1990 World Snooker Championship
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox individual snooker tournament
The 1990 World Snooker Championship (also referred to as the 1990 Embassy World Snooker Championship for the purposes of sponsorship) was a professional snooker tournament that took place between 13 and 29 April 1990 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. There was a total prize fund of £620,800, the winner receiving £120,000. The tournament was sponsored by cigarette manufacturer Embassy.
The defending champion was Steve Davis, who won the previous year's final 18–3 over John Parrott. Davis reached the semi-finals of the event, where he was defeated 14–16 by Jimmy White. White contested the final against Stephen Hendry who defeated Parrott in the other semi-final 16–11. Hendry led 9–7 after the first day's play and won the first four frames of the second day to lead 13–7, before White reduced the gap to four frames. At 16–12, Hendry compiled breaks of 81 and 71 to win the match 18–12, claiming his first world title. In so doing, he became the youngest-ever world champion at the age of 21 years and 106 days. There were 18 century breaks made during the tournament, the highest of which was 140 made by Parrott.
Overview
The World Snooker Championship is an annual professional snooker tournament organised by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA).Template:Sfn Founded in the late 19th century by British Army soldiers stationed in India,Template:Sfn the cue sport was popular in the British Isles.Template:Sfn However, in the modern era, which started in 1969 when the World Championship reverted to a knockout format,[1] it has become increasingly popular worldwide, especially in East and Southeast Asian nations such as China, Hong Kong and Thailand.[2][3][4]
Joe Davis won the first World Championship in 1927, hosted by the Billiards Association and Control Council, the final match being held at Camkin's Hall in Birmingham, England.Template:Sfn[5] Since 1977, the event has been held at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England.Template:Sfn The 1990 championship featured 32 professional players competing in one-on-one snooker matches in a single-elimination format, each match played over several Template:Glossary link. These competitors in the main tournament were selected using a combination of the top players in the snooker world rankings and the winners of a pre-tournament qualification stage.[6][7] The top 16 players in the world rankings automatically qualified for the event, the remaining 16 players coming through the qualification rounds.[6][7]
Prize fund
The winner of the event received £120,000 from a total prize fund of £620,800.The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:[8][9]
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- Winner: £120,000
- Runner-up: £72,000
- Semi-final: £36,000
- Quarter-final: £18,000
- Last 16: £9,000
- Last 32: £5,000
- Fifth qualifying round losers: £4,000
- Fourth qualifying round losers: £2062.50
- Televised rounds highest break: £12,000
- Qualifying rounds highest break: £3,000.
- Televised rounds maximum break: £100,000
Tournament summary
Qualifying
The first four rounds of the qualifying competition were played at the Norbreck Castle Hotel, Blackpool from 22 to 27 January 1990, and the fifth round was played at Preston Guild Hall from 26 to 27 March.[10][11] All qualifying round matches were the best-of-19 frames.Template:Sfn Bill Werbeniuk, who had been expelled from the professional association for refusing to pay a fine ralating to the use of Beta blockers, was permitted to compete in a tournament for the first time since September 1988.[12][13] He lost 1–10 to Nigel Bond.[13] Bond was one of nine first-season professionals in the championship; all nine won their first-round matches, including James Wattana who eliminated Joe Grech 10–4.[14]
In the second round, Marcel Gauvreau defeated 1957 runner-up Jackie Rea in the second qualifying round after needing two Template:Glossary link in the Template:Glossary link.[15] Eight-time champion Fred Davis, aged 76, was eliminated 6–10 by Ian Brumby.[15][16] In the third round, Murdo MacLeod recovered from 2–7 behind to defeat Nick Dyson 10–9.[17] In another match that went to the deciding frame, Mick Price won the last three frames to defeat Steve Duggan.[17] Brady Gollan beat Kirk Stevens 10–6, and Andrew Cairns defeated six-time champion Ray Reardon 10–8.[17][16] Round four saw three-time former champion John Spencer eliminated 8–10 by Wattana.[18][16] Jim Chambers defeated 1974 runner-up Graham Miles 10–5.[11]
In the final qualifying round, Darren Morgan, Mark Bennett and Danny Fowler all recovered from 7–9 down, to defeat Bob Chaperon, Rex Williams and Barry West respectively.[19] Nigel Gilbert made the highest break of the qualifying competition, 135, in the eleventh frame of his 10–6 win against David Roe.[19] Bond and Price had both made breaks of 131 that were the highest before this.[19] Silvino Francisco lost 7–10 to Gary Wilkinson and thus failed to qualify for the main event for the first time since 1982.[19] Two-time world champion Alex Higgins qualified for the Crucible by beating Wattana 10–6, after missing out the previous year.[20][16]
First round
The first round took place between 13 and 18 April, each match played over two sessions as the best of 19 frames.Template:Sfn Eight different nationalities were represented, and there were four debutants at the main event this year: Tony Chappel, Nigel Gilbert, Brady Gollan and Alain Robidoux, who all lost in the opening round.[9]Template:Sfn Chappel, in what turned out to be his only appearance at the main tournament, and Gilbert who both lost 4–10, to Tony Knowles and Terry Griffiths respectively.Template:Sfn Gollan, who had won five matches just to qualify, led Doug Mountjoy 8–7 before losing the last three frames.Template:Sfn[21] Robidoux and Stephen Hendry were level at 7–7 in their first round match when the referee announced that Robidoux had committed a Template:Glossary link by making a Template:Glossary link.Template:Sfn Hendry compiled a break of 58 to win that frame, and added the following two frames to progress 10–7.Template:Sfn
Defending champion Steve Davis lost the first frame to Eddie Charlton but won 10–1.[22] Higgins lost 5–10 to Steve James in the first round.[23] In the eleventh frame, James was awarded a free ball in a frame before any reds had been potted. In taking a baulk colour as an extra Template:Glossary link and compiling a total clearance of 135 the break became the first Template:Glossary link in a professional tournament.[24] After losing the match, Higgins remained in his seat in the arena for some time, ordering several vodka and orange drinks, slouched in his chair and twitching.Template:Sfn Afterwards, he punched tournament official Colin Randle in the abdomen before the start of a press conference at which he announced his retirement, and abused the media as he left. This followed another incident at the 1990 World Cup, where he repeatedly argued with fellow player and compatriot Dennis Taylor, insulting his late mother and threatening to have him shot if he returned to Northern Ireland.Template:Sfn For his conduct, Higgins was banned for the rest of the season and all of the next.[25][26][27]
Although he made a 102 break in the 5th frame, Tony Drago trailed Willie Thorne 3–6 after their first session.[28][21] Drago, who playing rashly according to journalist Janice Hale, lost the match 4–10.[28][21] Dennis Taylor was 1–5 behind Neal Foulds but reovered to 4–5.[21] Foulds had a four-frame lead at 9–5 and eventually won 10–8.[21] John Virgo defeated Gary Wilkinson 10–6 for only his second win in eight apperances at the Crucible.[29] Jimmy White led Danny Fowler 6–3 after their first session and went on to win 10–4.[29]Template:Sfn Tony Meo beat Wayne Jones 10–8.Template:Sfn
Darren Morgan caught chicken pox the week before the championship and was treated in hospital for three days before receiving a certification that he was not infectious, which enabled him to participate.[30] From 4–5 down against 1986 champion Joe Johnson he went on to win 10–8.[30] Although Mike Hallett defeated Steve Newbury 10–9, his own manager Ian Doyle criticised Hallett, saying that his "professional attitude ha[d]" been diabolical" since winning the 1989 Hong Kong Open.[30] Hallett accepted Doyle's comments and remarked that he "needed a kick up the backside."[30] Cliff Wilson made his 8th and final crucible appearance at the age of 55.Template:Sfn He never got past the world championship first round in his career and that run was not to change as he was eliminated 6–10 by Cliff Thorburn.Template:Sfn Dean Reynolds led Peter Francisco 6–3 after their first session. During the second session, Franciso Template:Glossary linkd a Template:Glossary link in the 12th frame.[28] John Parrott trailed Mark Bennett 7–9, but took the next two to force a Template:Glossary link that he won on the Template:Glossary link after a break of 69 after being 59 points behind.Template:Sfn
Second round
The second round, which took place between 18 and 22 April, was played as best-of-25-frames matches spread over three sessions.Template:Sfn Davis led James 5–3 after their first session, and added the first five frames of the second session.[32] The second session finished with Davis 11–5 up, and he went on to win 13–7.[32] Foulds and Thorne each won four frames in the first session of their match, with Foulds taking the eighth frame on a re-spotted black.[32] Foulds won five consecutive frames from 8–11 and eliminated Thorne.[33] Griffiths led Knowles 10–3 and 11–5,[34] and won 13–6.[31] Virgo won the first three frames against White, but the pair were at 4–4 when the first session finished.[34] White took all eight frames in the second session and progressed with the score at 13–6.[31]
Hendry established a 4–1 lead against Meo, but then lost two of the next three frames.[34] During the second session, Hendry compiled three century breaks, and finished it 11–5 ahead.[35] During the 16th frame, referee John Williams judged that Meo had made a foul Template:Glossary link; after this, Hendry made a break of 106.[35] He eventually won the match 13–7.[31] Morgan and Hallett were level at 4–4 after their first session.[34] Morgan compiled a 104 break to win the first frame of the next session, and went on to establish an 8–4 lead, before finishing the session 10–6 ahead and winning the match 13–8.[34][31] Thorburn won the Template:Glossary link against Mountjoy at nearly 1:00Script error: No such module "String".a.m., in a match that took 12 hours and 37 minutes.[34][36] In another lengthy match, where the players had to suspend play as they over-ran the session time and had to return for the last two frames after another match finished, Parrott defeated Reynolds 13–11.[36] Parrot won the 24th frame by fluking the Template:Glossary link.[36] The pair had been level at 5–5, 7–7, and 9–9.[32][33]
Quarter-finals
The quarter-finals were played as best-of-25-frames matches over three sessions on 23 and 24 April.Template:Sfn None of the matches produced a close finish.Template:Sfn Davis led Foulds 6–2 after the first session, but Foulds levelled at 8–8 before Davis won the next five frames to get through to the next round.Template:Sfn Griffiths was a frame behind White at 4–5 but then lost eight of the next nine frames and was eliminated.Template:Sfn
Hendry was level with Morgan at 4–4 but then pulled away and won 13–6.Template:Sfn After the match, Hendry commented "I think I'm getting stronger and playing well when it matters".[37]Template:Rp Parrott complied the highest break of the tournament, 140, while building an 8–4 lead against Thorburn, and went on to win 13–6.Template:Sfn[38]
Semi-finals
The semi-finals took place between 25 and 27 April as best-of-31-frames matches played over four sessions.Template:Sfn For the first time since 1982, Davis failed to reach the final,[39] losing 14–16 to Jimmy White in the semi-final. It was the first time White had defeated Davis at the Crucible after Davis had eliminated White in four previous encounters.[23] From 6–8 at the close of the second session, White won seven of the eight frames in the third session to lead 13–9. After winning the 27th frame on the Template:Glossary link after needing a Template:Glossary link, Davis moved to within one frame of White at 13–14, and led by 40 points in the 28th frame before White won that to go two frames clear with three to play, conceding one further frame before clinching victory.Template:Sfn
In beating John Parrott, Hendry ensured that he would replace Steve Davis as snooker's world number 1 in the rankings.Template:Sfn Davis had held first place since 1983.Template:Sfn Parrott had led 4–0, and was 5–3 ahead at the end of their first session. Hendry won the next six frames to lead 9–5, followed by Parrott winning six consecutive frames leaving Hendry 9–11 behind. Hendry won the last two frames of the third session to equalise at 11–11, and added the first five frames of the fourth session to complete a 16–11 victory.Template:Sfn
Final
The final between Stephen Hendry and Jimmy White took place on 28 and 29 April.Template:Sfn The first seven frames of the final saw a total of seven breaks over 40, and saw Hendry leading 4–3.[40] After White had won the first frame, Hendry equalised with a break of 72, but a miss and foul by Hendry in the third frame gave White the chance to regain the lead.[40] Hendry took the next three frames for 4–2, then White claimed frome seven with a break of 82.[40] Hendry led 9–7 after the first day, having compiled a 108 break in the 16th frame.[37][41]
On the second day, Hendry won the first four frames, making a break of 104 in the second, with White failing to pot a ball in three of them.[42] He later wrote that at the start of the day he perceived that White that showed "that he's desperate to win, yet secretly knows he will struggle. It's almost imperceptible — a tiny inwards movement around the eyes, a fleeting nip of teeth on lip — but it's there."Template:Sfn White reflected that "Every time I got near him, he eased into a higher gear."Template:Sfn From 7–13, White took the 21st frame with a break of 82, and added the following frame to reduce his deficit to 9–13.[42] In the 23rd frame, White led by 63 points before Hendry produced a clearance of 72 to win on the black ball. The session finished with Hendry 14–10 ahead after White won the session's last frame with breaks of 51 and 45.[42] The first three frames of the fourth session were completed in 27 minutes, and included a 108 clearance by Hendry. White took the following frame, before breaks of 71 and 81 secured a first world championship title for Hendry.[42][43] He became the youngest-ever world champion at the age of 21 years and 106 days,[44] overtaking Alex Higgins, who had won the 1972 World Snooker Championship a few days before his 23rd birthday.[42] The final was described by the snooker journalist Terry Smith as "a two-day high-speed potting battle that left the sell-out crowd virtually breathless."Template:Sfn
Hendry commented after his win that "I was determined to win and confident that I could do it. I was glad I was able to keep my concentration and cope with the pressure. All through the match I was nervous. My stomach was churning tonight." White said that he was disappointed with the standard of his own safety play during the match, but said that he had enjoyed the match, and added "In a way I'm pleased for Stephen. He's a great kid and he puts in enough work to be world champion. He played tremendous snooker. You could count his misses on one hand."[37]Template:Rp The final attracted 7.55Script error: No such module "String".million viewers on BBC2.[45] Hendry went on to win six more world titles, including further victories over White in the 1992, 1993 and 1994 finals.Template:Sfn
Main draw
Shown below are the results for each round. The numbers in parentheses beside some of the players are their seeding ranks; there were 16 seeds and 16 qualifiers.[23][46]Template:Sfn
Qualifying
Players in bold denote match winners.Template:Sfn
| First qualifying round Best of 19 frames | ||
| Player | Score | Player |
|---|---|---|
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–3 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–4 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–4 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–0 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–4 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | w.o. –<templatestyles src="Template:Tooltip/styles.css" />w.d.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–5 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–4 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–1 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–1 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–2 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–1 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–7 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–6 | Template:Flagathlete |
| Template:Flagathlete | 10–5 | Template:Flagathlete |
Century breaks
There were 18 century breaks in the championship. The highest break was 140 made by John Parrott.Template:Sfn[47]
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- 140 Template:Ndash John Parrott
- 135 Template:Ndash Steve James
- 131, 100 Template:Ndash Terry Griffiths
- 128 Template:Ndash Cliff Thorburn
- 118, 117, 112 Template:Ndash Steve Davis
- 117, 108, 108, 106, 104, 103 Template:Ndash Stephen Hendry
- 109 Template:Ndash Willie Thorne
- 105 Template:Ndash Jimmy White
- 104 Template:Ndash Darren Morgan
- 102 Template:Ndash Tony Drago
Qualifying stages
There were 22 century breaks in the qualifying stages; the highest, 135, was made by Nigel Gilbert in his fifth round defeat of David Roe.[48][19]
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- 135, 131 Template:Ndash Nigel Gilbert
- 133 Template:Ndash Neal Foulds
- 131, 105 Template:Ndash Mick Price
- 126, 109, 101 Template:Ndash Mark Johnston-Allen
- 123 Template:Ndash Danny Fowler
- 120 Template:Ndash Ray Reardon
- 117 Template:Ndash Tony Chappel
- 113 Template:Ndash Brian Morgan
- 111 Template:Ndash Ken Owers
- 110, 110, 106, 101 Template:Ndash Alain Robidoux
- 110 Template:Ndash Robert Marshall
- 107 Template:Ndash Tony Kearney
- 105 Template:Ndash Nigel Bond
- 104 Template:Ndash Steve Duggan
- 100 Template:Ndash Tommy Murphy
References
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