The 2023 British Open – Day 4

This is WST report about what happened in Cheltenham yesterday

Selby Through After Cruel Blow For Gilbert

Mark Selby edged a late night thriller, as David Gilbert bowed out in the cruelest possible fashion on the final black to lose 4-3 in the last 16 of the Cazoo British Open in Cheltenham.

With the clock just shy of 12:45am, the players found themselves battling it out on the last ball. Gilbert eventually took on a long range black to the green pocket, but the white tracked towards the top left corner and fell to end the match.

Selby progresses to face home favourite Jack Lisowski in the quarters tomorrow evening in what is set to be a showpiece clash. Lisowski came from behind to edge out 1999 British Open champion Fergal O’Brien 4-2.

It was cruel really. He’d probably rather have messed a safety up or something than lose like that. It isn’t nice to lose that way when you’ve been playing a frame for that long. I felt that I could have won 4-1, 4-2 or 4-3. It was a horrible match from start to finish,” said four-time World Champion Selby.

I played Shaun Murphy in the last 16 of the English Open last year and he missed a black off the spot to beat me 4-2. I managed to turn the match around, win 4-3 and went on to win the event. Sometimes you think your name is on the trophy, but it is only the quarter-finals so I’m not getting carried away.”

Lisowski is hunting his maiden ranking title and beat Matthew Selt, as well as O’Brien, in what was a long but successful day. Afterwards he admitted he had very little left in the tank.

Lisowski said: “I was tired tonight. I played so well against Matt and felt like I was bang on it. As soon as we started playing tonight I felt tired and different. My concentration wasn’t quite there. It was a contrast today. I managed to hang in there this evening and finish the game out somehow.

Iranian number one Hossein Vafaei is through to his ninth ranking quarter-final after defeating Scotland’s 2006 World Champion Graeme Dott 4-2.

The world number 17 is now just three matches away from capturing a second ranking crown, having beaten Mark Williams in the final of the 2022 Shoot Out final to claim his first.

Vafaei now faces either He Guoqiang in the last eight. He missed two match ball blacks before eventually seeing off Barry Hawkins 4-3 on the last ball.

Mark Williams scored a superb 4-2 win over Ding Junhui to seal his progression. The Welshman lost the first two frames, but produced a four-frame burst to turn the tie on its head and get over the line. He now plays Fan Zhengyi, who beat Hailong Ma 4-1.

Tom Ford booked his last eight slot with a 4-1 win over Scott Donaldson. His opponent will be Xiao Guodong, who defeated Ali Carter 4-2.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=90QIdgT2X3I%3Ffeature%3Doembed%26enablejsapi%3D1%26origin%3Dhttps%3A

WST has also published the draws for the quater-finals and semi-finals

The draw for the quarter and semi-finals of the Cazoo British Open has been made.

Quarter-Final Draw

He Guoqiang vs Hossein Vafaei
Tom Ford vs Xiao Guodong
Mark Selby vs Jack Lisowski
Mark Williams vs Fan Zhengyi

Semi-Final Draw

 Mark Williams/Fan Zhengyi vs He Guoqiang/Hossein Vafaei

Mark Selby/Jack Lisowski vs Tom Ford/Xiao Guodong

The quater-finals will be played today over a best of 9 format, the semi-finals, played tomorrow, are best of 11.

Mark Williams played very well indeed, but, as so often, I couldn’t help feeling uneasy watching Ding. He had won the first two frames easily. As soon as he lost the third frame, his body language and facial expression suggested that he wasn’t confident and almost resigned to lose. Maybe though, the problem actually is in the eyes of the beholder rather than with Ding. Thoughts anyone?

Now… really He Guoqiang deserves better than two sentences in this report. He Guoqiang is in his first year as a professional. He lost his first match heavily, he was beaten 5-0 by Ross Muir in the European Masters qualifiers. That was back in July. He has since played 7 more matches, winning 6 of them. His only defeat came at the hands of Jack Lisowski in the 2023 International Championship qualifiers. In the 2023 Wuhan Open qualifiers, he beat Kyren Wilson by 5-4, having trailed by 66 with 67 on in the decider. Yesterday, he beat Barry Hawkins by 4-3, on the final black. Those results are saying a lot, both about his abilities and his temperament. He won’t be showcased on the main table though … unless he reaches the final here, or, maybe, if he dons a Shaun Murphy mask ?

4 thoughts on “The 2023 British Open – Day 4

  1. I would confirm your impression. Also, at times I get (got) a similar one with Gilbert, Lisowski, and Zhou Yuelong. And yes, it’s hard to watch. At times I ended up wishing for a “time out” for them to regroup, maybe to get on speaking terms with their daemons, or something.

  2. Yes He Guoqiang was terrific – until he missed a great chance to win 4-1. After that I expected Hawkins to win but in fact he missed some shots in the decider, allowing He one final chance. He Guoqiang is from Leiyang in Hunan province, had a great junior record with several finals against Pang Junxu. He has two tournament 147’s and is generally a heavy scorer with a strong cue-action, and great self-confidence. He disappeared between 2018-2020, evidently for personal and disciplinary reasons, but then returned to win the Haining Open in 2021. What’s been impressive is his all-round game, which he has developed. At 23, he is mature enough to have coped with the upheaval of moving the the UK, based at Victoria’s.

    I seem unable to tweet an mp3 file with the proper pronunciation of his name, but if the commentators are still saying ‘hee’ I will be disappointed. It should be ‘her’. Even the referees have done a better job than these ‘professional’ broadcasters.

    There were some very exciting matches again. In fact, for drama, yesterday was as good a day to have a ticket as any this season, albeit in shorter matches. Starting today is a 10-day public holiday in China, which means I will be going to the English Open next week.

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