Tournament Name: | Betfair European Tour 2012/2013 Event 5 |
Venue: | Ravenscraig Regional Sports Facility |
Location: | Ravenscraig |
Country: | Scotland |
Organisation: | World Snooker |
Format: | Minor-ranking event |
Total Prize Fund: | €70,616 |
Winners Share: | €12,000 |
Highest Break: | (147) |
Score: | 4–2 |
Previous: | ET4 |
Next: | ET6 |
The European Tour 2012/2013 – Event 5 (also known as the 2012 Grant Property Investment.com Scottish Open) was a professional minor-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 13 and 16 December 2012 at the Ravenscraig Sports Facility in Ravenscraig, Scotland.[1] This was the first World Snooker event in Scotland since the 2010 World Open.[2] The event was the fifth of the European Tour 2012/2013
The Scottish Open was last held in 2004, under the Players Championship name. Jimmy White defeated Paul Hunter 9–7 in the final.[3] [4] China's Ding Junhui won the 10th professional title of his career by defeating Scot Anthony McGill 4–2 in the final.[5]
Kurt Maflin made the 96th official maximum break during his last 32 match against Stuart Carrington. This was Maflin's second 147 break and the eighth in the 2012/2013 season.[6]
The breakdown of prize money and ranking points of the event is shown below:[7] [8] [9]
width=110px | ! | width=110px align="right" | Prize fund ! | width=110px align="right" | Ranking points1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | €12,000 | 2,000 | |||
Runner-up | €6,000 | 1,600 | |||
Semi-finalist | €3,000 | 1,280 | |||
Quarter-finalist | €2,000 | 1,000 | |||
Last 16 | €1,250 | 760 | |||
Last 32 | €750 | 560 | |||
Last 64 | €500 | 360 | |||
Maximum break | €616 | – | |||
Total | €70,616 | – |
The following is the results from the event. Players in bold denote match winners.[10] [11] [12] [13]
Best of 7 frames
width=45% | width=10% | width=45% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ross Higgins | 0–4 | Chris Norbury | |||
Mark Boyle | 4–0 | Andy Guest | |||
Lance Little | 2–4 | Jak Jones | |||
Jamie Gibson | 4–1 | Christopher Giffney | |||
Scott Whiteley | 3–4 | Lloyd Condron |
width=45% | width=10% | width=45% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michael Collumb | 4–0 | Stephen Baillie | |||
Eden Sharav | 4–3 | Dylan Craig | |||
Darrell Whitworth | 4–0 | William Thomson | |||
Rhys Clark | Liam Monk |
Best of 7 frames
width=45% | width=10% | width=45% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hans Blanckaert | w/d–w/o | James Cahill | |||
George Cunningham | 1–4 | Lucky Vatnani | |||
Joseph McLaren | 4–3 | Barry Lee | |||
Marc Davis | 2–4 | Ashley Carty | |||
Ben Jones | 4–0 | George Scott | |||
Ian Glover | 4–3 | Christopher Keogan | |||
Scott Gillespie | 0–4 | Chris Norbury | |||
Andrew Milliard | 4–1 | Barry Campbell | |||
Matthew Day | 1–4 | Adam Wicheard | |||
Oliver Lines | 4–1 | Oliver Brown | |||
Bobby Cruickshanks | 2–4 | Mark Boyle | |||
Darren Bond | 4–3 | Jak Jones | |||
Terry Challenger | Kacper Filipiak | ||||
Ryan Causton | 1–4 | Gareth Allen | |||
Stuart Carrington | 4–1 | Jamie Gibson | |||
Phil Barnes | 4–0 | ||||
w/d–w/o | Kyren Wilson |
width=45% | width=10% | width=45% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sam Harvey | 4–2 | James Silverwood | |||
Jamie Barrett | 3–4 | Justin Astley | |||
Dean Goddard | w/d–w/o | John Parkin | |||
Garry Steele | 0–4 | Fraser Patrick | |||
Lee Page | 4–0 | Lloyd Condron | |||
Thomas McSorley | 3–4 | Jake Nicholson | |||
Hassan Miah | w/d–w/o | Sanderson Lam | |||
Ross Muir | 4–1 | Michael Collumb | |||
0–4 | Mitchell Mann | ||||
Aaron Busuttil | Jack Bradford | ||||
James Gillespie | 4–1 | Pat McKinney | |||
Sean James Riach | 1–4 | Eden Sharav | |||
Michael Wild | 4–2 | Darrell Whitworth | |||
Callum Lloyd | 3–4 | Rhys Clark | |||
Ricky Norris | 1–4 | Ben Harrison | |||
Mark Vincent | 4–1 | Joe Steele | |||
3–4 | Jordan Brown |
A total of 35 century breaks were made during the tournament.[14]