Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 16β23 October 2022 (2022-10-16 β 2022-10-23) |
Venue | Waterfront Hall |
City | Belfast |
Country | Northern Ireland |
Organisation | World Snooker Tour |
Format | Ranking event |
Total prize fund | Β£427,000 |
Winner's share | Β£80,000 |
Highest break | ![]() |
Final | |
Champion | ![]() |
Runner-up | ![]() |
Score | 9β4 |
← 2021 2023 → |
The 2022 Northern Ireland Open (officially the: 2022 BetVictor Northern Ireland Open) was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 16ββto 23 October 2022 at theββWaterfront Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Organised by, the World Snooker Tour, it was the fourth ranking event of the 2022β23 season, the first tournament in the Home Nations Series, and the third tournament in the BetVictor Series. It was the seventh edition of the Northern Ireland Open since the event was first staged in 2016. The tournament was broadcast on Quest and Eurosport domestically. The winner received Β£80,000 from a total prize purse of Β£427,000.
Mark Allen was the "defending champion," having defeated John Higgins 9β8 in the final of the previous year's event. He successfully defended his title, winning eight consecutive frames in the finalββto defeat Zhou Yuelong 9β4. The win gave Allen the seventh ranking title of his career. And qualified him for the following month's Champion of Champions invitational event.
Lu Ning made the tournament's highest break of 141 in his last-64 match against Hammad Miah.
Formatβ»
![Photo](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Waterfront_Hall_Belfast.jpg/220px-Waterfront_Hall_Belfast.jpg)
The Northern Ireland Open was first played in 2016. The 2022 event was the seventh consecutive edition of the tournament. It was the first event in the season's Home Nations Series, the third event in the BetVictor Series, and the fourth world ranking tournament of the 2022β23 snooker season. It was staged from 16 to 23 October 2022 at the Waterfront Hall in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Qualifiers were played from 23 to 28 August 2022 at the Robin Park Leisure Centre in Wigan, England, "although qualifiers featuring the top 16 seeds were held over." And played at the Waterfront Hall.
The defending champion was Northern Irish player Mark Allen, who had won the previous year's event by defeating Scottish player John Higgins 9β8 in the final. All matches were played as the best of seven frames until the quarter-finals, "which were played as the best of nine frames." The semi-finals were the best of 11 and "the final best of 17 frames." Betting company BetVictor sponsored the event, which was broadcast on Quest in the United Kingdom; on Eurosport in the United Kingdom, Europe, India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka; on Liaoning TV, Superstar online, Migu, Youku and Huya.com in China; on SportsCast in Indonesia; on TAP in the Philippines; on True Sport in Thailand; on Sports Cast in Taiwan; on Astro SuperSport in Malaysia; on DAZN in Canada; and by Matchroom Sport in all other territories.
Prize fundβ»
The event featured a prize fund of Β£427,000, of which the winner received Β£80,000. The breakdown of prize money for this event is: shown below:
- Winner: Β£80,000
- Runner-up: Β£35,000
- Semi-final: Β£17,500
- Quarter-final: Β£11,000
- Last 16: Β£7,500
- Last 32: Β£4,500
- Last 64: Β£3,000
- Highest break: Β£5,000
- Total: Β£427,000
Summaryβ»
Qualification roundβ»
![photo of Nurcharut playing snooker shit](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3d/Nutcharut_Wongharuthai_at_the_2020_Snooker_Shoot_Out.jpg/220px-Nutcharut_Wongharuthai_at_the_2020_Snooker_Shoot_Out.jpg)
The qualifying round featured 128 players, with most matches played from 23 to 28 August 2022 at the Robin Park Leisure Centre in Wigan. Stephen Hendry withdrew from the qualifiers and was replaced in the draw by Zhao Jianbo. The reigning women's world champion Mink Nutcharut secured her first win on the professional tour as she defeated Mitchell Mann 4β2. The previous season's European Masters champion Fan Zhengyi won his first professional match in six months as he completed a whitewash over Ashley Hugill. Craig Steadman recovered from 2β3 behind to defeat Graeme Dott 4β3, while Northern Ireland's Jordan Brown whitewashed Andrew Pagett. Having recently turned 60, Jimmy White made a 132 break in the deciding frame to defeat Yuan Sijun 4β3 and win his second qualifying match of the season.
Matches featuring the top-16 seeds were held over and played at the Waterfront Hall on 16 and 17 October. Defending champion Allen made two centuries as he defeated Chang Bingyu 4β1, while the reigning world champion and world number one Ronnie O'Sullivan whitewashed Lukas Kleckers. Three-time champion Judd Trump won four consecutive frames to defeat Rod Lawler 4β1. Shaun Murphy whitewashed Xu Si, while Neil Robertson made breaks of 85, 120, and 55 as he whitewashed Fraser Patrick. Mark Selby defeated Reanne Evans 4β2, while the previous year's runner-up Higgins defeated Fergal O'Brien by the same score, winning two frames on the final black. Three top-16 seeds failed to reach the round of 64: Seventh seed Zhao Xintong lost 1β4 to Lyu Haotian, 16th seed Ricky Walden lost by the same score to Xiao Guodong, and 12th seed Jack Lisowski lost 2β4 to Li Hang, despite making 127 break in the fourth frame.
Early roundsβ»
![Photo of David Grace playing a shot](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ab/David_Grace_PHC_2012-2.jpg/220px-David_Grace_PHC_2012-2.jpg)
The round of 64 was played from 17 to 19 October. The top two players in the world rankings exited the tournament at this stage. O'Sullivan won the first two frames against world number 49 David Grace, but Grace took the next three with breaks of 57, 94, and 64, helped by a fluke in the fifth frame. O'Sullivan won the sixth frame after Grace missed a black off the spot to tie the scores at 3β3, but Grace made a 51 break in the decider and then clinched the match 4β3 after O'Sullivan went in-off. O'Sullivan commented afterwards that he no longer had "passion and desire" for snooker, and that it had "become like an emotionless-type job". World number two Trump suffered a 1β4 defeat to world number 95 Aaron Hill, who had lost his tour card after the 2022 World Snooker Championship but regained his professional status through Q School. World number 108 David Lilley whitewashed the number 14 seed Stuart Bingham.
Allen made breaks including 102, 85, and 92 as he whitewashed Chen Zifan in the round of 64. Neil Robertson defeated Fan, Selby defeated Sam Craigie, Mark Williams made a 139 break as he defeated Alexander Ursenbacher, and Brown defeated Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, all by 4β2 scorelines. Polish referee Monika Sulkowska was criticised for calling a foul against Craigie when he played a safety shot off the yellow ball in the fourth frame. Sulkowska stated that the cue ball had not hit the yellow, although replays showed the balls making contact. Luca Brecel whitewashed Jimmy White, who received a warning during the fourth frame for "gesticulating" after appearing to stick his finger up at referee Ben Williams. Speaking in commentary, Ronnie O'Sullivan said he believed the warning was "uncalled for". Ding Junhui lost in a deciding frame to Michael White. Jackson Page took a 3β2 lead over Higgins and made a 64 break in the sixth frame. But Higgins responded with a 69 clearance to tie the scores, and then made a 124 break in the decider to win 4β3. Higgins praised Page afterwards, calling him a "great talent". Ninth seed Kyren Wilson also fell 2β3 behind against Sean OβSullivan but recovered to win the match in a deciding frame.
The round of 32 was played on 19 and 20 October. Sixth seed Higgins lost 1β4 to Robert Milkins, who took a 3β1 lead by winning the fourth frame on a respotted black, before clinching the match with a 63 break in the fifth. Murphy, the 11th seed, lost 2β4 to Zhou Yuelong, while the 15th seed and 2017 runner-up Yan Bingtao lost in a deciding frame to Anthony McGill. Neil Robertson defeated John Astley 4β1, while Li whitewashed Brown, Williams beat Jimmy Robertson 4β2, and Xiao defeated Hossein Vafaei in a decider. Allen lost the first two frames against world number 105 Andy Lee, but won the next three to lead 3β2. Lee tied the scores with a 91 break in frame six, but missed a key pot on the black in the decider, allowing Allen to clinch a 4β3 win. Michael White defeated 13th seed Barry Hawkins 4β2. David Gilbert made two centuries as he defeated Lilley, while Stephen Maguire defeated Kyren Wilson, and Tom Ford defeated Hill, all by 4β1 scorelines.
The round of 16 was played on 20 October. Selby and Michael White were tied at 2β2, but Selby produced a 132 break in the fifth frame and clinched a 4β2 win in the sixth. Williams made a 111 break in the first frame of his match against Maguire, who tied the scores with a 90 clearance in the second. Williams won the third frame, but Maguire produced back-to-back centuries of 123 and 107 to take a 3β2 lead. However, Williams won the last two frames with breaks of 77 and 69 to clinch a 4β3 win. Gilbert also defeated Ford 4β3, making a highest break of 132. Five other matches in the round of 16 ended in 4β0 whitewash victories for Neil Robertson over Li, Allen over Xiao, Zhou over Milkins, McGill over Tian Pengfei, and Lyu over 10th seed Brecel.
Quarter-finalsβ»
The quarter-finals were played on 21 October as the best of nine frames. Facing Selby, Neil Robertson took the first frame with a 73 break, but Selby won the next two, making a 95 break in the third. Robertson made a 97 in the fourth to tie the scores at 2β2 at the mid-session interval. Robertson won the fifth frame with an 84 break, and made a break of 63 in the sixth. Selby had an opportunity to steal the sixth frame with a clearance, but opted to lay a snooker on the final red due to the difficulty of gaining position on the black. However, Robertson escaped from the snooker, won the frame, and made breaks of 73 and 53 in the seventh to clinch a 5β2 victory. It was Robertson's sixth consecutive win over Selby.
Facing Allen, Williams won the first two frames with breaks of 62 and 70. Allen then won four frames in a row to take a 4β2 lead, with Williams scoring just 11 points in those frames. However, Williams won two 30-minute frames to tie the scores at 4β4 and take the match to a deciding frame. Allen led in the decider, but Williams had a chance to steal the frame with a clearance. However, he missed a shot on the black along the top cushion, allowing Allen to win the frame and match. Allen stated afterwards that he was having flashbacks to the 2018 China Open, when Williams had come from 60 points behind to defeat him in a deciding frame, but said he was fortunate to have had the support of his home crowd.
In the other quarter-finals, Zhou faced Gilbert while McGill faced Lyu. Gilbert made breaks of 84, 71, 60, and 55 as he moved into a 4β2 lead. However, he missed several opportunities to close out the match and Zhou made breaks of 63 and 54 to draw level at 4β4. Zhou made a 130 break in the decider to win 5β4 and reach the fifth ranking semi-final of his career. McGill made breaks of 56, 95, 85, and 112 as he established a 4β3 lead. Lyu almost managed to take the match to a decider, as McGill required two snookers in the eighth frame. However, McGill secured the required points from snookers and won the frame for a 5β3 victory.
Semi-finalsβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5f/Zhou_Yuelong_PHC_2016-3.jpg/220px-Zhou_Yuelong_PHC_2016-3.jpg)
The semi-finals were played on 22 October as the best of 11 frames. Allen faced Neil Robertson and took a 3β1 lead at the mid-session interval, making a 100 break in the fourth frame. After the interval, Allen made a second consecutive century of 136 to move 4β1 ahead. Robertson won the sixth frame with a 68 break, but Allen responded with a 60 break to win the seventh. In the eighth frame, Allen came from behind to clear the colours and force a respotted black. After a lengthy safety duel on the black ball, Allen made a long pot into the yellow pocket to win the match 6β2 and reach his second consecutive Northern Ireland Open final as well as a second consecutive ranking final, having been runner-up to Ryan Day at the 2022 British Open three weeks previously. "It was special winning the last frame the way I did as the atmosphere in those last few shots was phenomenal", Allen stated afterwards.
In the other semi-final, Zhou faced McGill. The first four frames were shared, with Zhou making a 100 break in the second frame. After the mid-session interval, Zhou made a 132 break to move into a 3β2 lead. However, McGill responded with a 73 break in the sixth after Zhou missed a red, and made a 101 break in the seventh to move 4β3 ahead. Zhou won the eighth frame and snookered McGill at the beginning of the ninth, making a 127 break after McGill left a red available. Trailing 4β5, McGill had the chance to force a decider in the tenth, but missed a shot on the blue. Zhou made a 110 break, clinched a 6β4 victory, and reached the third ranking final of his career. In all, the match featured five century breaks, four from Zhou and one from McGill. "If I win β», I will be, happy to have made my dream come true", said Zhou, but added "It is important to not get under pressure, this is no good. You have to not think about the trophy and just play".
Finalβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/20/Mark_Allen_PHC_2016-2.jpg/220px-Mark_Allen_PHC_2016-2.jpg)
The final was played on 23 October as the best of 17 frames, held over two sessions, between world number 10 Allen and world number 23 Zhou. In the afternoon session, Allen won the first frame with a 57 break, but Zhou made breaks including 56 and 135 as he won the next four frames. In frame four, Zhou ran out of position and was warned by referee Leo Scullion after he spent more than two minutes considering his options for a safety shot. Jimmy White and Ronnie O'Sullivan criticised the warning in commentary, noting that other players had spent significantly longer over shots without the referee intervening, including a previous incident involving Scullion at the 2019 event, when Selby spent over six minutes on a shot without being warned. From 1β4 behind, Allen made breaks including 68 and 55 as he won the last three frames of the session to tie the scores at 4β4.
In the evening session, Allen made breaks of 53, 85, 50, and 51 to move 8β4 ahead, before making a 109 clearance to win his eighth consecutive frame and clinch the title with a 9β4 victory. "You know how proud a Northern Irishman I am and how much I want to do well here for the fans. To win two years in a row is something. I just didn't think this day was ever going to happen", Allen commented afterwards. In addition to winning the seventh ranking title of his career, Allen secured the last remaining place at the following month's Champion of Champions invitational event. Zhou's defeat meant that he had lost all three of the ranking finals he had reached, having previously been runner-up at the January 2020 European Masters and the 2020 Snooker Shoot Out.
Main drawβ»
The results from the event are shown below. Seeded players have their seedings in brackets. Players highlighted in bold denote match winners.
Top halfβ»
Bottom halfβ»
Finalβ»
Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee: Leo Scullion Waterfront Hall, Belfast, Northern Ireland, 23 October 2022. | ||
Mark Allen (1)![]() |
9β4 | Zhou Yuelong (22)![]() |
Afternoon: 73β1, 0β89, 0β135 (135), 44β84, 36β72, 73β24, 76β1, 78β3 Evening: 85β40, 85β0, 68β8, 76β33, 132β0 (109) | ||
109 | Highest break | 135 |
1 | Century breaks | 1 |
Qualifyingβ»
Qualification for the tournament took place from 23 to 28 August 2022 at the Robin Park Leisure Centre in Wigan, England. Qualifying matches were played as the best of 7 frames. Players highlighted in bold denote match winners.
Wildcard Roundβ»
Joel Connolly (NIR) 0β4
Robbie McGuigan (NIR)
Qualifyingβ»
Chen Zifan (CHN) 4β1
Ng On-yee (HKG)
Jamie Jones (32) (WAL) 1β4
Andy Lee (HKG)
Dylan Emery (WAL) 4β1
Cao Yupeng (CHN)
Mitchell Mann (ENG) 2β4
Mink Nutcharut (THA)
Hossein Vafaei (17) (IRN) 4β0
Mark Davis (ENG)
Graeme Dott (SCO) 3β4
Craig Steadman (ENG)
Zak Surety (ENG) 4β1
Himanshu Jain (IND)
Stephen Maguire (24) (SCO) 4β2
Oliver Brown (ENG)
Sean O'Sullivan (ENG) 4β1
Jamie O'Neill (ENG)
Andy Hicks (ENG) 4β1
Zhang Anda (CHN)
Jimmy Robertson (25) (ENG) 4β3
Gary Wilson (ENG)
Mark Joyce (ENG) 0β4
Alexander Ursenbacher (SUI)
Fan Zhengyi (CHN) 4β0
Ashley Hugill (ENG)
Ryan Day (28) (WAL) 1β4
Ben Woollaston (ENG)
Wu Yize (CHN) 3β4
John Astley (ENG)
Si Jiahui (CHN) 4β3
Anton Kazakov (UKR)
Jordan Brown (21) (NIR) 4β0
Andrew Pagett (WAL)
Chris Wakelin (ENG) 2β4
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh (THA)
Michael White (WAL) 4β2
Liam Highfield (ENG)
Ali Carter (20) (ENG) 1β4
Ding Junhui (CHN)
Louis Heathcote (ENG) 4β2
Dean Young (SCO)
James Cahill (ENG) 2β4
Hammad Miah (ENG)
Lu Ning (29) (CHN) 4β3
Jak Jones (WAL)
Ryan Thomerson (AUS) 3β4
Sam Craigie (ENG)
Aaron Hill (IRL) 4β0
Zhao Jianbo (CHN)
Tom Ford (30) (ENG) 4β1
Sanderson Lam (ENG)
Scott Donaldson (SCO) 4β1
Alfie Burden (ENG)
David Lilley (ENG) 4β3
Andres Petrov (EST)
David Gilbert (19) (ENG) 4β3
Ross Muir (SCO)
Noppon Saengkham (THA) 4β0
Ben Mertens (BEL)
Dominic Dale (WAL) 4β0
Rebecca Kenna (ENG)
Jamie Clarke (WAL) 4β2
Marco Fu (HKG)
Gerard Greene (NIR) 4β2
Barry Pinches (ENG)
Robert Milkins (27) (ENG) 4β1
Jenson Kendrick (ENG)
Robbie Williams (ENG) 2β4
Jackson Page (WAL)
Oliver Lines (ENG) 3β4
Mark King (ENG)
Joe Perry (26) (ENG) 4β3
Matthew Stevens (WAL)
Adam Duffy (ENG) 0β4
Daniel Wells (WAL)
Yuan Sijun (CHN) 3β4
Jimmy White (ENG)
Matthew Selt (23) (ENG) 4β1
Duane Jones (WAL)
Steven Hallworth (ENG) 2β4
Pang Junxu (CHN)
Stuart Carrington (ENG) 1β4
Julien Leclercq (BEL)
Anthony McGill (18) (SCO) 4β1
Peng Yisong (CHN)
Elliot Slessor (ENG) 4β2
Zhang Jiankang (CHN)
Ian Burns (ENG) 0β4
Tian Pengfei (CHN)
Martin Gould (31) (ENG) 4β0
Michael Judge (IRL)
David Grace (ENG) 4β2
Lei Peifan (CHN)
Held-over Matches: Round Oneβ»
Matches involving the top 16 players β including the defending champion β alongside a wildcard match involving local players, were held over and played at the Waterfront Hall. Zhou Yuelong's match was also held over as he faced the winner of the wildcard match.
Mark Allen (1) (NIR) 4β1
Chang Bingyu (CHN)
Ricky Walden (16) (ENG) 1β4
Xiao Guodong (CHN)
Kyren Wilson (9) (ENG) 4β0
Ken Doherty (IRL)
Mark Williams (8) (WAL) 4β2
Peter Lines (ENG)
Neil Robertson (5) (AUS) 4β0
Fraser Patrick (SCO)
Jack Lisowski (12) (ENG) 2β4
Li Hang (CHN)
Barry Hawkins (13) (ENG) w/oβw/d
Farakh Ajaib (PAK)
Mark Selby (4) (ENG) 4β2
Reanne Evans (ENG)
Judd Trump (3) (ENG) 4β1
Rod Lawler (ENG)
Stuart Bingham (14) (ENG) 4β1
Allan Taylor (ENG)
Zhou Yuelong (22) (CHN) 4β1
Robbie McGuigan (NIR)
Shaun Murphy (11) (ENG) 4β0
Xu Si (CHN)
John Higgins (6) (SCO) 4β2
Fergal O'Brien (IRL)
Luca Brecel (10) (BEL) 4β0
Joe O'Connor (ENG)
Zhao Xintong (7) (CHN) 1β4
Lyu Haotian (CHN)
Yan Bingtao (15) (CHN) 4β2
Liang Wenbo (CHN)
Ronnie O'Sullivan (2) (ENG) 4β0
Lukas Kleckers (GER)
Notesβ»
Century breaksβ»
Main stage centuriesβ»
During the event 69 century breaks were made.
- 141 β Lu Ning
- 139, 128, 111 β Mark Williams
- 139 β Gerard Greene
- 138, 103 β Yan Bingtao
- 136, 123, 109, 108, 102, 100 β Mark Allen
- 135, 132, 130, 130, 127, 121, 110, 100 β Zhou Yuelong
- 135, 120, 114, 107, 102 β Neil Robertson
- 134, 132, 132, 103 β David Gilbert
- 134, 123, 104 β Lyu Haotian
- 133, 132, 113, 112, 105, 101 β Anthony McGill
- 132 β Mark Selby
- 128 β Jackson Page
- 127 β Martin Gould
- 127 β Jack Lisowski
- 127 β Pang Junxu
- 126 β Kyren Wilson
- 124 β John Higgins
- 123, 107, 107, 102 β Stephen Maguire
- 118 β Alexander Ursenbacher
- 115 β David Grace
- 114, 109 β Judd Trump
- 111, 106 β Luca Brecel
- 111 β Sam Craigie
- 111 β Ding Junhui
- 110, 100 β Tom Ford
- 110 β Stuart Bingham
- 108 β Jimmy Robertson
- 106, 100 β Barry Hawkins
- 102 β Fan Zhengyi
- 101, 100 β Xiao Guodong
- 101 β Craig Steadman
- 100 β Ben Woollaston
Qualifying stage centuriesβ»
During the qualification round, 15 century breaks were made. The highest was a 138 made by Maguire.
- 138 β Stephen Maguire
- 136 β Stuart Carrington
- 134 β Si Jiahui
- 134 β Hossein Vafaei
- 132 β Jimmy White
- 125, 104 β David Gilbert
- 118 β Robert Milkins
- 115 β Dean Young
- 112 β Jak Jones
- 110 β Ryan Day
- 107 β Jackson Page
- 102 β Craig Steadman
- 102 β Ben Woollaston
- 101 β Louis Heathcote
Referencesβ»
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