The 2024 Northern Ireland Open Qualifiers

The two qualifying rounds foe the 2024 Northern Ireland Open were played this week but were largely overshadowed by the news of Clive Everton’s passing and by the 2024 British Open being played in Cheltenham. Actually the most “prominent” talking point in relation to this event is the “conflict of schedule” created by Oli Lines run to the semi-finals in Cheltenham.

Anyway… here are the reports by WST

Qualifying Round 1

WINNING START FOR WHITE IN BELFAST QUALIFIERS

Jimmy White took a first step towards qualifying for the final stages of the BetVictor Northern Ireland Open with a 4-3 victory over Paul Deaville.

Veteran White must beat Jackson Page on Sunday to earn a spot in the televised stages in Belfast next month. A break of 77 helped White build a 3-1 lead, and after Deaville had fought back to 3-3, the Whirlwind took the decider with a run of 69.

Northern Irish amateur Joel Connolly edged out Ian Burns 4-3, while Baipat Siripaporn came close to her first win on tour but was beaten 4-3 by Liam Graham. Stan Moody top scored with 77 in a 4-2 win over Dylan Emery, while India’s Kreishh Gurbaxani enjoyed a 4-1 success against Andrew Higginson. 

Antoni Kowalski came from 3-2 down to beat Hammad Miah 4-3 with breaks of 108 and 51 in the last two frames. Marco Fu pulled out of the event which meant that Bai Yulu received a bye into the next round, and she will meet David Grace on Sunday. Bulcsu Revesz came from 3-0 down to beat Iulian Boiko 4-3  with a top break of 101.

Qualifying Round 2

BROWN EARNS SPOT IN BELFAST

Antrim’s Jordan Brown earned a place in the final stages of the BetVictor Northern Ireland Open with a 4-1 win over Liam Davies in the second qualifying round.

Brown goes through to the Waterfront Hall in Belfast for the televised stages to run from October 20-27. ..

Breaks of 83 and 113 helped former Welsh Open champion Brown to a comfortable win over Davies and put him into the last 64.

Jimmy White, still going strong at the age of 62, secured his progress with an impressive 4-3 win over world number 45 Jackson Page. White led 3-1 with a top break of 61, then Page fought back to 3-3 before White got the better of the decider.

Stan Moody came from 3-1 down to beat Ben Woollaston 4-3, making breaks of 96, 64 and 58 in the last three frames. India’s Ishpreet Singh Chadha, a semi-finalist at the BetVictor English Open last week, saw off Ashley Carty 4-1 with runs of 73, 53, 93 and 60.

Yuan Sijun scored heavily in a 4-0 win over Liam Graham, firing breaks of 59, 51, 65, 65, 56 and 142. Matthew Selt top scored with 92 and 87 in a 4-1 win over Michael Holt, while Louis Heathcote edged out Cork’s Aaron Hill 4-3.

All the detailed results can be found on snooker.org

I didn’t see much at all of the event and can’t really comment, but what I did watch yesterday evening was the match between Joe Perry and Wang Yuchen. Wang had lead 3-0 but Perry came back at him, winning the next two frames. Wand eventually won that match by 4-2 but the last frame was quite extraordinary. It turned into a “magnet frame”, with the black over the top right pocket, entirely surrounded by reds, eventually by all the remaining reds on the table. The other colours were all over the place, many on or close to cushions. Given Joe Perry’s experience and shrewd mind, I was expecting him to eventually win that frame. The two of them battled for a very long time around that cluster of balls, trading extremely delicate skilful shots. Eventually it was Wang who fouled and that made me even more convinced that this would be Joe’s frame. But no… the battle of wits continued. It was all about getting colours into play without leaving the opponent opportunities. And it was Joe who faltered first… Wang kept his cool and got the points he needed to win! Joe played on but it was in vain. He looked absolutely gutted when leaving the arena. He probably didn’t expect that type of snooker, and all the patience in the world, from such a young opponent. Unfortunately it isn’t on YouTube.

Mark Selby is the 2024 British Open Champion

Yesterday, in Cheltenham, Mark Selby produced some remarkable snooker in beating John Higgins by 10-5 in the Final to become the 2024 British Open Champion.

Congratulations Mark Selby!

Here is the report by WST:

BEST OF BRITISH SELBY ENDS TITLE DROUGHT

Mark Selby won a first ranking title for 18 months, and 23rd of his career, with a 10-5 defeat of John Higgins in the final of the Unibet British Open.

In a clash between two of the sport’s all-time greats, it was Selby who rose to the occasion as two centuries and six more breaks over 60 helped him to a comfortable victory.

Despite all of his success over the past two decades, this is a significant moment in Selby’s career as his form slumped at the end of last season and he insisted that he was considering retirement. For many years he has struggled with his mental health, and early in 2023 the family were hit with the hammer blow of his wife Vikki’s diagnosis with breast cancer. Thankfully, she is on track for a full recovery. 

These off table concerns have helped to put snooker into perspective for 41-year-old Selby, allowing him to enjoy the game itself and lower the burden of expectation he often presses upon his own shoulders. Gradually his form has returned, culminating in today’s excellent performance in Cheltenham.

It’s his first ranking title since the 2023 WST Classic, first British Open crown and first success in an ITV-televised tournament. Just two days after the legendary commentator and journalist Clive Everton passed away, the great man may have looked down in appreciation as Selby lifted the trophy which bears his name. 

Banking £100,000, Selby climbs one place in the rankings to fourth, and jumps from 30th to seventh on the one-year list. His return to form brings intrigue to snooker fans as the four-time World Champion and ultimate match-player has all the tools to challenge Judd Trump’s dominance at the top.

Higgins had also hoped to end a long wait for a ranking title, stretching back to the  2021 Players Championship. The 49-year-old could have become the oldest ever ranking event champion other than Ray Reardon, but was outplayed in the concluding session. He has the consolation of returning to the world’s top 16 having dropped out a week ago – the Scot earns £45,000 and climbs to 14th.

Leading 5-3 after the first session, Selby shared the first two frames tonight, then in the next he trailed 34-10 when he converted a sizzling long red to set up a break of 88 and go 7-4 ahead. He had chances in frame 12 but didn’t take them, and Higgins led 31-25 when he doubled a red to centre and added 30 to reduce the gap to two.

In the 13th, Higgins trailed 41-22 when he made a safety error, hitting the black instead of flicking off a red, gifting Selby the chance to make 28 and go 8-5 ahead. That ended Higgins’ resistance as Selby strolled through the last two frames with breaks of 91 and 93.

The way I played from start to finish was really pleasing,” said Leicester’s Selby. “The first session was incredible, I think my pot success was 98% and John’s was 96%. Tonight wasn’t quite as good, I missed one red at 7-4 but apart from that I made very few mistakes and I took my chances when I had them. I have so much respect for John and his family, every time I play him I just relish the moment. I knew I had to play at the top of my game, and that’s what I did today.”

Higgins, who remains tied with Stephen Hendry on four British Open titles, said: “Mark put on a clinic tonight, he was too good for me. My big moment was the tenth frame when I had a chance to make it 5-5 but couldn’t take it. I really enjoyed the occasion, I’m just a bit disappointed with the way I played tonight. But every credit to Mark. I’m still trying to compete with these top guys, I need to find a higher level to do that.” 

I was only able to watch the first session properly. It was snooker of the highest quality from both players.

I’m very pleased for Mark Selby and his family. Mark’s struggles with depression have been well documented. Vikki has always been the pillar of the family, but she is fighting her own battle against breast cancer. By all accounts she’s on top of it and I do hope that she will be fully fit and healthy very soon. And, I’m very sure that both Mark and Vikki do their utter best to protect their young daughter and shield her from their own concerns and anguish. It’s not an easy thing to do. All this is much more important than any snooker match, but Mark winning a big title and the three of them having something positive to celebrate together can only help! 💗💕

The 2024 British Open – Day 6 – SFs

The final of the 2024 British Open will be contested today between John Higgins and Mark Selby. Although there were quite a few surprising exits in the early rounds, eventually, the two men still standing are both serial event winners, World, Masters, and UK Champions … and both are over 40.

Here are the reports by WST on how tthe day unfolded in Cheltenham

Afternoon session

HARD LINES FOR OLI AS HIGGINS ROMPS INTO FINAL

John Higgins reached his first ranking event final in two and half years as he crushed Oliver Lines 6-0 at the Unibet British Open, remaining on course to become the oldest winner of a ranking event since 1982.

Lines had chances in most of the frames but struggled to find any fluency on the biggest occasion of his snooker career. Higgins was far from his best and made only three breaks over 50, but was able to use his massive experience as a tactician to out-fox his opponent.

The Scot will be up against Mark Selby or Mark Allen in the final on Sunday, and first to ten frames will bank £100,000 and lift the Clive Everton Trophy. At 49 years and four months, Higgins is looking to become the oldest ranking event champion other than Ray Reardon who was 50 when he captured the 1982 Professional Players Tournament.

Four-time World Champion Higgins has struggled for form in recent seasons and may have contemplated retirement. But class is permanent and – playing with a new cue –  his game has clicked. He is into his 56th ranking event final and first since the 2022 Tour Championship when he lost 10-9 to Neil Robertson. The Wishaw ace is aiming for a 32nd ranking title and first since the 2021 Players Championship.

At the start of this week, Higgins dropped out of the world’s top 16 having been ever present since 1995. But his absence from the elite will last a mere seven days, as the £45,000 he is now guaranteed lifts him to at least 14th, and he now looks well placed for a guaranteed spot at the UK Championship and the Masters.

Yorkshireman Lines was playing in his first semi-final, but the 29-year-old couldn’t settle into the tie. The opening frame lasted 33 minutes and went to Higgins on the colours. In the second, world number 99 Lines led 43-39 when he made a safety blunder on the last red, and his opponent punished him for 2-0. A break of 57 extended Higgins’ lead, and in frame four he trapped Lines in a tough snooker on the last red, creating the opportunity to go 4-0 ahead.

Lines was unable to muster a fight back after the interval as runs of 64 and 67 sealed the result for Higgins.

I’m delighted to be in another final and can’t wait to get out there tomorrow,” said Higgins, who won the British Open in 1995, 1998, 2001 and 2004. “I have not won silverware for a few years and I just love the feeling of being the last man standing, that’s why I keep going. I am going to have a monumental game tomorrow, they are both immovable objects who are so tough to compete against. I hope it goes 6-5 tonight either way

I’ll give it everything. There have been points in the last couple of years where I have felt that I am not good enough to compete against these guys and get to the finals. I will savour it.

Lines said: “Nerves got the better of me. I wanted to at least show why I made the semi-final. Even the easiest pots were looking so hard. I have played well all week and I hoped I could find something today, but mentally I didn’t give myself a chance, I didn’t handle it. You can’t play like that against someone of John’s class

John said to me at the end that it has been a positive week for me. I need to keep getting to these matches to gain more experience.”

Evening session

SELBY TO FACE HIGGINS IN CHELTENHAM FINAL

Mark Selby said he is determined to enjoy the occasion when he meets John Higgins in the final of the Unibet British Open on Sunday, having beaten Mark Allen 6-3 in the semi-finals in Cheltenham.

Selby has been through tough times on and off the table over the past three years. He has struggled with his mental health, and wife Vikki was diagnosed with breast cancer last year, though thankfully she is now recovering. On the baize, his form slumped at the end of last season and he admitted he was considering retirement.

To play fellow all-time great Higgins in the final is a significant moment for Selby, particularly as he has not won a ranking title since the 2023 WST Classic, 18 months ago. But his attitude this season is to keep the game in the right context.

I could wake up tomorrow and feel low, but while I am doing ok and things are good, I am trying to enjoy every day,” he said tonight after a fine win over world number three Allen. “That is my biggest challenge now, my only goal is to enjoy it. Obviously if I lose tomorrow I’ll be disappointed. But with everything I have been through, including Vikki’s illness, I look at the bigger picture and realise that snooker is just a game.”

The 41-year-old from Leicester is into his 35th ranking event final and aiming for his 23rd title. It’s his second consecutive final in Cheltenham as he lost 10-7 to Mark Williams a year ago. Success tomorrow would earn him £100,000 and move him one place up the world rankings to fourth. Selby and Higgins, with four world titles apiece and 53 ranking titles between them, will battle over a possible 19 frames for the Clive Everton Trophy.

Selby took the first three frames tonight with a top break of 105, and might have added the fourth but missed the blue to a baulk corner on 45 and Allen later made a 62 clearance to pull one back. In the fifth, Allen was on 47 when he missed the pink, and that eventually cost him the frame as Selby extended his advantage to 4-1. 

Runs of 50 and 130 saw Northern Ireland’s Allen recover to 4-3, but in the eighth he ran out of position on 36 and Selby punished him with a 95. Again in frame nine Allen had first chance, but on 50 he went for a risky plant on a red to a top corner and missed the target, leaving the balls well-placed for Selby to make a match-winning 77 clearance. 

Selby added: “It’s a huge win because it has been a long time since I have been to a final. Mark is one of the form guys of the last two seasons and one of the toughest match players. I have been more positive in my game over the last few weeks. I have practised harder so my timing is good, and also travelled around playing the likes of David Gilbert and Michael Holt to get match sharp. That has shown this week

John and I will be battling out there tomorrow, giving it everything. I have so much time for him, every time I see him we have a laugh and get on well. He’s one of the best I have ever seen and played against, and he has obviously played well to get to the final.”

Allen said: “Mark started well, he froze me out. It was a match that got away from me. The areas where Mark usually outplays people, I matched him and created a lot of chances. So it’s frustrating because I just didn’t take them, I broke down too many times on 40 or 50. You can’t afford to do that against him, I didn’t make him work hard enough. On another day I wouldn’t have made those silly errors and won 6-2 or 6-3. I will take positives because I probably did better against Mark on the safety side than I have ever done. One or two shots could have made a difference. I feel my game is in good enough shape and I’m looking forward to the next tournament.

I watched the Higgins v Lines game and, indeed, Oli didn’t handle the situation well. He’s not the first, and he won’t be the last: many players have struggled in in their “maiden” really big occasion match. Some are destroyed by it1 , but many learned from it and I hope that Oli will be in this category. His game is very easy to the eye when he’s on form, he has the ability, he’s still very young and has his father, a hard match player, by his side. Regarding the clash of schedule with the Northern Ireland qualifiers, WST did the right thing: Oli’s match versus Josuah Cooper will be played at the main venue as a “held-over” match, and the winner of that match will then face Ricky Walden, also at the main venue.

I didn’t watch the evening match at all, not by choice but because I had a photoshoot booked yesterday evening at a musical event.

Judd Trump and Mark Allen have very much been the form players over the last year or so, but no player can stay at that level all the time. Dips of form are inevitable… and generally only temporary. They are human beings, not robots.

I’d like to see Mark Selby winning today.

  1. Zhou Yuelong is a prime example ↩︎

The 2024 British Open – Day 5 – QFs

Yesterday news was dominated by the sad announcement that Clive Everton had passed away at the age of 87. By an extraordinary coincidence, the British Open trophy, is the “Clive Everton Trophy”. A visibly emotional Rob Walker paid tribute to the great commentator and journalist at the start of the afternoon session. The WST officials, the commentators, the referees, the players and the fitters surrounded table one, where the trophy stood on display. A minute of silence was observed in the arena, followed by one minute of applause.

Then the action at the tables resumed… the show must go on.

Here are the WST reports on the matches:

Afternoon session

SELBY AND HIGGINS INTO SEMIS

Mark Selby won a fourth consecutive match in the deciding frame to beat David Gilbert 5-4 at the Unibet British Open, remaining on course for a first ranking title in 18 months.

Selby, renowned for his toughness under pressure, beat Pang Junxu, Yuan Sijun and Thepchaiya Un-Nooh by a 4-3 scoreline to reach the quarter-finals, and once again proved stronger at the business end against Gilbert to earn a place in the last four in Cheltenham. It’s his first ranking semi-final since the Players Championship in February, and the Leicester cueman is chasing a first ranking title since the 2023 WST Classic.

John Higgins is also into the last four, thrashing Elliot Slessor 5-1. The random draw for the semi-finals will be made live on ITV around 6.45pm.

Four-time World Champion Selby built a 4-1 lead today with top breaks of 101 and 66. Gilbert stormed back to 4-4 with 93, 66 and 59, and he had a chance early in the decider but made just 8 before his attempted pot on the black to a top corner jumped off the table. Selby converted a tricky red to a baulk corner to set up a match-winning run of 50.

I don’t make it easy for myself,” joked Selby. “It’s just about getting the win, whether it’s 5-0 or 5-4. I got a bit nervy towards the end, although Dave played very well from 4-1 to 4-4. I thought I wasn’t going to get a chance, but he was unlucky in the last frame. We practised together before the English Open, we had four best of sevens, each for £5, and I won all of them so he owed me £20. At the end of the match today he shook my hand and said he hopes I win the title, but he wants me to let him off the £20!

My game is close, I just need to be more clinical and close out matches earlier when I get chances.”

Paying tribute to Clive Everton, the great journalist and commentator who passed away today, Selby added: “When I first started as a pro he was the main commentator, and I would also buy his magazine Snooker Scene. It’s a very sad day for snooker, he had such an iconic voice.” 

Higgins, a four-time British Open champion who has won more matches in this event than any other player, reached his 85th ranking event semi-final and he’s just two wins away from a first ranking title since the 2021 Players Championship.

The 49-year-old Scot compiled breaks of 132 and 102 in an impressive win over Slessor. “I’m pleased with the way I played, I won two frames from Elliot’s break-off, which is something the top boys do consistently and it has been missing from my game,” said Higgins. “I’m feeling good about my game and my new cue.

Evening session

ALLEN OVERTURNS WORLD NUMBER ONE TRUMP

Mark Allen took a giant step towards a first title of the season as he won his Unibet British Open quarter-final 5-3 on a night of mixed emotions for Judd Trump.

Trump became only the third player in snooker history to make 1,000 career centuries, joining Ronnie O’Sullivan and John Higgins, with a ton in the second frame. But the contest finished in disappointment for the world number one as his hopes of a third title this season ended.

Allen, ranked third, goes through to the last four to face Mark Selby on Saturday night. Having won three tournaments in each of the last two seasons, the Northern Irishman has had a relatively quiet start to the current campaign and this will be his first semi-final. He’ll relish a battle with Selby in Cheltenham and the opportunity to chase a 12th career ranking title.

The opening frame tonight lasted 48 minutes, resolved when Allen got the better of a safety battle on the green and cleared the table. Trump levelled with his landmark century, but Allen made a crucial 33 clearance to pinch the third frame and added the next two for 4-1. 

Bristol’s Trump pulled one back with a 92, and gained momentum by taking frame seven after his opponent had missed the final yellow to a baulk corner. But Allen shrugged off that mistake and dominated the next with a top run of 50 to reach his 39th ranking semi-final.

It was frustrating that I didn’t close out the match earlier because I had chances at 4-1 and 4-2,” said Allen. “Any win against Judd is a good one, especially the season he is having. I have a good record against him and I feel like he knows that. There are a lot of players who don’t believe they can beat Judd, but if I get a chance against him I’m capable of doing it, so to do that in a big tournament is always nice

It was great to be a part of history, seeing Judd make his 1,000th century. He’ll be disappointed not to have won the match, but he’s got that monkey off his back because everyone had been talking about the 1,000 centuries for a while.” 

World number 99 Oliver Lines enjoyed a huge breakthrough in his career as he beat Jak Jones 5-4 to reach his first ranking event semi-final. The 29-year-old will meet John Higgins on Saturday at 1pm.

Leeds cueman Lines turned pro in 2014 and had lost his two previous quarter-finals 5-4, but this time he was on the right side of the scoreline. In fact he has won four matches this week in the deciding frame, having beaten Lei Peifan, Ka Wai Cheung and Sunny Akani 4-3.

Breaks of 102 and 55 put Lines 2-0 ahead tonight, before Crucible runner-up Jones took the next three with top runs of 84 and 68. The next two were shared, then Lines compiled excellent breaks of 76 and 75 to win the last two.

I know I have got it in there and I can stand up and be counted when I need to,” he said. “It was nice to prove to myself and my family that I can do it. I can’t put into words how good it would be to make my first ranking final, that’s what I have worked my whole life for.

I don’t have anything to happen to these reports. I watched table one in both sessions.

But now WST has a serious issue on their hands. Indeed the 2024 Northern Ireland Open qualifiers start today and Oli Lines is due to play in them. He’s due to play Josuah Cooper at 6 pm, in Ponds Forge, in Sheffield. The winner is due to face Ricky Walden tomorrow. He obviously can’t play in Ponds Forge today and it would be totally wrong and absurdly unfair if he was forced to withdraw from the Northern Ireland Open because of WST ridiculous scheduling. On one hand they constantly go on about how good the lower ranked players are nowadays, and many are indeed excellent as Oli’s run in Cheltenham is proving, on the other hand they schedule a qualifying event to clash with a main event which means what? Apparently it means they assumed that nobody ranked under 64 can reach the semi-finals of an event, and nobody ranked under 32 can reach a final for that matter, despite previous occurrences1. This is utters shambles. And “holding over” to the main venue means “holding over” two qualifying matches. Plus … Cooper and Walden have probably already booked their hotel and trip to Sheffield and it doesn’t come free.

  1. If some of Ronnie’s comments about lower ranked players are disrespectful to the players and the game, what about this coming from the governing body itself? ↩︎

Farewell Clive Everton …

The snooker community is in mourning as, today, Clive Everton has left the scene …

Here is the obituary written by David Hendon, and shared by WST

COMMENTARY LEGEND CLIVE EVERTON PASSES AWAY

Clive Everton, one of snooker’s greatest ever commentators and voice of the sport, has died at the age of 87. 

Everton devoted his life to snooker and covered some of the sport’s most historic moments as a broadcaster and journalist. 

Commentator David Hendon was a protege of Everton and a close friend. Here is his obituary for a snooker legend.

Clive Everton deserves to be remembered as one of the most significant figures in snooker history.

He reached a highest world ranking of 47th but it was off the table where he made a vast and varied contribution, primarily as a broadcaster and journalist but also as the trusted conscience of the sport.

As editor of Snooker Scene for 51 years he provided an invaluable chronicle of snooker’s rise from folk sport to a mainstream television attraction, charting the careers of players from boyhood to stardom. He forensically examined the governance of the professional game and campaigned for change and transparency.

Clive was also passionate about billiards, the game in which he particularly excelled, and he worked tirelessly to promote it and help it survive.

In his book, Black Farce and Cue Ball Wizards, Clive explained how this love affair began:
“My emotional commitment to the game dated back to boyhood and one rainy London afternoon when my father and I settled into the plush fauteuils of Leicester Square Hall, which was then the 220-seat home of the professional game. From the first click of the balls, I was entranced.”

Clive won the 1952 British under 16 billiards title but the reputation of cue sports was such that his achievement received little recognition.

He wrote: “Far from making me any kind of hero at school – King’s, Worcester – this success made me more of an outsider and nurtured, in turn, my anti-establishment instincts. My headmaster, F. R. Kittermaster, an Old Rugbeian from the Thomas Arnold tradition, wrote in Sport and Society that only sports with an element of physical danger like rugby, cricket or hockey, were ‘character building.’ He was fond of insisting: ‘You came here to be made into gentlemen.’ Proficiency at billiards, the classic sign of a misspent youth, did not fit into his definition.

This did not deter Clive, whose attitude to authority was always one of scepticism. He went on to win the British under 19 billiards championship and at age 22 the first of four Welsh amateur billiards titles. He reached the final of the English amateur championship on five occasions.

He was also talented at tennis, competing for the Worcestershire county team and entering qualifying for Wimbledon.

A BA Hons English graduate of Cardiff University, he moved to the Midlands after marrying Valerie, whose father arranged a teaching job at a college of further education in Halesowen. Clive taught English and Liberal Studies but journalism was what he wanted to do.

He was helped by Rex Williams, with whom he would practise and who negotiated columns in the Wolverhampton Express and Star and its sporting ‘pink’ published on Saturdays. 

Clive also picked up some freelance work as a tennis and hockey writer and after a year in post gave up his teaching job to pursue journalism: “What it amounted to was that I loved sport and wanted to spend my life in it.”

Enterprising and ambitious, Clive was determined to succeed but also to push the cause of snooker and billiards. In 1966, he was appointed editor of Billiards and Snooker, the magazine of the Billiard Association and Control Council. Still a young man and an independent thinker, his ideas did not always meet with approval from the powers that be and in January 1971 he began his own magazine. Originally titled World Snooker, the following year it became Snooker Scene.

The ethos behind the magazine was to provide a first draft of history by recording every available result. Detailed match reports informed readers as to the ebb and flow of contests, especially valuable in the age before television became heavily involved. Players would also advertise for exhibitions.

In addition, Clive did not stint from providing his analysis of the decisions being made by those charged with running the sport. His intention was that Snooker Scene would incorporate the best parts of Wisden and Private Eye.

Covering a range of sports, including football and rugby, he set up Everton’s News Agency, which supplied reports to newspapers and radio stations. Jim Rosenthal, who later became one of ITV’s best known broadcasters, was an early employee. Clive was a regular hockey reporter and even set up Hockey Scene, a monthly magazine modelled on its snooker equivalent.

Gradually, though, snooker’s popularity was such that Clive poured all of his energies into evangelising for it and billiards. 

He took over the running of the British Junior Championship after it had lapsed and played a key role in the founding of the International Billiards and Snooker Federation.

Clive travelled to London in 1968 to interview the squash player, Jonah Barrington, and departed as his manager. Through this venture he got to know Peter West and Patrick Nally, who ran a consultancy specialising in the relatively new world of sports sponsorship. West Nally advised Gallaher, the parent group of Benson and Hedges, and Clive suggested a snooker tournament as a fit for their brand. The B&H Masters was launched in 1975 and has long been regarded as one of the sport’s major events.

Clive won the 1977 National Pairs title with Roger Bales and turned professional at snooker in 1981 but by this time was past his best. He had an exaggerated playing style, twisting himself into each shot following major back surgery. He beat a young John Parrott and former UK champion Patsy Fagan before retiring in 1991.

He fared better at billiards, winning the 1980 Canadian Open, of which he wrote: “In a field of variable quality, I beat Long John Baldrey’s pianist in the first round and Steve Davis in the final.”

Clive reached the quarter-finals of the World Billiards Championship three times and achieved a highest ranking of ninth. He kept a table at home where he would spend many happy hours playing the game he loved.

Clive’s mastery of the English language and encyclopaedic knowledge of snooker made him a natural choice for commentary when the sport established a foothold on television. He auditioned for the BBC in 1963 and was told he had done well but heard nothing more. In the mid-1970s he undertook a commentary test for executives from Thames TV, held at Stoke Poges golf club which housed a snooker table.

The executives enjoyed a boozy lunch – Clive abstained – and repaired to the snooker room to play a frame over which he was expected to commentate. The standard was predictably appalling but Clive passed the audition and was engaged by various ITV regional companies to commentate on events before his life changed on the opening day of the 1978 World Championship. Arriving at the Crucible, he was asked by Nick Hunter, the BBC executive producer, if he would be interested in doing some commentary. Confirming he would, Clive was told his first match would be starting in 20 minutes time.

It was an encounter between Willie Thorne and Eddie Charlton. With typical sardonic humour, Clive described it as a time when “Willie had yet to lose his hair and Eddie had yet to acquire more.”

He quickly became a mainstay of the BBC team, the third lead commentator behind Ted Lowe and Jack Karnehm. After Karnehm retired in 1994 and Lowe in 1996, Clive became widely known as the ‘Voice of Snooker’ and was behind the mic for many memorable moments.

His commentaries were notable for his crisp, spare, pinpoint use of language, with not a word wasted. He only spoke when necessary. When he did, it was worth hearing.

Warning: genius at work,” was how he once summed up a Jimmy White century.

Ray Reardon six times world champion in the 70s, Steve Davis six times in the 80s, but it’s a magnificent seven times for Stephen Hendry in the 90s,” he said as Hendry triumphed in 1999.

Amazing, astonishing, astounding,” was his summation of Shaun Murphy’s shock capture of the 2005 world title.

Clive was aware of the need for journalistic distance in commentary, using surnames when describing the players to avoid any suggestion of bias. He was friendly with players but not one for socialising. You would not see him in the hotel bar at night.

When not in the commentary box he would be found in the media centre, writing daily reports for the Guardian newspaper and updating listeners on BBC Radio 5 Live. At the weekend he wrote first for the Sunday Times and later the Independent on Sunday.

Over the course of his career he wrote close to 30 books about snooker and billiards, whether technical, historical or biographical.

Snooker Scene remained his great passion and an outlet in which he scrutinised the administration of the game, often leading to serious disagreements with the authorities. Clive himself briefly served on the WPBSA board but understood the conflict of interest involved. Instead, he was often a thorn in the side of various chairmen, board members and executives.

As a campaigning journalist, he was at times obsessed with snooker politics as the change he desired time and again failed to materialise. He could suffer depressive episodes and found it almost impossible to switch off from work.

His battles with those in power led to various legal threats but he stood his ground and was eventually delighted by the arrival of Barry Hearn at the WST chairmanship in 2010, ushering in an era of change and growth.

Clive loved absurdist humour. He would not want his own obituary to be entirely serious.

Fortunately, there were lighter moments, most notably at the Grand Prix in Preston in 1998 when he toppled backwards off his chair while in the box. Attempting to halt the inevitable fall, he grabbed the tie of his co-commentator, Dennis Taylor, almost strangling the 1985 world champion.

A cultured man, he once wrote a novel based in the tennis world. Handwritten on several hundred sides of A4, he intended to take the first draft to the office for revisions but, on putting the stack of paper on the roof of his car while he unlocked the door, a gust of wind scattered the pages far and wide and the project was abandoned.

By his own admission, he was hopeless with technology. For many years, he did not own a computer, preferring to hand write his reports and dictate them down the phone to newspaper copytakers. When they were phased out, he was forced to buy a laptop and had to be given several lessons in how to send an email.

Clive made no secret of his disappointment at being phased out of the BBC commentary team but continued on Sky Sports in their coverage of the Premier League and headed the ITV team when they returned to the snooker fold in 2013. He remained there until the Covid pandemic of 2020, when his age meant his was unable to travel to events with their strict protocols.

He was by now in his 80s and diagnosed with Parkinson’s, a condition which took a physical toll and left him unable to write by hand. It forced him to relinquish the editorship of Snooker Scene in 2022 after 51 years at the helm, something he struggled to accept.

However, his interest in the sport did not diminish. He still contributed articles to the magazine and watched tournaments from home, as fascinated by snooker as he was as a youth.

Proudly anti-establishment, his achievements were nevertheless in time recognised by those in authority. He was inducted into the WST Hall of Fame in 2017 and in 2019 was awarded an MBE for his services to the sport. In 2022, The British Open trophy was named in his honour.

These were fitting accolades for someone who had contributed so much to snooker’s own success story. He was respected by colleagues in the media, players and snooker fans as an authoritative figure and huge source of anecdotes spanning the sport’s long history. He had known every world champion since the first, Joe Davis, and his work was a celebration of their collective efforts.

Clive Everton devoted his life to snooker and billiards and was perhaps the greatest friend these sports have ever had. 

We have lost something special with his passing but have gained so much more from his many decades of loyal service.

Thank you David for this great piece.

This news saddens me deeply. I had the privilege to meet Clive on many occasions during the six years I was taking pictures on the main tour. He was a giant of a man, physically, spiritually and journalistically.

Farewell Clive … I hope they have a nice billiard table and a working typewriter up there … snooker will miss you, I will miss you. 💔

The 2024 British Open – Day 4

We have now reached the quater-finals stage at the 2024 British Open. The matches will become longer, best of 9, and only two tables will be in operation. Hopefully this will lead to a more reasonable schedule because, let’s be honest, it’s been a shambles so far this week. Some players had to play two matches yesterday, and the last match only finished in the not so small hours this morning.

Here are the reports by WST

Afternoon session

Thepchaiya Un-Nooh produced arguably the best performance of the week so far at the Unibet British Open as he made a century and five more breaks over 50 during a 4-3 win over Ricky Walden to reach the last 16. 

Un-Nooh will meet Mark Selby in a intriguing match-up in Cheltenham on Thursday night, and victory would give the Thai a first ranking event quarter-final since 2022.

In the opening frame, Un-Nooh was on course for a 147 until he missed the 13th red on 96. In the next two, he made breaks of 52 and 57, only for his opponent to snatch them both on the colours. Walden then made a 61 to lead 3-1, before Un-Nooh hit back with 93, 88 and 115 in the last three frames.

I’m very happy, especially with the break I made in the last frame,” said the Thai. “I wasn’t thinking about the match, I just focussed on the balls, one at a time.” 

Judd Trump made it 21 wins from 23 matches so far this season with a 4-2 defeat of Mark Davis. World number one Trump remains stuck on 999 career centuries as his top break today was 73, but he’ll have another chance tonight against Stephen Maguire.

Oliver Lines edged out Sunny Akani 4-3 to set up a Yorkshire derby against Stan Moody. Lines, who has now won three consecutive matches 4-3, is hoping to reach his third ranking quarter-final. 

I thought I had blown my chance today because I was 3-1 up but then missed chances and he got back to 3-3,” said Lines. “I had some luck in the last frame, it’s nice when it goes your way. I played a couple of bad shots at 3-1 and then lost all confidence. I know Stan really well, we were based at the same club for a long time. I don’t really like playing friends but we’ll both be trying as hard as we can.”

John Higgins battled to a 4-2 win in an all-Scottish clash with Graeme Dott which lasted three hours and 20 minutes. Higgins now meets giant-killer Rory Thor, who has already knocked out Mark Williams and Neil Robertson.

Luca Brecel made another step towards a return to form as he saw off Liam Davies 4-1, while World Champion Kyren Wilson fired breaks of 80 and 95 in a 4-0 win over Marco Fu.

Evening session

Jak Jones hopes to build on his amazing Crucible run by capturing his first title, and he’s just three wins away having beaten Luca Brecel 4-2 to reach the quarter-finals of the Unibet British Open.

Jones stepped into the limelight with a tremendous performance at the World Championship five months ago, finishing runner-up to Kyren Wilson. With added expectation on his shoulders this season, he has started strongly, reaching the last 16 at the Xi’an Grand Prix and now going one step further this week in Cheltenham. Breaks of 128 and 77 helped him to an impressive win over 2023 Crucible king Brecel.

It’s a big win to beat Luca,” said Jones, who will meet Oliver Lines in the last eight on Friday. “Getting to the final in Sheffield gave me a lot of confidence and extra belief in myself. There has been more pressure as well, but that’s part of the game. My season has been good so far, apart from losing in the first round in Saudi against Jack Lisowski as that was such a big event, but he’s a great player and it was a tough draw. I feel I’m making up for that this week.

I’m definitely a better player than I was a year ago. I’m not sure why, I think it’s just the belief that no matter how I am feeling I can still beat anyone. Before I thought I could only beat the top players if I felt amazing on the day, but it’s not really like that. My main goal now is to win my first title.”

Lines reached the third ranking event quarter-final of his career with a 4-1 win over fellow Yorkshireman Stan Moody. Lines, who top scored with 60 and 70, will have the chance to reach his first semi-final.

Judd Trump remains on course for a third title of the season, having already landed the Shanghai Masters and Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters. Runs of 69 and 78 helped him to a 4-2 success against Stephen Maguire. He will now meet Mark Allen, who beat Chris Wakelin 4-3, potting blue and pink to win the decider at 1.30am.

John Higgins, targeting a first ranking title since the 2021 Players Championship, ended the run of Rory Thor, who had knocked out Mark Williams and Neil Robertson. Breaks of 67 and 55 helped Higgins to a 4-0 success. “I will have to play better because there are some great players left in it. I would just love to win another tournament,” he said.

The Scot’s next opponent is Elliot Slessor, who scored an excellent 4-2 win over World Champion Kyren Wilson with a top break of 128.

Mark Selby enjoyed a 4-3 victory over Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, compiling breaks of 110 and 115. He’ll now meet David Gilbert, who edged out Lyu Haotian 4-3, taking the last two frames with breaks of 70 and 65.

All the detailed results are on snooker.org, as always

The omission of Mark Allen’s afternoon match is bizarre because something special happened … the reason is likely the very late start of that match. It probably was still underway when WST wrote the afternoon report. But then WST had to make a separate piece to report on it:

Mark Allen made the fourth 147 break of his career during his third round match with Ben Mertens at the Unibet British Open on Thursday.

Allen’s perfect break came in the second frame and put him 2-0 ahead. The key moment of the maximum came after nine reds and blacks, as he ran out of position but then played a clever double to a centre pocket on the tenth red, allowing him to go on and complete the 147. He will earn the £5,000 high break prize in Cheltenham if the break is not equalled this week.

The Northern Irishman becomes the 16th player to make four (or more) 147s and it’s his second maximum of 2024 as he made one in the Masters in January. It’s the 205th 147 in snooker history and third of the season. 

To make a 147 with a good crowd in that arena is very special,” said Allen. “On 72, I thought about playing safe but I was willing to take the risk of going for it, because the balls were all there. The buzz of a 147 is very different to winning a tournament. Obviously winning a title is more important, but on a maximum the adrenaline builds up all the way through.

It’s bizarre that WST didn’t include the video in their report, because they shared it on their YouTube channel:

For some reason I really don’t like this event. I don’t feel like the random draw adds anything to it and the schedule is seriously bad.

The 2024 British Open – Day 3

Here are the reports by WST on yesterday’s action at the 2024 British Open

Afternoon session

UNIBET BRITISH OPEN DAY THREE

John Higgins, determined to regain his place among the world’s top 16, scored one of his best wins of recent years as he beat Shaun Murphy 4-2 in the second round of the Unibet British Open. 

After an unbroken sequence of 29 years among the top 16, an all-time record, Higgins dropped out last weekend, overtaken by English Open champion Neil Robertson. But the legendary Scot has no intention of slipping further down, and his ambition over the upcoming events is to make sure of a place at the Masters in January.

The 49-year-old took a 3-0 lead today with top breaks of 74 and 56. Murphy pulled two back with 57 and 84, before Higgins wrapped up the result in frame six with an 82.

It’s a massive scalp for me,” said Higgins, who now meets close friend Graeme Dott in the last 32 at 1pm on Thursday. “The last couple of times against Shaun, he has outplayed me. It’s important for me to beat one of the top guys, and I’m pleased with the way I closed the match out. My new cue seems to have given me a new lease of life.

The players in the top 16 deserve to be in there because they are winning tournaments, and I have not done that. It gives me something to aim for, to get back in there in time for the Masters. I’ve played there for 30 consecutive years and I wouldn’t want that run to end.

World Champion Kyren Wilson saw off Ben Woollaston 4-1 with top breaks of 114 and 92. “It was a mixed bag, I scored heavily at times but also missed a few easy balls,” said Wilson. “Winning a title early in the season (the Xi’an Grand Prix) has taken pressure off me but I want to win more. I’m not at my best, I haven’t put in as much preparation as usual because I’m trying to balance family life with practice. But I still feel I can compete for the trophy.” 

Zhang Anda enjoyed a 4-1 success against Hossein Vafaei, while Oliver Lines made a crucial 23 in the deciding frame to beat Ka Wai Cheung 4-3. Ben Mertens top scored with 85 in a 4-1 win over Hammad Miah.

Evening session

UNIBET BRITISH OPEN DAY THREE EVENING

Stan Moody reached the last 16 of a ranking event for the second time in his career with a superb 4-3 victory over world number 12 Zhang Anda in round three of the Unibet British Open.

Teenage talent Moody, playing his second season on the tour, will reach his first quarter-final if he can beat Oliver Lines or Sunny Akani in Cheltenham on Thursday evening. 

Yorkshire’s 18-year-old Moody turned pro last year with high expectations after an outstanding junior career, and has shown his potential in patches. Tonight’s performance in Zhang was perhaps his best so far as he made breaks of 69, 55, 68, 60 and a crucial 47 in the decider.

It’s my best win on tour,” said Moody. “My all round game is getting better, I am working on my safety game. My debut season was very difficult, but this season I have changed a lot of things both on and off the table and hopefully I’ll get the results. I’ll just play the balls tomorrow and have some fun.

English Open champion Neil Robertson suffered a surprise 4-3 reverse against Rory Thor. From 3-1 down, Malaysia’s Thor took the next two frames with a top break of 90, then got the better of a scrappy decider. 

Mark Selby pulled out a 41 clearance in the deciding frame to beat Yuan Sijun 4-3 on the final black, while Crucible finalist Jak Jones top scored with 109 in a 4-1 win over Iulian Boiko. David Gilbert came from 3-1 down to beat Ashley Carty 4-3, while Stephen Maguire edged out Stuart Bingham by the same scoreline.

As always, all the results are on snooker.org

I haven’t much to add really. I don’t like this event for a number of reasons. Never did. The schedule is very difficult for me. The last “yesterday” match actually finished today past 3 am in my time zone. Needless to say … I didn’t watch it. In fact, I didn’t watch any of the “evening session”. The ITV coverage might be excellent but it’s not available to me. I watch on discovery+ and I am grateful to, at least, have that option, but it’s not the same thing.

In the afternoon, I watched Sunny Akani vs Antoni Kowalski and Ben Mertens v Hammad Miah. Sunny won all the “closer” frames, which is to be expected. Younger players are often excellent potters but they still have to learn how to win the more tactical frames. Ben Mertens outplayed Hammad Miah in all departments for most of the match. I was happy with the outcome of both matches. I like Sunny, who I met in person several times, as a person and as a player.

I find nothing “exciting” about the random draw in each round. The draw isn’t even made in public, and can’t be watched online either. It’s just WST coming up at some point with the “next round draw” on their website.