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European Masters (snooker)
European snooker tournament
European snooker tournament
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| tournament_name | European Masters |
| image | File:European Masters (Snooker) Logo.png |
| country | Various European countries |
| (France, Netherlands, Belgium, Malta, Ireland, Romania, England, Austria, Germany) | |
| establishment | 1989 |
| organisation | World Snooker Tour |
| format | Ranking event |
| prizefund | £427,000 |
| final year | 2023 |
| Final Champion | Barry Hawkins |
| winnershare | £80,000 |
(France, Netherlands, Belgium, Malta, Ireland, Romania, England, Austria, Germany) The European Masters (officially the BetVictor European Masters) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that has been staged periodically since 1989 as the European Open. Between 2005 and 2008 it was known as the Malta Cup and was the sole ranking tournament in Europe outside the British Isles before being discontinued. The event was resurrected in its latest form from 2016 to 2023, when it was being discontinued again along with the wider European Series.
History
Before the 1988/89 season, there were no ranking events outside the United Kingdom. There were, however, many successful invitation events, so the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association decided to extend the tour with some overseas events. The first two were held in Canada and mainland Europe. The first European event was the European Open in 1988 in Deauville, France, with the sponsorship of ICI. The event then was held at the Palais des Sports in Lyon, France, for 1992 and at the Imax Centre in Rotterdam, Netherlands with the sponsorship of Tulip Computers.
The event was then moved to Belgium. It was held in Tongeren in 1992 and Antwerp between 1993 and 1994 with sponsorship from Humo. The event was moved to the first half of the season in 1993/1994, thus there were two events in 1993, in February and December. The event was moved back to its original place in the calendar in 1995/1996 and took place in Valletta, Malta between 1996 and 1997. The event was held in Tallaght, Ireland in 1998 as the Irish Open. In the 1999/2000 season the Malta Grand Prix was the only continental European ranking event and in 2000/2001 there were none for the first time in 13 seasons.
The European Open was revived in 2001/2002 and was held in Valletta, Malta. In 2003 the event was held in England for the first time (Torquay). The following year it returned to Malta, this time held in Portomaso. The following season event was renamed the Malta Cup. The 2006 event was the first ranking tournament, where no English player reached the quarter-finals. It became an invitation event in 2007/2008, but it was discontinued afterwards.
In 2016, it was announced that the event would be revived under the name European Masters in Romania for the next three years. However, in 2017 it was announced that the tournament would be held in Belgium that year. In 2020, it was held in Milton Keynes, due to the Coronavirus pandemic. The 2022 event will be held at the same venue, after COVID-19 rates in Bavaria prevented it from being held at the Stadthalle in Fürth. The final was traditionally played as a best-of-17 frames match, but for 2022, it was extended to a best-of-19.
There has been five maximum breaks in the history of the tournament. Alain Robidoux made the first in the first qualifying round of the 1989 event against Jim Meadowcroft. The second was Shaun Murphy's fifth official maximum break, which he compiled in the second qualifying round of the 2016 event against Allan Taylor. The third and fourth came at the qualifying stage of the 2022 event. On 16 July, Zhang Anda made a maximum break during his 5–1 win over Anton Kazakov; the following day, Hossein Vafaei made a maximum as he defeated Ng On-yee by the same score. It was the first time either player had made a 147 in professional competition. The most recent maximum break was made by Sean O'Sullivan in the qualifying round of the 2023 event against Barry Hawkins.
Winners
| Year | Winner | Runner-up | Final score | Venue | City | Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Open (ranking, 1989–1997) | ||||||
| 1989 | John Parrott | Terry Griffiths | 9–8 | Casino de Deauville | Deauville, France | 1988/89 |
| 1990 | John Parrott | Stephen Hendry | 10–6 | Palais des Sports | Lyon, France | 1989/90 |
| 1991 | Tony Jones | Mark Johnston-Allen | 9–7 | Imax Centre | Rotterdam, Netherlands | 1990/91 |
| 1992 | Jimmy White | Mark Johnston-Allen | 9–3 | Tongeren Snooker Centre | Tongeren, Belgium | 1991/92 |
| 1993 (Feb) | Steve Davis | Stephen Hendry | 10–4 | Arenahal | Antwerp, Belgium | 1992/93 |
| 1993 (Dec) | Stephen Hendry | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 9–5 | 1993/94 | ||
| 1994 | Stephen Hendry | John Parrott | 9–3 | Schijnpoort Arena | 1994/95 | |
| 1996 | John Parrott | Peter Ebdon | 9–7 | Mediterranean Conference Centre | Valletta, Malta | 1995/96 |
| 1997 | John Higgins | John Parrott | 9–5 | 1996/97 | ||
| Irish Open (ranking, 1998) | ||||||
| 1998 | Mark Williams | Alan McManus | 9–4 | National Basketball Arena | Tallaght, Ireland | 1998/99 |
| European Open (ranking, 2001–2004) | ||||||
| 2001 | Stephen Hendry | Joe Perry | 9–2 | Mediterranean Conference Centre | Valletta, Malta | 2001/02 |
| 2003 | Ronnie O'Sullivan | Stephen Hendry | 9–6 | Palace Hotel | Torquay, England | 2002/03 |
| 2004 | Stephen Maguire | Jimmy White | 9–3 | Hilton Conference Centre | Portomaso, Malta | 2003/04 |
| Malta Cup (ranking, 2005–2007) | ||||||
| 2005 | Stephen Hendry | Graeme Dott | 9–7 | Hilton Conference Centre | Portomaso, Malta | 2004/05 |
| 2006 | Ken Doherty | John Higgins | 9–8 | 2005/06 | ||
| 2007 | Shaun Murphy | Ryan Day | 9–4 | 2006/07 | ||
| Malta Cup (non-ranking, 2008) | ||||||
| 2008 | Shaun Murphy | Ken Doherty | 9–3 | Hilton Conference Centre | Portomaso, Malta | 2007/08 |
| European Masters (ranking, 2016–present) | ||||||
| 2016 | Judd Trump | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 9–8 | Globus Circus | Bucharest, Romania | 2016/17 |
| 2017 | Judd Trump | Stuart Bingham | 9–7 | De Soeverein | Lommel, Belgium | 2017/18 |
| 2018 | Jimmy Robertson | Joe Perry | 9–6 | 2018/19 | ||
| 2020 (Jan) | Neil Robertson | Zhou Yuelong | 9–0 | Messe Dornbirn | Dornbirn, Austria | 2019/20 |
| 2020 (Sep) | Mark Selby | Martin Gould | 9–8 | Marshall Arena | Milton Keynes, England | 2020/21 |
| 2022 (Feb) | Fan Zhengyi | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 10–9 | 2021/22 | ||
| 2022 (Aug) | Kyren Wilson | Barry Hawkins | 9–3 | Stadthalle Fürth | Fürth, Germany | 2022/23 |
| 2023 | Barry Hawkins | Judd Trump | 9–6 | Nuremberg, Germany | 2023/24 |
References
References
- Turner, Chris. "Major European Tournaments". Chris Turner's Snooker Archive.
- Turner, Chris. "Malta Grand Prix, Malta Cup". Chris Turner's Snooker Archive.
- (21 December 2015). "Romania to stage new European Championship". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- (10 May 2016). "European Open 2016". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- (5 July 2017). "Belgium To Host Snooker's European Masters". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- Turner, Chris. "Maximum breaks". Chris Turner's Snooker Archive.
- (28 September 2016). "Murphy Makes 147 In Preston". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- (16 July 2022). "Zhang Joins 147 Club". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- (17 July 2022). "Maximum Joy For Prince Of Persia". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- (28 July 2023). "O'Sullivan fires in Leicester maximum". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
- "Hall of Fame (European Open)". Snooker.org.
- "Hall of Fame (Malta Cup)". Snooker.org.
- "Snooker European Masters Tickets".
- "European Masters".
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