs that bit of confidence to go on and get the title that his talent warrants, maybe he can do what the likes of Hawkins and Michael White have and use this as a springboard to bigger things.

When you think of quick players who will have no trouble with the shot clock Robert Milkins is the name that sticks out. He was the runner-up to Bond in the very first shoot-out and is not afraid to attack, score heavily and get the job done in a flash. Once again he is a man that just needs that springboard to go on and achieve bigger things, and the shot clock in play will help him to stay in the fantastic rhythm he gets into.

No player has ever won the snooker shoot-out twice, but in my opinion there is one man that has come a lot closer than others and that is Barry Hawkins. As well as winning the shoot-out he has also reached a further semi-final and seems to thrive when these three days in the calendar come around.

Out of all of the debutants there is a certain man from Finland that I would love to see win this event. Robin Hull is a heavy scorer and certainly capable of beating anyone over any format. He should not have too much trouble with the shot clock as he's experienced enough to know how to deal with anything by now. There's a big difference between qualifying for the Crucible two years in a row (which Hull has done in the two years he has been back on tour) and winning the shoot-out but Robin certainly has what it takes.

Kyren Wilson deserves a special mention here too. We all know that he is a very attacking player, a heavy scorer and incredibly confident after collecting his first ranking title this season. He loves the shoot-out and as a semi-finalist last year you would not rule him out of going all the way if he plays as fluently as he did in his record breaking qualifier for the China Open. Wilson made four centuries (and a 68) whilst Anthony Hamilton had two of his own to set the record for the most centuries in a best-of-9 with six in total.

Finally, another player who fits the shoes made for a shoot-out winner is Tom Ford. Tom has a pretty decent record in the event and has always played with a very quick, attacking style and is no stranger to heavy scoring either. Odds of 100/1 being offered in some places could be a very unhealthy move come Sunday evening.


The list does not end there with guys like Jamie Jones, Shaun Murphy, Jimmy Robertson and plenty more having that all-out attacking style and quick heavy scoring that usually gets the job done in the shoot-out.

Straight after the event it is across to the Motorpoint Arena in Cardiff for the Welsh Open with all 128 players involved playing at some point on Monday so there's no rest for the guys.