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British Open (snooker)
Snooker tournament
Snooker tournament
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| tournament_name | British Open | |
| image | File:Cheltenham Racecourse - geograph.org.uk - 670237.jpg | |
| venue | The Centaur | |
| location | Cheltenham | |
| country | England | |
| establishment | 1980 | |
| organisation | World Snooker Tour | |
| format | Ranking event | |
| prizefund | £502,000 | |
| Recent edition | 2025 | |
| Current Champion | Shaun Murphy | |
| winnershare | £100,000 | image caption=The Centaur in Cheltenham has hosted the tournament since 2023 |
The British Open is a professional snooker tournament, established in 1980 and held as a ranking tournament from 1985. Originally known as the British Gold Cup, the event has had various sponsors and venues over the early years, until the 2005–06 season where it was initially dropped. The "FA Cup-like" flat draws format was introduced in 1990 from the last 32 stage of the event and has differentiated itself from the other regular knock-out events; the unique format was retained when the tournament is reinstated from the 2021–2022 season, where draws in every round of this event are now randomised.
The tournament currently awards the Clive Everton Trophy, named after the popular commentator. The reigning champion is Shaun Murphy who won his first title in 2025. The record for the most titles is held by Englishman Steve Davis with five, one ahead of Scots Stephen Hendry and John Higgins.
History
The tournament began in 1980 as the British Gold Cup in the Assembly Rooms, Derby. It was a sixteen-man invitation event and was played on a round robin basis with the group winners advancing to the semi-finals. The next year Yamaha took over sponsorship and the tournament was renamed the Yamaha Organs Trophy. The next year the tournaments name was changed to International Masters. The top eight of the first round robin stage played in two further groups and the winners advanced to the final. For 1984 the field of the tournament was increased to 27 and nine three-man groups were organised. The winners played in three semi-final groups and the winners played in a three-man round robin final.
After WPBSA decided to increase the number of ranking events in 1984/1985 and Yamaha withdrew its sponsorship the event was renamed the British Open. Dulux was the sponsor of the event between 1985 and 1987. In the next six years the event had four different sponsors: MIM Britannia Unit Trusts in 1988, Anglian Windows in 1989, Pearl Assurance between 1990 and 1992, and Wickes Home Improvements in 1993. In 1994 the tournament was moved to the Plymouth Pavilions. Between 1994 and 2004 the event was sponsored in only three years by Castella in 1995 and 1996, and by Stan James in 2001.
The tournament usually took place around November each year. Prior to the 1999/2000 season, it was held later in the season. As a result, two tournaments were held in 1999, one for the 1998/1999 season and one for the 1999/2000 season. The event than moved to the Telewest Arena in Newcastle for 2001, the Telford International Centre for 2002 and the Brighton Centre for 2003 and 2004. The event was dropped from the calendar in 2005/2006.
There have been ten maximum breaks during the history of the tournament. James Wattana made the first in 1992 in the last 16 against Tony Drago. The second and third came at the qualifying stage of the event. David McDonnell compiled it in the fourth round of the 1995 event against Nic Barrow and Jason Prince in the fifth round of the first 1999 event against Ian Brumby. Graeme Dott made the fourth at the same event in the last 64 against David Roe. The fifth was Stephen Hendry's sixth official maximum break, which he compiled in the final of the second 1999 event against Peter Ebdon. The sixth was compiled by John Higgins in 2003 in the last 32 against Michael Judge. The revived 2021 event recorded two maximum breaks. Higgins made one in the first frame of his first round win over Alexander Ursenbacher, while Ali Carter made his during the second frame of his fourth round match against Elliot Slessor. The ninth maximum was made in 2022 by Mark Selby in the third round against Jack Lisowski. The most recent maximum break was compiled in 2024 by Mark Allen in his third round match against Ben Mertens.
Winners
| Year | Winner | Runner-up | Score | Venue | City | Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| British Gold Cup (non-ranking, 1980) | ||||||
| 1980 | Alex Higgins | Ray Reardon | 5–1 | Assembly Rooms | Derby, England | 1979/80 |
| Yamaha Organs Trophy (non-ranking, 1981) | ||||||
| 1981 | Steve Davis | David Taylor | 9–6 | Assembly Rooms | Derby, England | 1980/81 |
| International Masters (non-ranking, 1982–1984) | ||||||
| 1982 | Steve Davis | Terry Griffiths | 9–7 | Assembly Rooms | Derby, England | 1981/82 |
| 1983 | Ray Reardon | Jimmy White | 9–6 | 1982/83 | ||
| 1984 | Steve Davis | David Martin | R-RFinal was decided on a three-man round robin basis. | 1983/84 | ||
| British Open (ranking, 1985–2004) | ||||||
| 1985 | Silvino Francisco | Kirk Stevens | 12–9 | Assembly Rooms | Derby, England | 1984/85 |
| 1986 | Steve Davis | Willie Thorne | 12–7 | 1985/86 | ||
| 1987 | Jimmy White | Neal Foulds | 13–9 | 1986/87 | ||
| 1988 | Stephen Hendry | Mike Hallett | 13–2 | 1987/88 | ||
| 1989 | Tony Meo | Dean Reynolds | 13–6 | 1988/89 | ||
| 1990 | Bob Chaperon | Alex Higgins | 10–8 | 1989/90 | ||
| 1991 | Stephen Hendry | Gary Wilkinson | 10–9 | 1990/91 | ||
| 1992 | Jimmy White | James Wattana | 10–7 | 1991/92 | ||
| 1993 | Steve Davis | James Wattana | 10–2 | 1992/93 | ||
| 1994 | Ronnie O'Sullivan | James Wattana | 9–4 | Plymouth Pavilions | Plymouth, England | 1993/94 |
| 1995 | John Higgins | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 9–6 | 1994/95 | ||
| 1996 | Nigel Bond | John Higgins | 9–8 | 1995/96 | ||
| 1997 | Mark Williams | Stephen Hendry | 9–2 | 1996/97 | ||
| 1998 | John Higgins | Stephen Hendry | 9–8 | 1997/98 | ||
| 1999 (Apr) | Fergal O'Brien | Anthony Hamilton | 9–7 | 1998/99 | ||
| 1999 (Sep) | Stephen Hendry | Peter Ebdon | 9–5 | 1999/00 | ||
| 2000 | Peter Ebdon | Jimmy White | 9–6 | 2000/01 | ||
| 2001 | John Higgins | Graeme Dott | 9–6 | Telewest Arena | Newcastle, England | 2001/02 |
| 2002 | Paul Hunter | Ian McCulloch | 9–4 | Telford International Arena | Telford, England | 2002/03 |
| 2003 | Stephen Hendry | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 9–6 | Brighton Centre | Brighton, England | 2003/04 |
| 2004 | John Higgins | Stephen Maguire | 9–6 | 2004/05 | ||
| British Open (renewed, ranking, 2021–present) | ||||||
| 2021 | Mark Williams | Gary Wilson | 6–4 | Morningside Arena | Leicester, England | 2021/22 |
| 2022 | Ryan Day | Mark Allen | 10–7 | Marshall Arena | Milton Keynes, England | 2022/23 |
| 2023 | Mark Williams | Mark Selby | 10–7 | The Centaur | Cheltenham, England | 2023/24 |
| 2024 | Mark Selby | John Higgins | 10–5 | 2024/25 | ||
| 2025 | Shaun Murphy | Anthony McGill | 10–7 | 2025/26 |
Notes
References
References
- (21 September 2022). "British Open trophy named after Clive Everton". [[World Snooker Tour]].
- "Williams beats Selby to win British Open". BBC Sport.
- Turner, Chris. "British Open Including British Gold Cup, Yamaha Organs Trophy and Yamaha International Masters". Chris Turner's Snooker Archive.
- "Tournament Histories – British Open". Global Snooker Centre.
- (16 August 2021). "Higgins makes 12th maximum". WST.
- (20 August 2021). "Captain Fires In Leicester Maximum". WST.
- (29 September 2022). "Selby Makes Marvellous Maximum". WST.
- (26 September 2024). "Allen makes 147 in Cheltenham". WST.
- Turner, Chris. "On this Week: British success for the Whirlwind". [[Eurosport]] UK.
- "British Open Finals". Snooker.org.
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