Tournament Name: | 2017 Ladbrokes World Grand Prix |
Venue: | Preston Guild Hall |
Location: | Preston |
Country: | England |
Organisation: | World Snooker |
Format: | Ranking event |
Total Prize Fund: | £375,000 |
Winners Share: | £100,000 |
Highest Break: | (145) |
Score: | 10–7 |
Previous: | 2016 |
Next: | 2018 |
The 2017 World Grand Prix (officially the 2017 Ladbrokes World Grand Prix) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 6 and 12 February 2017 at the Guild Hall in Preston, England. It was the third staging of the tournament and the thirteenth ranking event of the 2016/2017 season. The tournament was broadcast in the UK on ITV4.[1]
Shaun Murphy was the defending champion, but lost 2–4 in the quarter-finals to Ryan Day, who went on to reach the final. Barry Hawkins beat Day 10–7 to win his third ranking title.[2]
The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:
The "rolling 147 prize" for a maximum break stood at £5,000.
The top 32 players on a one-year ranking list running from the 2016 Riga Masters until the 2017 German Masters qualified for the tournament.[3]
Source:[4]
Rank | Player | Total points | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Mark Selby | 375,150 | |
2 | Ding Junhui | 170,000 | |
3 | Ali Carter | 162,025 | |
4 | Judd Trump | 161,750 | |
5 | Ronnie O'Sullivan | 143,750 | |
6 | Marco Fu | 130,150 | |
7 | John Higgins | 118,500 | |
8 | Liang Wenbo | 117,400 | |
9 | Anthony Hamilton | 106,525 | |
10 | Stuart Bingham | 106,087 | |
11 | Anthony McGill | 99,275 | |
12 | Neil Robertson | 96,125 | |
13 | Barry Hawkins | 93,500 | |
14 | Mark King | 92,800 | |
15 | Shaun Murphy | 87,625 | |
16 | Joe Perry | 77,050 | |
17 | Mark Williams | 73,750 | |
18 | Michael Holt | 72,025 | |
19 | Stephen Maguire | 63,500 | |
20 | Kyren Wilson | 63,025 | |
21 | Ricky Walden | 55,900 | |
22 | David Gilbert | 55,650 | |
23 | Ryan Day | 54,362 | |
24 | Mark Allen | 51,725 | |
25 | Dominic Dale | 47,125 | |
26 | Michael White | 44,725 | |
27 | Jamie Jones | 43,862 | |
28 | Yan Bingtao | 43,600 | |
29 | Tom Ford | 43,525 | |
30 | Zhou Yuelong | 42,550 | |
31 | Yu Delu | 40,625 | |
32 | Martin Gould | 40,550 |
Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Maike Kesseler Guild Hall, Preston, England, 12 February 2017. | |||
Barry Hawkins (13) | 10–7 | Ryan Day (23) | |
Afternoon: 44–80 (55),,,,,,,, Evening: 128–0 (128),,,,,,, | |||
141 | Highest break | 92 | |
5 | Century breaks | 0 | |
8 | 50+ breaks | 6 |
Total: 25[5]