WST/WPBSA confirm their intention to make the Tour more international… at last!

This article by Phil Haigh was shared in the press today.

World Grand Prix move to Hong Kong part of plan to reduce UK’s snooker dominance

Phil Haigh

Ronnie O’Sullivan won the World Grand Prix last season in Leicester (Picture: Getty Images)

The World Grand Prix is likely to leave the UK for the first time since it arrived on the World Snooker Tour calendar in 2015 and that looks set to be a sign of things to come in the coming years.

Talks are at an advanced stage for the tournament to be held in Hong Kong this season, in the new 10,000-seat indoor arena at Kai Tak Sports Park, which is still under construction.

Official confirmation of the move to the new venue is yet to arrive, but WST are ‘very confident’ that it will happen, in what would be a big step for the event which has been held in Leicester, Cheltenham, Coventry and Milton Keynes in recent years.

This is part of a plan to spread the sport across the globe a little more fairly as the World Snooker Tour is still mainly based in the UK.

Last season there were 23 professional tournaments held in the UK, with just seven abroad across China, Germany and Saudi Arabia.

This season there are 20 events currently on the calendar with 13 in the UK and seven elsewhere – although with more to be added to the schedule in the near future including the Grand Prix and World Masters of Snooker.

This is getting closer to a 50-50 split, which WST say is the target in the short-term, with the potential for more events to be abroad than in the UK in future.

A WST spokesperson told Metro: ‘You’ll see going forward, the Grand Prix being a great example, less events in the UK at smaller venues. There’s no room for us now to keep doing stuff in smaller places. 

We’re looking to shift to a 50-50 model in the near future. By 2026/27 it should be 50-50 and it might even go beyond that, which is what it should be really. So there will be fewer UK events but they’ll be world class.

New events overseas have joined the calendar this season, with the Xi’an Grand Prix in China and the big-money Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters coming up next month, both for the first time, with the World Masters of Snooker in Riyadh is likely to return for a second time in October.

Talk of a new tournament in Qatar was made public by Barry Hearn during the World Championship, and while that remains on the cards for 2025, it may be next season rather than the current one. 

Where there has been decline, though, is in Europe where there is only the German Masters on the calendar this season, one event down from last season which saw the European Masters also hosted in Germany.

With the 2023 world champion being Belgian and hugely popular exhibition events held in the likes of Finland and Bulgaria, the presence in Europe is disappointing in terms of how global the game currently is.

However, WST insist they are ‘always looking at Europe’ and ‘desperately trying’ to expand the tour across the continent

We need to move away from relying on the UK market,’ said the WST spokesperson.

Luca Brecel’s 2023 World Championship triumph is yet to lead to more European events (Picture: Getty Images)

With the imminent move for the Grand Prix, more of the ‘smaller’ ranking events in the UK could also be moved abroad or swapped for new international tournaments, with the likes of the English Open currently held in Brentwood certainly a candidate to change.

As for the World Grand Prix, confirmation is expected in the coming weeks on the venue, dates and TV coverage, with talks ongoing on all fronts.

Hong Kong is the likely destination, but dates in January and March are possible and whether ITV4 will continue to televise the event is still being discussed.

The event will remain the first in the three-tournament series which leads into the smaller field Players Championship and Tour Championship.

At last !!!

Well this is good news, well overdue but good news. And if WST is really trying to expand the tour in mainland Europe, I’m not sure what is stopping them. The appetite from the fans is there as the success of this summer exhibitions has shown. What I do know though is that Brexit isn’t making it easier and that there has to be something worth it for the local promoters/organisers. During the PTCs era, I know that organising those events cost the local promotors and staff a lot of work, time and energy and they got very little out of it. That model can’t work in the long term.

One thought on “WST/WPBSA confirm their intention to make the Tour more international… at last!

  1. Perhaps the PTC model, with some improvements, could work better now than it did 10 years ago.

    But the real test of whether WST’s tour is more global would be whether all these ‘overseas’ events have qualifier rounds in Leicester or Barnsley. Even if we don’t count the two Championship Leagues (about 500 mini-matches), last season 77% of professional matches were played in England. There were even qualifiers for Scottish Open, Welsh Open, etc. With the schedule, that means that players are practically forced to live in the UK, which puts non-UK people at a disadvantage (not least because of expense).

    In order to be more global, WST need to change their schedule, perhaps abolish qualifiers, and have a ranking system that doesn’t penalise players who skip some events in order to be with their families. It’s achieveable, if the will is there.

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