Hercule
Poirot, that meddling Belgian who sent many a murderer down despite having no
actual jurisdiction in law, takes his final bow on British television tonight.
It’s
apt in a way because the next event, in Belgium this week, will, like all
Poirot stories, come down to a dozen or so usual suspects, all with a good claim, the eventual
champion to be revealed in the final reel.
It’s
noticeable how few surprise winners of Players Tour Championship events there
have been, particularly since they started to be televised.
The
cream has risen to the top time and time again because though prize money and
ranking points are lower than in the bigger events, it’s the same difficult
game with the same pressures.
What
the PTCs have done, though, is given less experienced players invaluable table
time against the world’s best and also imbued many with confidence to take into
bigger tournaments.
Hence,
Robbie Williams, a second season professional, reached the semi-finals of the
European Tour event in Mulheim then went to Delhi and got to the same stage of
the new Indian Open.
The PTCs have also given some lesser lights TV exposure and introduced audiences to different faces.
The PTCs have also given some lesser lights TV exposure and introduced audiences to different faces.
The
Antwerp event was won last year by Mark Allen, who has just captured the last
two European Tour titles this season, in Germany and Gloucester.
He
was absolutely right to point out that he has interrupted Ding’s run, which
encompassed the Shanghai, Indian and International titles. However, this does
not detract from Ding’s three in a row achievement.
World
ranking events have traditionally been solely professional tournaments. On
occasion they have included amateurs, as when the World Championship was open,
but were still strictly seeded according to the world rankings. The PTCs are
pro-ams, open to everyone and anyone, with ranking points attached.
For
statistical purposes, therefore, they are classed as ‘minor’ ranking titles, in
the same way that similar events in the mid 1990s were.
This
does not diminish the worth of winning one. They are tough slogs, with seven
match wins required over a two-day period.
By
my reckoning there have been 46 PTC events staged in the UK, Europe and Asia since
2010 with 25 different winners.
In
Antwerp, Ding, Ronnie O’Sullivan, John Higgins, Allen, Shaun Murphy, Judd Trump
and Mark Selby are among the leading title contenders.
TV coverage starts live on Friday on Eurosport2 at 8.30 GMT.
TV coverage starts live on Friday on Eurosport2 at 8.30 GMT.
In
the meantime, here is a list of PTC winners, by titles:
4
Judd
Trump, Mark Selby
3
John
Higgins, Ronnie O’Sullivan, Neil Robertson, Mark Allen
2
Stuart
Bingham, Stephen Maguire, Michael Holt, Tom Ford, Stephen Lee, Mark Williams,
Ding Junhui
1
Rod
Lawler, Martin Gould, Barry Pinches, Shaun Murphy, Dominic Dale, Marcus Campbell,
Ben Woollaston, Andrew Higginson, Joe Perry, Ricky Walden, Ju Reti, Liang Wenbo
3 comments:
Morning Dave,
Any info. on what the prize money breakdown is for the Antwerp Open? I'm particularly interested in the earlier rounds. Thanks
Dave
Slightly off topic but what decides what events are ranking, and what events are invitational? For example why the 2011 Wuxi Classic was invitation only and the 2012 event was ranking. And is it true that that world ranking events cost at least £500,000 to stage?
Thanks.
You can see the prize money here: http://www.worldsnooker.com/page/NewsArticles/0,,13165~3194469,00.html
Traditionally most ranking events have started as invitation events with small fields and then grown, as with the Wuxi Classic. Invitation events are good for testing the water in places with an interest in snooker.
They are costly to stage when you factor in prize money, venue hire and personnel.
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