2020 European Masters (2019–20 season) explained

Tournament Name:2020 European Masters
Venue:Messe Dornbirn
Location:Dornbirn
Country:Austria
Organisation:World Snooker Tour
Format:Ranking event
Total Prize Fund:£407,000
Winners Share:£80,000
Highest Break: (146)
Score:9–0
Previous:2018
Next:2020 (Sep)

The 2020 European Masters was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place from 22 to 26 January 2020 in Dornbirn, Austria. Organised by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), it was the ninth ranking event of the 2019–20 season, following the 2019 UK Championship, and preceding the 2020 German Masters. It was the twenty-first edition of the European Masters first held in 1989. The event was sponsored by betting company BetVictor.

Qualifying took place from 17 to 19 December 2019 in Barnsley, England. Jimmy Robertson was the defending champion after defeating Joe Perry 9–6 in the 2018 final, but he lost 3–5 to Martin O'Donnell in the first qualifying round. Neil Robertson won the seventeenth ranking title of his career with a 9–0 whitewash win over Zhou Yuelong in the final. It was only the second whitewash in a two-session ranking event final, the first since the 1989 Grand Prix. A total of 27 century breaks were made during the tournament, with Thailand's Thepchaiya making the highest, a 146 in the first round.

Tournament format

The January 2020 European Masters was a professional snooker tournament held at the Messe Dornbirn in Dornbirn, Austria, between 22 and 26 January 2020. This was the twenty-first edition of the European Masters tournament, the first having been held in 1989 as the 1989 European Open.[1] It was the ninth ranking event of the 2019–20 snooker season following the 2019 UK Championship and preceding the 2020 German Masters. It was played as the best-of-nine frames until the semi-finals, which were best-of-eleven frames, followed by a best-of-seventeen frames final. The event featured thirty-two participants from the World Snooker Tour with two qualifying rounds which took place from 17 to 19 December 2019 in Barnsley, England. The World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association and World Snooker organised the European Masters, and it was the first snooker ranking event to be held in Austria.[2]

Prize fund

The event featured a total prize fund of £407,000 with the winner receiving £80,000. The event was the first of the "European Series", all sponsored by betting company BetVictor also including the German Masters, Snooker Shoot Out and Gibraltar Open. The player who accumulates the highest amount of prize money over the four events receives a bonus of £150,000. The breakdown of prize money for the event is shown below:

Summary

Qualifying

The tournament began with a two-round qualification process held in the Barnsley Metrodome, Barnsley, England between 17 and 19 December 2019. All matches were held as the best-of-nine frames. The defending champion was Jimmy Robertson, who won his first ranking event in the 2018 final, where he defeated Joe Perry in the final 9–6. Both Robertson and Perry, however, lost in the opening qualifying round for the 2020 event to Martin O'Donnell and Tian Pengfei respectively. Reigning world champion Judd Trump was also defeated in the first round of qualifying, losing 3–5 to Ian Burns. Neil Robertson arrived late for his qualifying match against Nigel Bond but still won 5–2. World number thirteen David Gilbert lost 2–5 to Jordan Brown. The second qualifying round also featured top ranked players failing to progress. World number seven Mark Allen was whitewashed by Lu Ning 0–5. World number ten Shaun Murphy was also beaten 2–5 by Alfie Burden and world number fourteen Jack Lisowski was defeated on a by Jackson Page.

Knockout stages

The main stages of the competition were played from 22 to 26 January 2020. All matches until the semi-finals were played as best-of-nine frames, with no . The first round saw Riga Masters champion Yan Bingtao withdraw from the competition because of back pain. Thepchaiya defeated Robbie Williams in his first round match, making the tournament's highest of 146 in the sixth frame. World number three Mark Williams lost on a deciding frame to Zhou Yeulong 4–5. The second round featured four-time world champion John Higgins being defeated 5–4 by . Higgins commented, "It's a tough one to take. I should have won 5–2", having been 4–2 ahead. Barry Hawkins defeated former world champion Mark Selby 5–4, in a match that contained nine breaks of over fifty. The UK Championship winner Ding Junhui lost 5–2 to Scott Donaldson.

The quarter-finals saw 2020 Masters finalist Ali Carter defeat Donaldson 5–1, Hawkins lose to Zhou Yuelong 2–5, Gary Wilson defeat Marco Fu 5–3 and Neil Robertson defeat 5–1, with Robertson scoring three century breaks. The first semi-final was played between Carter and Robertson. Robertson won the opening frame then Carter leveled the score at 1–1. Robertson won the next five frames to win 6–1.[3] After the match, Robertson commented that "[Carter's] mindset didn't seem to be there from the outset, maybe it was a hangover from the Masters".[3] The second semi-final was held between Zhou and Wilson. Wilson led early in the match, but there was never more than two frames between the players. In a decider, Zhou won the frame to reach his first ranking event final, 6–5.[3]

The final was played on 26 January 2020 between Robertson and Zhou, as a best-of-17 frames match over two . The match was the first ranking event final for Zhou, and the first time since the 2017 Scottish Open it was contested by two players not from the United Kingdom. In the first session, Robertson won all eight frames, scoring a century break in both the fourth and eighth frames. When the match resumed, Zhou went on the final, allowing Robertson to win frame nine and complete a 9–0 victory. The win was only the second whitewash in a two-session ranking event final, the first since Steve Davis beat Dean Reynolds 10–0 in the 1989 Grand Prix final. By winning this event, Robertson had won one every season since 2006.

Main draw

Below is the draw from the main stage (last 32) onwards. Seeded players have their seedings in brackets. Players highlighted in bold denote match winners.

Final

Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee: Maike Kesseler.
Messe Dornbirn, Dornbirn, Austria, 26 January 2020.
Neil Robertson (4)
9–0Zhou Yuelong (30)
Afternoon: 56–47,,,,,,,
Evening: 73–45
128Highest break47
2Century breaks0

Qualifying

Two rounds of qualifying matches were held between 17 and 19 December 2019 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. All matches were the best-of-nine frames.

Round 1

width=45%width=10%width=45%
(1)3–5
5–3
(32)4–5
5–1
(16)4–5
4–5
(17) 5–3
5–4
2–5
(24) 5–3
5–4
(9) 5–1
5–3
(25) 5–1
5–2
(8) 5–4
(5) 5–2
2–5
(28) 3–5
4–5
(12) 2–5
5–3
(21) 5–3
5–4
(WC) 2–5
(20) 5–1
5–1
(13) 5–1
1–5
(29) 5–3
5–4
(4) 5–2
width=45%width=10%width=45%
(3) 5–4
5–4
(30) 5–4
5–2
(14) 5–4
4–5
(19) 5–2
4–5
5–4
(22) 5–1
3–5
(11) 5–4 (WC)
(WC) 4–5
(27) 5–0
5–4
(6) 5–4
(7) 5–2
5–3
(26) 3–5
2–5
(10) 5–2
0–5
(23) 5–3
1–5 (WC)
5–3
(18) 5–3
5–4
(15) 3–5
5–0
(31) 3–5
5–0
(2) 3–5

Round 2

width=45%width=10%width=45%
3–5 Daniel Wells
3–5 Michael Holt
Tian Pengfei 5–0 James Cahill
Ali Carter (17) 5–2 Dominic Dale
Robert Milkins 5–2 Tom Ford (24)
3–5 Ding Junhui (9)
4–5 Scott Donaldson (25)
1–5 Kyren Wilson (8)
John Higgins (5) 5–2 Yuan Sijun
3–5 Fergal O'Brien
1–5 Robbie Williams
Thepchaiya (21) 5–4 Luo Honghao
0–5 Graeme Dott (20)
Liang Wenbo 5–4 Stuart Bingham (13)
4–5 Lyu Haotian (29)
3–5 Neil Robertson (4)
width=45%width=10%width=45%
Mark Williams (3) 5–0 Eden Sharav
Zhou Yuelong (30) 5–2 David Grace
Jack Lisowski (14) 4–5 Jackson Page
Yan Bingtao (19) 5–1 Andy Hicks
David Lilley 5–0 Ryan Day (22)
1–5 Barry Hawkins (11)
Jak Jones 5–2 Matthew Selt (27)
2–5 Mark Selby (6)
Mark Allen (7) 0–5 Lu Ning
Marco Fu 5–0 Ben Woollaston
Shaun Murphy (10) 2–5 Alfie Burden
Xiao Guodong (23) 5–2 Lukas Kleckers (WC)
1–5 Gary Wilson (18)
Luca Brecel 5–2 Martin Gould
Michael White 5–1 Rod Lawler
Zhao Xintong 5–2 Ian Burns

Century breaks

Main stage centuries

A total of 27 century breaks were made during the competition. The highest was a 146 made by Thepchaiya in frame six of his first round match against Robbie Williams.

Qualifying stage centuries

A total of 67 century breaks were made during the qualifying stages of the event. The highest of these was a 142 made by Michael Georgiou, made in frame four of his first round match against Luca Brecel.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hall of Fame (European Open). Snooker.org. 22 June 2013.
  2. Web site: Nelson. Adam. World Snooker adds Austrian event in continued European expansion. Sport Business. 23 October 2019. 1 March 2020.
  3. Web site: Snooker news – Neil Roberston knocks out Ali Carter to reach European Masters final . Eurosport UK . 25 January 2020 . 28 January 2020 .