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2023 Scottish Open (snooker)

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2023 Scottish Open (snooker)
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The 2023 Scottish Open (officially the 2023 BetVictor Scottish Open) was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 11 to 17 December 2023 at the Meadowbank Sports Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland. It was the tenth ranking event of the 2023–24 season (following the Snooker Shoot Out and preceding the World Grand Prix), the third tournament in the Home Nations Series (following the English Open and Northern Ireland Open and preceding the Welsh Open), and the sixth of eight tournaments in the season's European Series. Sponsored by BetVictor, the tournament was broadcast by Eurosport, Discovery+ and free to air on DMAX in the UK and Europe, and by other broadcasters worldwide. The winner received the Stephen Hendry trophy and £80,000 from a total prize fund of £427,000.

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Qualification for the tournament took place from 30 October to 2 November at the Morningside Arena in Leicester. Qualifying matches involving the top 16 players in the world rankings and two Scottish wildcards were held over to be played at the main venue in Edinburgh. The world number one Ronnie O'Sullivan withdrew from the tournament before his held-over qualifying match against Liam Graham.

Gary Wilson was the defending champion, having defeated Joe O'Connor 92 in the final of the 2022 tournament. Wilson successfully retained the title, defeating first-time ranking finalist Noppon Saengkham 95 in the final to win the second ranking title of his career. The main stage of the tournament produced 59 century breaks, in addition to the 19 centuries made in the qualifying rounds. Stuart Bingham made the tournament's highest break, a 145 in his last-64 match against Manasawin Phetmalaikul.

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Format

The event took place from 11 to 17 December 2023 at the Meadowbank Sports Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland.[1] All matches were played as the best of 7 frames until the quarter-finals, which were best of 9. The semi-finals were best of 11, and the final was a best-of-17-frames match played over two sessions.[2]

Broadcasters

The qualifying matches were broadcast by Discovery+ in Europe (including the UK); Migu [zh], Youku, and Huya in China; and Matchroom.live in all other territories.[3]

The main stage of the event was broadcast by Eurosport, Discovery+, and DMAX in Europe (including the UK and Ireland); Liaoning TV, Migu, and Huya in Mainland China; Now TV in Hong Kong; Astro SuperSport in Malaysia and Brunei; TrueVisions in Thailand; Sportcast in Taiwan; Premier Sports Network in the Philippines; Fastsports in Pakistan; and Matchroom.live in all other territories.[4]

Prize fund

The tournament winner received the Stephen Hendry trophy. The breakdown of prize money for the event is shown below:[5]

  • Winner: £80,000
  • Runner-up: £35,000
  • Semi-final: £17,500
  • Quarter-final: £11,000
  • Last 16: £7,500
  • Last 32: £4,500
  • Last 64: £3,000
  • Highest break: £5,000
  • Total: £427,000
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Summary

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Qualifying round

Qualifying for the event took place from 30 October to 2 November 2023 at the Morningside Arena in Leicester, England. All qualifying matches were the best of seven frames.[6] The match between Chris Wakelin and Mark Joyce, due to be played on 30 October, was rescheduled to 31 October because of Wakelin's participation in the Northern Ireland Open final on 29 October. Wakelin defeated Joyce 42. Jimmy White recorded his first win of the season over Duane Jones, who replaced Marco Fu in the draw after Fu withdrew from the event. White won the match in a deciding frame.[6][7] Scott Donaldson came from 13 down to beat Ashley Hugill in a decider, and James Cahill also defeated Stan Moody in a deciding frame.[8][9]

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Jamie Jones (pictured in 2013) beat fifth seed Mark Allen 42 in the held-over qualifying round.

The held-over qualifying matches were played in Edinburgh on 11 December. That morning, the World Snooker Tour announced that the world number one Ronnie O'Sullivan had withdrawn from the event and would not play that afternoon as scheduled.[10] His opponent Liam Graham received a walkover but criticised O'Sullivan for his late withdrawal, calling it "disrespectful."[11] O'Sullivan responded that he had withdrawn the previous evening and said he "did not leave it to the last minute."[12]

Ding Junhui defeated David Grace in a whitewash. Elliot Slessor made a century break of 104 to tie the scores at 33 against the defending champion Gary Wilson, but Wilson won the deciding frame with a 90 break. Sam Craigie lost the first three frames against the ninth seed Mark Williams but then won four in a row, making a century break of 126 in the deciding frame. The reigning World Champion Luca Brecel whitewashed Iulian Boiko despite arriving at the venue just before the match, due to a delayed flight. The seventh seed Shaun Murphy lost 14 to Liu Hongyu, and the 16th seed Hossein Vafaei lost to Daniel Wells in a deciding frame. The 14th seed Barry Hawkins made century breaks of 127 and 100, but lost a deciding frame to Pang Junxu.[13]

In the evening session, Mark Davis whitewashed the 12th seed Robert Milkins. Judd Trump, Jack Lisowski, and John Higgins also whitewashed their respective opponents Sydney Wilson, Mohamed Ibrahim, and Oliver Brown. World number two Trump revealed afterward that being scheduled to play on tables two and three earlier in the season had given him "extra incentive" to return to the main table.[14]Jamie Jones defeated fifth seed Mark Allen 42 with century breaks of 141 and 103.[13]

Last 64

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Judd Trump (pictured in 2014) was defeated 24 by Zhang Anda in the last 64.

The last-64 matches were played from 11 to 13 December. Martin Gould withdrew from the tournament, and his opponent Zhou Yuelong received a walkover.[1] Zhang Anda defeated the fourth seed Trump 42.[15][16] Brecel beat Cahill in a deciding frame,[17] and Aaron Hill defeated the 13th seed Lisowski 41. Liu Hongyu and Lyu Haotian whitewashed their respective opponents Zak Surety and Jackson Page. He Guoqiang won the first frame against Higgins after needing two snookers, but Higgins took the next four to win 41. Higgins described some of his shots in the match as "amateurish" and "pathetic", commenting: "[I was] poor, really poor. I'm just lucky he didn't put me under any pressure really because I was all over the place."[18]

Mark Selby made a century break of 115 in the second frame and led Matthew Stevens 32. Stevens won the sixth frame to take the match to a decider, which Selby won with a 64 break. The match between Jimmy Robertson and White went to a deciding frame after midnight, which White won on the last black.[15] Thepchaiya Un-Nooh made two century breaks of 105 and 115 to lead Wakelin 20, but Wakelin replied with a century of 110, and went on to win the match 42. The defending champion Gary Wilson trailed Xing Zihao 13, but won three frames in a row for a 43 victory, making back-to-back century breaks of 130 and 125. The previous year's runner-up Joe O'Connor defeated Donaldson 41. The 17th seed Ryan Day lost a deciding frame to Ashley Carty. The 20th seed Stuart Bingham whitewashed Manasawin Phetmalaikul, making consecutive centuries of 135 and 145 in the first two frames. Kyren Wilson made breaks of 126, 74, 129, and 106 to whitewash Jordan Brown, with Brown scoring just 13 points in the match.[19]

Last 32

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The previous year's runner-up Joe O'Connor (pictured in 2017) lost 34 to Gary Wilson in the last 32.

The last-32 matches were played from 13 to 14 December.[1] Noppon Saengkham took a 3–1 lead over the 11th seed Ali Carter. Carter made a total clearance of 138 to win the fifth frame, but Saengkham made a 79 break in the sixth for a 42 victory.[20] Facing Brecel, the world number 80 Martin O'Donnell made breaks of 59, 75, and 70 as he took a 3–1 lead. Brecel took the 44-minute fifth frame, but O'Donnell made an 85 break in frame six to win the match 4–2. "Out there playing the World Champion on the main stage and to score like I did was great," said O'Donnell afterwards. O'Donnell's win meant that he had beaten Brecel in all three professional matches they had played.[21][20] Matthew Selt trailed Selby 1–3 but recovered to tie the scores at 3–3. Selt won the 76-minute deciding frame on the colours after Selby missed the brown, the first time he had beaten the four-time World Champion in a ranking event. "It's a fantastic result for me and a big scalp," Selt said afterwards.[21][20] Anthony McGill trailed Pang 1–2 but made breaks of 53, 100, and 56 to win three consecutive frames for a 42 victory.[20] Tom Ford beat Ding in a deciding frame, and Higgins defeated Ricky Walden, also in a decider.[21] Kyren Wilson lost the first three frames against David Gilbert, but recovered to win four consecutive frames and advance to the last 16.[1][22] Dominic Dale beat White 41, Zhang defeated Si Jiahui 42, and Wakelin whitewashed Craigie. The defending champion Gary Wilson defeated the previous year's runner-up O'Connor in a deciding frame.[1]

Last 16

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Sanderson Lam (pictured in 2016) defeated Anthony McGill 41 to reach his first ranking quarter-final.

The last-16 matches were played on 14 December.[1] Sanderson Lam defeated McGill 41 to reach his first ranking quarter-final. Higgins was tied at 22 with Lyu but won the match 42. Ford trailed O'Donnell 12, but won three frames in a row for a 42 victory. Selt made breaks of 91 and 99 to lead Saengkham 21, but Saengkham won the next two frames with breaks of 113 and 79 to lead 32. Selt forced a decider, which Saengkham won with a 93 break. Bingham made breaks of 119, 68, 65, and 89 to whitewash Zhang. Gary Wilson defeated Thor 41. He twice attempted maximum breaks in the match, but ran out of position after the 11th red in frame three and missed the 12th black in frame five. Zhou whitewashed Dale, making breaks of 138 and 88. Kyren Wilson led Wakelin 20, but Wakelin won four frames in a row, making breaks of 64, 79, and 75, to win 42.[23]

Quarter-finals

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Zhou Yuelong (pictured in 2016) defeated Stuart Bingham 54 in a deciding frame.

The quarter-finals were played on 15 December as the best of nine frames.[1] In the afternoon session, Zhou made a century break of 100 in the first frame and went on to lead Bingham 41. Bingham won three frames in a row, including a century break of 142 in the sixth, to level at 44, but Zhou won the deciding frame with a 70 break. Gary Wilson made breaks of 68, 96, 118, 68, and 82 to whitewash Wakelin. After the match, Wilson said: "It was nice to play pretty good for a change. It was a long time coming. I had a bad start to the season and it was just nice to find something and play how I know I can."[24][25]

Saengkham was level at 22 with Lam at the mid-session interval, but took three of the next four frames to win 53. Higgins made a century break of 132 in the first frame against Ford, and went on to lead 30. Ford made breaks of 58, 56, and 99 to level at 33, but Higgins won the next two frames for a 53 victory. After the match, Higgins said: "It was a big win for me. I've lost a few times to Tom [Ford] and he is such an improved player. His head doesn't really go the way it used to in previous years. He is a top player. I know I'm going to have to play well tomorrow night now."[24][25]

Semi-finals

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Noppon Saengkham (pictured in 2015) defeated John Higgins 63 to reach his first ranking final.

The semi-finals were played on 16 December as the best of eleven frames.[1] In the first semi-final, Zhou took a 53 lead, but Wilson made breaks of 122 and 54 to tie the scores at 55. Zhou made a break of 69 in the deciding frame and celebrated after potting the green ball to lead by 31 points with just 22 remaining. However, Wilson obtained foul points from three snookers, and then won the frame on a re-spotted black. Afterwards, Wilson said: "I'm shocked. Absolutely shocked. I'm shaking like a leaf here. It was just one of those crazy games. It wasn't a great game. I was really struggling technically. I just fought and fought."[26][27]

In the second semi-final, Higgins made breaks of 130 and 90 to lead Saengkham 31, but Saengkham took five frames in a row with breaks of 133, 120, and 83 to win 63 and reach his first ranking final. Saengkham said: "When I was 31 down I just had a 15-minute break. I felt nervous and went back to talk with my wife and [daughter] little Believe. I knew it could either happen again and I could lose in another semi-final or I could win today. I just tried to stay in the game and control something. I did it today."[28][29]

Final

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Gary Wilson (pictured in 2016) beat Noppon Saengkham 95 to successfully defend his title.

The best-of-17-frame final was played over two sessions on 17 December between the defending champion Gary Wilson and first-time ranking finalist Saengkham.[1] Wilson made breaks of 90, 62, and 66 for a 31 lead, which he extended to 72 with breaks of 79, 105, 78, and 81. Saengkham won the next two frames with breaks of 132 and 97, narrowing Wilson's lead to 74. Wilson took frame 12 to move within one frame of victory. Saengkham won the 13th frame, but Wilson won the 14th with a 53 break to win the match 95, successfully defending the title and claiming his second ranking event victory.

After the match, Wilson said: "This game is crazy. I was absolutely nowhere for quite a while and didn't expect anything this week. Slowly but surely I found a little bit and a little bit more, to the point where I am actually quite proud of myself for the final. I've wanted to play in a final again and play in a solid way like I used to play when I was younger. I felt like I played that way." Saengkham said: "I have to give all of the credit to Gary [Wilson]. In the first session he was very strong. He scored very heavily and he controlled everything with the safety game. I had so much pressure because he didn't miss and was very good."[30][31]

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Main draw

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The draw for the tournament is shown below. Numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the top 32 seeded players, and players in bold denote match winners. All matches were played as the best of 7 frames until the quarter-finals, which were the best of 9. The semi-finals were the best of 11, and the final was a best-of-17-frames match played over two sessions.[32]

Top half

Last 64
Best of 7 frames
Last 32
Best of 7 frames
Last 16
Best of 7 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 9 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
 Gary Wilson (ENG) (1) 4
 Xing Zihao (CHN) 3
England Gary Wilson (1) 4
England Joe O'Connor (32) 3
 Joe O'Connor (ENG) (32) 4
 Scott Donaldson (SCO) 1
England Gary Wilson (1) 4
Malaysia Rory Thor 1
 Daniel Wells (WAL) 3
 Rory Thor (MAS) 4
Malaysia Rory Thor 4
England Ashley Carty 3
 Ryan Day (WAL) (17) 3
 Ashley Carty (ENG) 4
England Gary Wilson (1) 5
England Chris Wakelin (24) 0
 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh (THA) 2
 Chris Wakelin (ENG) (24) 4
England Chris Wakelin (24) 4
England Sam Craigie 0
 Yuan Sijun (CHN) 0
 Sam Craigie (ENG) 4
England Chris Wakelin (24) 4
England Kyren Wilson (8) 2
 Robbie Williams (ENG) 3
 David Gilbert (ENG) (25) 4
England David Gilbert (25) 3
England Kyren Wilson (8) 4
 Jordan Brown (NIR) 0
 Kyren Wilson (ENG) (8) 4
England Gary Wilson (1) 6
China Zhou Yuelong (21) 5
 Jamie Jones (WAL) 3
 Dominic Dale (WAL) 4
Wales Dominic Dale 4
England Jimmy White 1
 Jimmy Robertson (ENG) (28) 3
 Jimmy White (ENG) 4
Wales Dominic Dale 0
China Zhou Yuelong (21) 4
 Mark Davis (ENG) 1
 Andrew Higginson (ENG) 4
England Andrew Higginson 2
China Zhou Yuelong (21) 4
 Zhou Yuelong (CHN) (21) w/o
 Martin Gould (ENG) w/d
China Zhou Yuelong (21) 5
England Stuart Bingham (20) 4
 Manasawin Phetmalaikul (THA) 0
 Stuart Bingham (ENG) (20) 4
England Stuart Bingham (20) 4
Republic of Ireland Aaron Hill 2
 Aaron Hill (IRL) 4
 Jack Lisowski (ENG) (13) 1
England Stuart Bingham (20) 4
China Zhang Anda 0
 Julien Leclercq (BEL) 2
 Si Jiahui (CHN) (29) 4
China Si Jiahui (29) 2
China Zhang Anda 4
 Zhang Anda (CHN) 4
 Judd Trump (ENG) (4) 2

Note: w/d=withdrawn; w/o=walkover

Bottom half

Last 64
Best of 7 frames
Last 32
Best of 7 frames
Last 16
Best of 7 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 9 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
 Liam Graham (SCO) 4
 Ben Mertens (BEL) 2
Scotland Liam Graham 3
England Sanderson Lam 4
 Sanderson Lam (ENG) 4
 Cao Yupeng (CHN) 1
England Sanderson Lam 4
Scotland Anthony McGill (19) 1
 Pang Junxu (CHN) 4
 Xu Si (CHN) 1
China Pang Junxu 2
Scotland Anthony McGill (19) 4
 Anthony McGill (SCO) (19) 4
 Oliver Lines (ENG) 2
England Sanderson Lam 3
Thailand Noppon Saengkham (22) 5
 Lukas Kleckers (GER) 1
 Noppon Saengkham (THA) (22) 4
Thailand Noppon Saengkham (22) 4
England Ali Carter (11) 2
 Ishpreet Singh Chadha (IND) 3
 Ali Carter (ENG) (11) 4
Thailand Noppon Saengkham (22) 4
England Matthew Selt (27) 3
 Alfie Burden (ENG) 1
 Matthew Selt (ENG) (27) 4
England Matthew Selt (27) 4
England Mark Selby () 3
 Matthew Stevens (WAL) 3
 Mark Selby (ENG) (6) 4
Thailand Noppon Saengkham (22) 6
Scotland John Higgins (10) 3
 Liu Hongyu (CHN) 4
 Zak Surety (ENG) 0
China Liu Hongyu 2
China Lyu Haotian 4
 Lyu Haotian (CHN) 4
 Jackson Page (WAL) 0
China Lyu Haotian 2
Scotland John Higgins (10) 4
 John Higgins (SCO) (10) 4
 He Guoqiang (CHN) 1
Scotland John Higgins (10) 4
England Ricky Walden (23) 3
 Ricky Walden (ENG) (23) 4
 Alexander Ursenbacher (SUI) 3
Scotland John Higgins (10) 5
England Tom Ford (18) 3
 Liam Highfield (ENG) 2
 Tom Ford (ENG) 4
England Tom Ford (18) 4
China Ding Junhui (15) 3
 Jenson Kendrick (ENG) 1
 Ding Junhui (CHN) (15) 4
England Tom Ford (18) 4
England Martin O'Donnell 2
 Martin O'Donnell (ENG) 4
 Jamie Clarke (WAL) 2
England Martin O'Donnell 4
Belgium Luca Brecel (2) 2
 James Cahill (ENG) 3
 Luca Brecel (BEL) (2) 4

Final

Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee: Marcel Eckardt
Meadowbank Sports Centre, Edinburgh, Scotland, 17 December 2023[31]
Gary Wilson (1)
 England
95 Noppon Saengkham (22)
 Thailand
Afternoon: 901, 750, 1200, 769, 795, 1055 (105), 820, 6173
Evening: 810, 0132 (132), 097, 11015, 5578, 8413
(frame 6) 105 Highest break 132 (frame 10)
1 Century breaks 1
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Qualifying

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Qualification for the tournament took place from 30 October to 2 November at the Morningside Arena in Leicester, although matches involving the top 16 players in the world rankings and two Scottish wildcards (Jack Borwick and Amaan Iqbal) were held over to be played at the final venue. Numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the top 32 seeded players, and players in bold denote match winners.[6]

Edinburgh

The results of the held-over matches played in Edinburgh on 11 December were as follows:[1]

Morning session

Afternoon session

Evening session

Note: w/d=withdrawn; w/o=walkover

Leicester

The results of the qualifying matches played in Leicester were as follows:[6]

30 October

31 October

1 November

2 November

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Century breaks

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Main stage centuries

A total of 59 century breaks were made during the main stage of the tournament in Edinburgh.[33]

Qualifying stage centuries

A total of 19 century breaks were made during the qualifying stage of the tournament in Leicester.[33]

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Notes

  1. Duane Jones replaced Marco Fu, who withdrew.[6]

References

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