You will find day 2 results for both events on snooker.org as usual: UK Q-School Event 2 and Asia-Oceania Q-School Event1.
There was no surprise whatsoever on in the first round of the European Event. WST daily report focusses on an interview with young Vladislav Gradinari from Moldova:
Gradinari Books Second Round Slot
Moldova’s talented 14-year-old star Vladislav Gradinari eased to the second round of Q School Event Two, thanks to a 4-0 whitewash win over Simon Bevz in Leicester.
Gradinari and his family moved to the UK in 2021 for him to pursue a career in snooker. He has already reaped the rewards of that, having won the English Under-14 Championship and made the last 32 of the Shoot Out earlier this year.
The Moldovan closed today’s win out with a break of 57 in the fourth. He now faces a tricky test in the second round against Ireland’s Ross Bulman. Although he’s aware of his family’s sacrifices to get to this point, Gradinari is keen to stay in the moment and enjoy his development as a player.
“We have sacrificed everything in our lives, my parents especially, just to get here and play near some professionals at the best level. I want to get as much experience as I can from these players. I need to enjoy playing at this age, because it is going to be difficult to enjoy it later,” said Gradinari.
“The Shoot Out was different. I have never felt anything like this. I was shaking in the first match. I couldn’t feel the crowd because there was so much space between the crowd and the table. It was like a practice table with sounds. I tried to enjoy it. The tournament was so much fun and it is perfect for kids to get some experience playing on the TV stage.”
Ukrainian 17-year-old Iulian Boiko bounced straight back from the disappointment of defeat in the final round of event one, defeating James Height 4-0. Boiko fired in breaks of 68, 90 and 56 on his way to victory.
Craig Steadman and Stuart Carrington, who were relegated from the professional circuit at the end of last season, scored wins to earn second round slots. Steadman came from 2-1 down to beat Jake Crofts 4-2, while Carrington whitewashed Pommy Kang 4-0.
WST also reported on the first day at the Asian event but I must confess that I know nothing about most of the players involved in that competition first round.
Two female players are in the draw: On Yee Ng and Cheung Yee Ting. On Yee was seeded in round 2 and lost this morning by 4-1 to Gong Chenzhi. Cheung Yee Ting got a walk-over is her opponent didn’t show up and, at the time of writing, is yet to play in the second round.
Gong Chenzhi had played really well to beat Wang Yuchen in the first round and if he kept that level in his second match the outcome is no surprise to me. All the same it’s a terrible result for On Yee.

Yes, Ng On Yee was poor, and only won a very scrappy 3rd frame on the pink. The rest of the time, Gong dominated, with a top break of 94. The other woman, Cheung Yee Ting, is a steady left-hander but not a contender. Rory Thor won a very tight battle against Hamza Akbar, so only he and Lei Peifan are the former professionals remaining.
Vladislav Gradineri is definitely one to watch, but with respect his opponent wasn’t a threat. The overall standard of Q School this year doesn’t see so high, but we’ll see what happens in the crunch rounds.