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2016 China Championship

Snooker tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2016 China Championship (officially the 2016 Evergrande China Championship) was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 1–5 November 2016 in Guangzhou, China.[1]

Quick facts Tournament information, Dates ...

It was the first staging of the tournament, and the plans were for it to become a full ranking event for the following three years, with the biggest prize pool for any event ever held outside the UK previously.[2]

John Higgins became the inaugural winner by beating Stuart Bingham 10–7 in the final.[3][4]

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Prize fund

The breakdown of prize money from this year is shown below:

The "rolling 147 prize" for a maximum break stands at £TBD.

Seeding list

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The top 10 snooker players on the ranking list after the Shanghai Masters, along with the top 4 players on the one year prize money ranking list were invited to participate in the event.[2][5] The remaining two players (Marco Fu and Liang Wenbo) were selected by the Chinese Billiards and Snooker Association.[6] Mark Williams became eligible to participate after the withdrawal of world number 10 Ronnie O'Sullivan from the competition, as he was next in line to qualify through his official world ranking.[7]

Source:[8]

More information Seed, Player ...
  Player qualified via general ranking list.
  Player qualified via one-year ranking list.
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Main draw

[11][12][13][14]

Last 16
Best of 11 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 11 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 17 frames
Final
Best of 19 frames
            
1 England Mark Selby 6
12 Scotland Anthony McGill 2
1 England Mark Selby 5
8 Northern Ireland Mark Allen 6
8 Northern Ireland Mark Allen 6
9 England Ricky Walden 4
8 Northern Ireland Mark Allen 3
5 Scotland John Higgins 9
5 Scotland John Higgins 6
10 Wales Mark Williams 4
5 Scotland John Higgins 6
11 England Ali Carter 2
4 England Judd Trump 4
11 England Ali Carter 6
5 Scotland John Higgins 10
2 England Stuart Bingham 7
3 England Shaun Murphy 6
13 England Joe Perry 4
3 England Shaun Murphy 6
Hong Kong Marco Fu 2
6 China Ding Junhui 3
Hong Kong Marco Fu 6
3 England Shaun Murphy 8
2 England Stuart Bingham 9
7 Australia Neil Robertson 5
14 England Michael Holt 6
14 England Michael Holt 5
2 England Stuart Bingham 6
2 England Stuart Bingham 6
China Liang Wenbo 2

Final

Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Zhou Ying.
Guangzhou Gymnasium, Guangzhou, China, 5 November 2016.[12][13][14]
John Higgins (5)
 Scotland
10–7 Stuart Bingham (2)
 England
Afternoon: 77–37, 74–17, 72–1, 1–127 (102), 18–112 (112), 49–75 (52), 69–0, 70–58 (65, 58), 14–100 (50)
Evening: 28–55, 4–98 (98), 81–0 (56), 71–10 (65), 0–84 (84), 134–1 (134), 105–21 (100), 129–8 (101)
134 Highest break 112
3 Century breaks 2
6 50+ breaks 7
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Century breaks

[15]

References

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