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1993 Masters (snooker)

Professional non-ranking snooker tournament, Feb 1993 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 1993 Masters (officially the 1993 Benson & Hedges Masters) was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 7 and 14 February 1993 at the Wembley Conference Centre in London, England.

Quick facts Tournament information, Dates ...

Stephen Hendry retained the title by beating James Wattana 9–5 in the final. After the final the Benson & Hedges Masters trophy was given to Hendry to keep for winning the event five times in a row.[1]

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Field

Stephen Hendry, defending champion and World Champion was the number 1 seed. Places were allocated to the top 16 players in the world rankings. Players seeded 15 and 16 played in the wild-card round against the winner of the qualifying event, Chris Small (ranked 75), and Ken Doherty (ranked 21), who was the wild-card selection. Nigel Bond, Darren Morgan and Chris Small were making their debuts in the Masters.

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Wild-card round

In the preliminary round, the wild-card players plays the 15th and 16th seeds:[2][3]

More information Match, Date ...

Main draw

[2][3]

Last 16
Best of 9 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 9 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
Final
Best of 17 frames
            
1  Stephen Hendry (SCO) 5
 Ken Doherty (IRL) 4
1 Scotland Stephen Hendry 5
8 England Gary Wilkinson 2
8  Gary Wilkinson (ENG) 5
14  Alain Robidoux (CAN) 0
1 Scotland Stephen Hendry 6
13 Scotland Alan McManus 4
5  Neal Foulds (ENG) 1
13  Alan McManus (SCO) 5
13 Scotland Alan McManus 5
4 England Steve Davis 4
4  Steve Davis (ENG) 5
9  Nigel Bond (ENG) 2
1 Scotland Stephen Hendry 9
7 Thailand James Wattana 5
3  Jimmy White (ENG) 5
15  Willie Thorne (ENG) 2
3 England Jimmy White 5
10 England Steve James 3
6  Terry Griffiths (WAL) 0
10  Steve James (ENG) 5
3 England Jimmy White 3
7 Thailand James Wattana 6
7  James Wattana (THA) 5
12  Martin Clark (ENG) 2
7 Thailand James Wattana 5
2 England John Parrott 3
2  John Parrott (ENG) 5
11  Dennis Taylor (NIR) 4

Final

Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee: John Street
Wembley Conference Centre, London, England, 14 February 1993.
Stephen Hendry
 Scotland
9–5 James Wattana
 Thailand
First session: 14–59, 96–42 (96), 72–0 (52), 44–77, 90–21, 25–59 (50), 74–14 (67), 113–1 (54, 55), 81–22 (81), 9–107 (107), 74–12 (52), 127–1 (62, 65), 16–75, 74–1
96 Highest break 107
0 Century breaks 1
9 50+ breaks 2

Qualifying

Chris Small won the qualifying tournament, known as the 1992 Benson & Hedges Championship at the time. The event carried ranking points, but only ten percent of the usual tariff.[4]

Century breaks

Total: 11[5]

Darren Morgan's century was scored in the wild-card round.

References

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