2004 World Snooker Championship
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The 2004 World Snooker Championship (officially the 2004 Embassy World Snooker Championship) was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 17 April to 3 May 2004 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. It was the 28th consecutive year the World Snooker Championship was held at the Crucible. The eighth and final ranking event of the 2003–04 snooker season, the tournament was organised by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association and sponsored by cigarette company Embassy. The total prize fund was £1,378,920, of which the winner received £250,000.
Qualifying rounds for the tournament took place from 10 to 20 February 2004 at Pontins in Prestatyn, Wales. The 16 players who progressed through these qualifying rounds met the top 16 players from the snooker world rankings. The main stage of the event was contested as a single-elimination tournament. Both Ryan Day and Stephen Maguire made their debuts in the main stage of the World Championship.
Mark Williams was the defending champion, having won the previous year's final 18Template:Nbnd16 against Ken Doherty. He lost 11Template:Nbnd13 to Joe Perry in the second round. Ronnie O'Sullivan, despite trailing 0Template:Nbnd5 to Graeme Dott in the final, won the match 18Template:Nbnd8 and claimed his second World Championship. This was the fourth biggest margin in a World final, a score O'Sullivan would recreate again in 2008 and 2020 over Ali Carter and Kyren Wilson, respectively. A total of 55 century breaks were compiled during the event's main stage, the highest being a 145 made by Joe Perry.
Background
The inaugural 1927 World Snooker Championship, then known as the Professional Championship of Snooker, took place at various venues in England between November 1926 and May 1927. Joe Davis won the final—held at Camkin's Hall in Birmingham from 9 to 12 May 1927—and went on to win the tournament 15 consecutive times before retiring undefeated after the 1946 edition (no tournaments were held from 1941 to 1945 because of World War II).[1][2][3] The tournament went into abeyance after only two players contested the 1952 edition, due to a dispute between the Professional Billiards Players' Association (PBPA) and the Billiards Association and Control Council (BACC). The PBPA established an alternative tournament, the World Professional Match-play Championship, of which the six editions held between 1952 and 1957 are retroactively regarded as legitimate continuations of the World Snooker Championship. However, due to waning public interest in snooker during the post-war era, that tournament was also discontinued, and the world title was uncontested between 1958 and 1963.[1][2]
Then-professional player Rex Williams was instrumental in reviving the World Snooker Championship on a challenge basis in 1964. John Pulman, winner of the 1957 World Professional Match-play Championship, defended the world title across seven challenge matches between 1964 and 1968. The World Snooker Championship reverted to an annual knockout tournament for the 1969 edition, marking the beginning of the championship's "modern era".[4][5] The 1977 edition was the first staged at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, where it has remained since.[6][7] The most successful players in the modern era was Stephen Hendry, having won the title seven times.[8][9] Hendry was also the tournament's youngest winner, having captured his first title at the 1990 event, aged Template:Age in years and days.[10] Ray Reardon became the oldest winner when he secured his sixth title at the 1978 event, aged Template:Age in years and days.[11]
The 2004 event marked the 28th consecutive year that the tournament was held at the Crucible, and the 36th successive year that the World Championship was contested through the modern knockout format.[12][13][14] Welsh player Mark Williams won his second world title at the previous year's championship, defeating Irish player Ken Doherty 18Template:Nbnd16 in the final.[15] Organised by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association, the 2004 tournament was sponsored by cigarette company Embassy, which sponsored the event from 1976 to 2005.[16][17]
Format
The 2004 World Snooker Championship took place from 17 April to 3 May 2004, as the last of eight ranking events in the 2003–04 snooker season.[18] The event featured a 32-player main draw, preceded by a qualifying tournament that was held at Pontins in Prestatyn, Wales, between 10 and 20 February 2004. The qualifiers were played over six rounds, higher-ranked players being seeded and given byes to the later rounds.[19] All of the rounds were played as the best of 19 Template:Glossary link.[19]
The top 16 players in the snooker world rankings automatically qualified for the main draw as seeded players. Defending champion Williams was automatically seeded first overall. The remaining 15 seeds were allocated based on the world rankings. The main stage of the event was contested as a single-elimination tournament. Matches in the first round of the main draw were played as the best of 19 frames, second-round matches and quarter-finals played as the best of 25 frames, and the semi-finals as the best of 33 frames.[20] The final was played over two days as a best-of-35-frames match.[20] Reaching the first round of the tournament's main stage were seventeen players from England, six from Scotland, five from Wales, and one each from Ireland, Thailand, Australia and Northern Ireland.[20]
Prize fund
The winner of the event received £250,000 from a total fund of £1,378,920.[21] The breakdown of prize money is shown below:[21][22][23]
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Summary
First round
The first round was played between 17 and 22 April as the best of 19 frames.[20] The defending champion, Mark Williams, played Dominic Dale. Williams, who became a father the day before the match was played, earned a 6Template:Nbnd3 lead in the first Template:Glossary link, with five Template:Glossary link over 50, including a Template:Glossary link of 105 in the second frame.[24] Dale responded and won three frames to draw level at 7Template:Nbnd7.[24] Williams, however, clinched victory with the last three frames, which included a Template:Glossary link.[24] "It's not the best preparation you can have, but if you're happy off the table you can carry that over," Williams commented after the match with regard to his fatherhood.[24]
Six seeded players lost in the first round—Stephen Lee, Quinten Hann, Steve Davis, Peter Ebdon, Ken Doherty and Jimmy White. Although Lee fell 3Template:Nbnd6 behind Lee Walker, he managed to win three of the first four frames of the evening session to reduce the gap to a single frame.[25] Walker, nonetheless, clinched the twelfth frame, which lasted 53 minutes, and ended up winning the match 10Template:Nbnd7.[25] Lee claimed afterwards that the defeat was the summary of "a terrible season" for him.[25] Andy Hicks advanced into the second round by beating Hann 10Template:Nbnd4.[26] Having already been warned for his language by referee Lawrie Annandale in the eleventh frame, he confronted Hicks once the match had ended and he admitted to having told him "You're short, bald and always will be, and can have me outside whenever you want".[26] Hicks pointed out to him that he was likely to drop out of the top 16 as a result of the loss.[26][27] The six-time champion Davis lost to Anthony Hamilton 7Template:Nbnd10.[28] Doherty, 1997 winner, was beaten by two-time semi-finalist Joe Swail 6Template:Nbnd10.[29] Doherty's defeat was the first time he had lost in round one since the 1995 event,[29] and had since been champion once, finalist twice and three times a quarter-finalist.[30] Ebdon played Ian McCulloch,[31] who was making his third-ever appearance at the Crucible, having previously qualified for the 1999 and 2003 events.[32] The first session, which featured a 48-minutes-long frame, was shared at 4Template:Nbnd4, and the balance was not broken after eight more frames, with a score of 8Template:Nbnd8.[31] McCulloch, whose Template:Glossary link and Template:Glossary link were praised by his rival, went on to win two frames and sealed the first Crucible victory in his career.[31] Barry Pinches qualified for the main stage for the first time since 1991.[33] He faced White, recent European Open runner-up and Players Championship winner, in a match which overran and had to be completed after other matches.[34] A 10Template:Nbnd8 victory meant that Pinches would reach the top 16 in the world rankings for the first time in his career.[34]
Ryan Day and Stephen Maguire were the only debutants at the Crucible and both lost in the opening round. Day made three century breaks in his match, the first to do so on his debut at the World Championship.[35] He put himself 9Template:Nbnd7 ahead with breaks of 111, 68, 54, 128, 60, 112, 71 and 57 over 1998 champion John Higgins. Higgins, however, forced a Template:Glossary link with a 68 and took the match with a result of 68Template:Nbnd50 in the last frame.[36] Maguire, who was 23 and the youngest of the 32 players who made it to this stage of the tournament, reached the main draw after a season in which he had won his first ranking tournament defeating White in the European Open final.[37] Facing 2001 champion Ronnie O'Sullivan in the first round, Maguire made a 121 Template:Glossary link to go 3Template:Nbnd2 ahead and had a chance to double the lead in the next frame, but he would end up losing 6Template:Nbnd10 in a match that featured a combined three centuries between both players.[37] O'Sullivan made gestures using "middle and index fingers" and "rubbing motions" that "could have been interpreted as offensive" according to snooker commentator and historian Clive Everton.[37] O'Sullivan also conceded a frame while he could still mathematically win, something "widely regarded as inappropriate".[38] Chris Small was 1Template:Nbnd7 down to fellow Scotsman Alan McManus when he was forced to retire from the match due to pain from a degenerative spinal disease,[39] a condition which would later force him to retire from the game permanently.[40] McManus said after the match that he was "dumbstruck" by his rival pulling out.[39] Ali Carter, taking part in his second consecutive first-round match of the World Championship after having made his debut the previous season, faced David Gray, who overcame a "nightmare start" and made two consecutive half-centuries in the last two frames to secure victory with a result of 10Template:Nbnd7.[41]
Joe Perry and Robert Milkins, who were playing in the main stage for the fourth and third time respectively, met in the opening round. Although Perry came out 6Template:Nbnd3 on top at the end of the first session, Milkins reduced the deficit to two frames.[42] Perry then won three frames to put himself one away from victory at 9Template:Nbnd4.[42] Milkins, however, replied with breaks of up to 51 and 65, and Perry said he was beginning to "worry" when it got to 9Template:Nbnd7, but managed to close out the match.[42] In a tactical match, Matthew Stevens, finalist in 2000, overcame a two-frame deficit against James Wattana and won the last five frames to advance into the second round.[43] Paul Hunter, who had lost the Players Championship final against White two weeks earlier, took a 5Template:Nbnd4 lead against 1991 world champion John Parrott, who could have levelled the match at 7Template:Nbnd7, but missed a Template:Glossary link.[44] Hunter went on to win 10Template:Nbnd7.[44] Seven-time champion Stephen Hendry raced into an 8Template:Nbnd1 lead against Stuart Pettman in the first session, and wrapped up the match with two more frames once the match was resumed, with a 117 century.[45] In a match that only featured six breaks over fifty, Graeme Dott defeated Mark King in the decider 10Template:Nbnd9.[46] "It was actually getting embarrassing how bad the game was," he said afterwards.[46]
Second round
The second round of the event was played as the best of 25 frames, held over three sessions, between 22 and 26 April.[20] Pinches, playing in this stage of the tournament for the first time, led Hendry 11Template:Nbnd9 before losing 12Template:Nbnd13.[47] Hendry regarded the match as one of the toughest "battles" he had had to endure at the Crucible.[47] Hunter and Stevens met in the last 16 for the second consecutive year.[48] Stevens had been defeated 6Template:Nbnd13 the previous year,[48] and found himself two frames behind at 10Template:Nbnd12 before Hunter missed a Template:Glossary link in the 23rd frame which would have given him the match.[48] Stevens took all three remaining frames to win the match 13Template:Nbnd12.[48] Perry made a break of 145 in his match against defending champion Williams, which would remain as the highest break of the tournament.[49] Having manufactured a 10Template:Nbnd6 lead, Perry lost five frames on the trot and let Williams in front for the first time in the match at 10Template:Nbnd11.[49] Perry put together breaks of 55, 53 and 82 to win 13Template:Nbnd11 and advance into the quarter-finals of the World Championship for the first time in his career.[49] Gray took victory over Walker with a result of 13Template:Nbnd5 and also made his first appearance in the quarter-finals.[50] "It was not my greatest performance," Gray highlighted despite the result and urged himself to score more heavily the next day.[50]
Dott got off to a good start in his match against Higgins and established a 5Template:Nbnd1 advantage that got reduced to 5Template:Nbnd3 by the end of the first session.[51] Going into the last session, Dott led 12Template:Nbnd7 before Higgins made breaks of 89 and 130 and won another one to reduce the deficit to only a couple of frames.[51] Dott won the match with a 62 break, and said he had "never seen John [Higgins] play as badly as that".[51] O'Sullivan faced 1995 semi-finalist Hicks,[52] who had not managed to get past the first round of the event since that year. Scores were level going into the final session, but O'Sullivan won a match in which he compiled five century breaks.[52] Both players conceded frames while the other was still at the table.[38] Hamilton shared the first two sessions with Swail tied at 8Template:Nbnd8.[53] Swail had until that point scored half-centuries for every frame that had gone his way, but could not hold Hamilton, who sealed victory by 13Template:Nbnd11 with breaks of 86 and 61.[53] McManus won the first frame against McCulloch, who then took seven in a row with breaks of 106, 64, 76, 62, 113, 82 and 84, and moved within two of victory ahead of the evening session.[54] They played only three frames in the third session as McCulloch progressed to the quarter-finals for the first time in his career.[54]
Quarter-finals
The quarter-finals were played as the best of 25 frames held over three sessions, on 27 and 28 April.[20] In his match against O'Sullivan, Hamilton lost seven of the first eight frames and eventually lost the match 3Template:Nbnd13.[55] O'Sullivan compiled four centuries of 109, 106, 131 and 121 in the match.[55] The performance was regarded by snooker reporter Clive Everton writing for The Guardian as a "performance of stunning virtuosity".[56] Hendry defeated McCulloch also 13Template:Nbnd3 with a Template:Glossary link.[57] In setting up a semi-final duel with O'Sullivan, he made two centuries and nine half-centuries.[57]
Perry, contesting his first ever quarter-final, was six frames behind Stevens at the beginning of the third session at 5Template:Nbnd11, but he won five frames to trail 10Template:Nbnd12.[58] He stated, however, he was "mentally tired" after his second-round match against Williams and that he had lost the match "at the start", eventually losing 10Template:Nbnd13.[58] "It's difficult when you have a big lead like that and then someone fights back, because it really puts the pressure on you," pointed out Stevens.[58] Dott had never reached this stage of the tournament before either, and displayed what he thought was "a rubbish game", but defeated Gray 13Template:Nbnd7, closing out the match with a break of 62.[59] "You watch the Crucible when it gets to one table as a kid, and wonder what it would be like to play there," he said afterwards.[59]
Semi-finals
The semi-finals were played as the best of 33 frames, held over four sessions, between 29 April and 1 May.[20] Hendry and O'Sullivan were playing in the semi-finals stage for the second time, with Hendry winning 17Template:Nbnd12 in 1999.[60] Several breaks over 80 and a 117 gave O'Sullivan a clear advantage over Hendry in the two first sessions, where he led 6Template:Nbnd2 and 13Template:Nbnd3 ahead, respectively.[61][62] The match ended 17Template:Nbnd4 and with a session to spare, thanks to breaks of 93 and 79 by O'Sullivan, whose victory against Hendry was the biggest ever for a semi-final of the tournament. The previous largest was Hendry's 16Template:Nbnd4 win over Terry Griffiths in 1992.[63]
In the other semi-final, Dott faced Stevens. Stevens previously reached this stage of the tournament on four occasions, whilst it was Dott's first time. Dott was also required to reach the final to retain his place in the top 16 in the world rankings.[61] The pair shared the first session 4Template:Nbnd4, but Dott gained a 9Template:Nbnd7 lead after the second. Dott displayed good safety throughout the rest of the match to lead 15Template:Nbnd12. Although Stevens won frames 28, 29 and 30 to level the match at 15Template:Nbnd15, Dott won the next two, including one on the final Template:Glossary link, to reach the final.[64]
Final
The final of the event was played on 2 and 3 May as a best-of-35-frames match, held over four sessions, between Dott and O'Sullivan.[20] Referee Paul Collier took charge of his first World Championship final.[65] O'Sullivan (seeded third) was contesting his second World Championship final, having won his previous one in 2001 against Higgins, while it was the first one for Dott (seeded thirteenth).[66] Dott had till that point reached two ranking finals—those of the 1999 Scottish Open and the 2001 British Open—but had come short to both Hendry and Higgins.[67] Dott made a strong start to the match and compiled breaks of 71, 77, 64 and 60 to move 5–0 clear, but O'Sullivan responded with a 100-point century break and then won two more to put himself only two behind at the end of the first session.[68] In the second session, played in the evening, O'Sullivan moved from two frames down to two ahead by the conclusion, and in the third session the following afternoon he won all frames save one—in which Dott compiled a 106 century. O'Sullivan only needed two frames and twenty minutes in the evening to seal his second world title.[68]
O'Sullivan won the match 18Template:Nbnd8, the biggest margin in a World final since Hendry's 18Template:Nbnd5 victory over White in 1993[68] and the fourth largest in the history of the tournament, subsequently equalled by O'Sullivan himself against Carter in 2008 and Kyren Wilson in 2020.[69] Afterwards, Dott conceded that the newly crowned champion could be regarded as "the greatest of all time" and expressed elation over having avoided losing the final with a session to spare.[70] "It could have been worse," he stated in the post-match interview.[70] O'Sullivan said he had felt at all times throughout the seventeen days that he would go on to win the tournament and thanked six-time world champion Ray Reardon for his advice, for he had recently begun to work alongside him on improving his overall game.[71] He dedicated the victory to his father, who was at prison at the time, and said there was "more to come".[71]
Main draw
The draw for the main tournament is shown below. The numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the seedings for the 16 seeded players (1Template:Nbnd16). The match winners are shown in bold.[21][20][72]
Qualifying
The matches were played at Pontin's, Prestatyn Sands between 10 and 20 February 2004.[19]
- Note: w/o = walkover; w/d = withdrawn
Century breaks
A total of 55 century breaks were made during the main stage of the tournament. The highest break of the tournament was a 145 made by Joe Perry.[22][73][74]
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Notes
References
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