2023 Snooker Shoot Out (2023–24 season)
The 2023 Snooker Shoot Out (officially the 2023 BetVictor Snooker Shoot Out) was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 6 to 9 December 2023 at the Swansea Arena in Swansea, South Wales. Played under a variation of the standard rules of snooker, with every match contested over a single frame, the tournament was the ninth ranking event of the 2023–24 snooker season and the fifth of eight events in the 2024 European Series. Sponsored by BetVictor, the event was broadcast by Eurosport and Discovery+ in Europe.[1] Chris Wakelin was the defending champion, having defeated Julien Leclercq 119–0 in the previous final,[2] but he lost 44–46 in the second round to Joe O'Connor. Shaun Liu, who had turned 13 in July 2023, defeated Ishpreet Singh Chadha 57–52 and became the youngest winner of a televised match in a ranking event.[3] In the first round match against Bulcsú Révész, Shaun Murphy made his eighth career maximum break, the first ever compiled at the Shoot Out.[4] In the final of the event, world number four Mark Allen defeated Cao Yupeng 65–4 to capture his tenth ranking title. He became the first player in the history of the event to win the title while ranked within the world's top 16.[5] "It's just so hard," Allen said after the match, "the easiest of shots turns into the most difficult and you feel more pressure here in a 10–minute frame than you would do in the final frame of a big ranking tournament final at 9–9 or something. It just does crazy things to your brain."[6] Tournament formatThe tournament was played using a variation of the traditional snooker rules. The draw was randomised before each round. All matches were played over a single frame, each of which lasts up to 10 minutes. The event featured a variable shot clock; shots played in the first five minutes are allowed 15 seconds while the final five has a 10-second timer. All foul shots award the opponent a ball in hand. Unlike traditional snooker, if a ball does not hit a cushion on every shot, it is a foul. Rather than a coin toss, a lag is used to choose which player breaks. In the event of a draw, each player receives a shot at the blue ball. This is known as a "blue ball shootout". The player who pots the ball with the cue ball from inside the "D" and the blue ball on its spot with the opponent missing wins the match.[7]: 42–46 BroadcastersThe event was broadcast by Eurosport and Discovery+ in Europe (including the UK and Ireland); Migu , Youku, 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.[8] Prize fundThe total prize fund for the event is £171,000 with the winner receiving £50,000. The breakdown of prize money is shown below:[1][9]
Tournament drawAll times in Greenwich Mean Time. Times for quarter-finals, semi-finals and final are approximate. Players in bold denote match winners.[10][11][12] The draw is listed in the order of play.[13] Round 16 December – 13:00
6 December – 19:00
7 December – 13:00
7 December – 19:00
Round 28 December – 13:00
8 December – 19:00
Round 39 December – 13:00
Round 49 December – 19:00
Quarter-finals9 December – 21:00
Semi-finals9 December – 22:00
Final
Century breaksA total of 2 century breaks were made during the tournament.[14]
Notes
References
External links |
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