The 2026 Welsh Open – Day 5 – QFs

Yesterday was “quarter-finals day ” in Llandudno, and it yielded and interesting semi-finals line-up:

  • Wu Yixe v Barry Hawkins in the afternoon
  • John Higgins v Jack Lisowski in the evening

Both matches feature opponents with contrasting styles. Wu and Jack are attacking players who like an open game. On form they are deadly potters. Barry and John are more all-rounders , both with a very strong tactical nous and loads of experience. It should be interesting.

I hope that both matches will be close and I would love a Wu Yize v Jack Lisowski final although I’m far for optimistic about getting that “outcome”. Both John Higgins and Barry Hawkins are very hard to beat when they get to this stage of tournaments.

Here are the reports shared by WST:

Afternoon session

Lisowski On Brink Of Giant Bonus

Jack Lisowski is just one win away from earning a massive £150,000 bonus as he beat Stuart Bingham 5-2 to reach the semi-finals of the BetVictor Welsh Open.   

This is the fourth and final event in the 2025/26 BetVictor Home Nations Series, and the leading money winner across the series earns the huge bonus. Mark Allen started this week in pole position but lost to David Grace in the first round, which has opened the door to those giving chase.

Lisowski, who won his first ranking title at the BetVictor Northern Ireland Open in October, will meet Zhou Yuelong or John Higgins on Saturday in Llandudno for a place in the final. If 34-year-old Lisowski wins that match he is certain of the bonus, while Zhou also has a chance but must win the tournament. Otherwise, the windfall will go to Allen. 

Breaks of 70 and 118 gave Lisowski a 4-0 lead today, and he eventually got over the line in frame seven after Bingham had pulled two back.

I knew I just had to concentrate on the match today, keep the bonus out of my mind and get on with it,” said world number 22 Lisowski after reaching his 14th ranking semi-final. “At 4-0 I was waiting for Stuart to come back at me, then once it got to 4-2 I really didn’t want it to go 4-3, so I was glad to get over the line and live to fight another day.

A couple of weeks ago my cueing was bad, my arm wasn’t going straight through the ball. I have changed my tip to a softer one and I have played a lot of snooker in the last week. Hopefully things can click now. I had been losing a lot of matches recently so I needed to steady the ship. I didn’t have enough intensity in practice, I was still trying my best in matches but I just felt a bit out of sorts. I have put myself back on the right path this week. Having won in Belfast I can see the winning line, I know what comes with it and I am desperate to win another one.

Barry Hawkins reached his first semi-final of the season as he beat a former World Champion for a second consecutive day, seeing off Neil Robertson 5-3. 

Hawkins followed up yesterday’s victory over Mark Williams with another huge scalp to reach his 35th ranking event semi-final. The world number 14 made only one break over 40 today but won several scrappy frames as he remained in the hunt for a fifth ranking title and first since the 2023 European Masters. Hawkins will face Jiang Jun or Wu Yize over 11 frames on Saturday with the chance to reach a 13th ranking final.  

Robertson was on 53 in the opening frame when he missed an awkward pot on the last red to a centre pocket, allowing Hawkins to slot in the red and clear for 1-0. A run of 102 from Robertson levelled the tie, then Hawkins got the better of a safety tussle on the final brown in frame three and regained the lead. The Englishman added a scrappy fourth to lead 3-1 at the interval despite a highest break of just 28.

Breaks of 61 and 132 got Robertson back to 3-3. Frame seven came down to the colours and Hawkins, leading 52-30, cross-doubled the green into a centre pocket which proved enough to edge him ahead. And after laying a tough snooker behind the green early in the eighth, Hawkins earned a match winning chance and seized it with a run of 93.

I don’t know how I am still standing here,” admitted 46-year-old Hawkins, who almost pulled out of the event at the start of the week with back pain but ironically was talked into playing on by Robertson. “I battled hard all the way through. My scoring wasn’t there, though I potted some good balls towards the end of the frames and played some good safety

I was over the moon to be 3-1 up at the interval. Neil was the better player, I just managed to nick some close frames and then finishing from 4-3 in one visit gives me a bit of a boost. It’s great to be at a tournament going into the weekend and to have given myself a chance. I had no expectation at the start of the week but now there are only four players left and I need to up my game again.” 

Robertson said: “There were a few pieces of luck which went against me, otherwise I could have won 5-1 or 5-2.  But I can take a lot of positives from this tournament, I have found a brand of tip which is the best I have had in at least ten years. That gives me a lot of confidence particularly looking ahead to the World Championship.

Evening session

Wu Fights Back To Beat Jiang And Reach Semis

Wu Yize came from 4-1 down to beat Jiang Jun 5-4 to reach the semi-finals of the BetVictor Welsh Open, boosting his hopes of another title in his breakthrough season.

Jiang had looked set to reach the last four of a ranking event for the first time but missed several chances in the last four frames and Wu took advantage. China’s 22-year-old Wu will meet Barry Hawkins at 1pm on Saturday, with the winner to face Jack Lisowski or John Higgins in Sunday’s final in Llandudno. 

In recent months, Wu has made giant strides forward in his career, beating Higgins in the final of the International Championship in November, reaching the semi-finals of the Masters last month and he is now set to jump into the world’s top ten for the first time. The popular young potter with a fluent attacking style is into a sixth ranking semi-final.

Breaks of 68, 64 and 55 helped put Jiang 4-1 ahead before Wu made a 71 to pull one back then got the better of a scrappy seventh frame. In the eighth, Jiang was on 43 when he missed a red to a top corner and Wu punished him with 89 for 4-4. Again in the decider Jiang had first clear chance, but on 37 he overcut a tricky black to a top corner, playing with the rest. And once again he could only watch as Wu remained calm in a winning 65.

In the first half I wasn’t very focused and made some mistakes,” said Wu, who comes from Lanzhou in North West China. “My opponent played well in that session. Those four frames felt like I had played ten frames – I really had no rhythm at all. During the interval I practised a bit and managed to find some of my form again in the second half, and that helped me finish the match. As for Jiang, I’m not sure whether it was his habit or maybe pressure. I can’t really understand it from his side, but I hope he will keep improving in the future.

This season I’ve now reached two ranking semi-finals. Last time I went on to win the title, and on that run I also beat Barry Hawkins (6-0 in the quarter-finals). I hope this time I can focus on myself again and try to make another breakthrough. Some of the matches I lost this season were due to carelessness and sometimes it’s hard to summarise clearly. You can only learn through experience, and when you face a similar situation next time, you try to make a better decision. I’ve made big progress this year, experienced the later stages of tournaments a few times now and learned a lot of lessons from before. I hope I can do better this time.

Higgins moved a step closer to a first title of the season as he thrashed Zhou Yuelong 5-0. The Scot took three scrappy frames before winning the last two with breaks of 75 and 67. 

World number six Higgins has already won this title a record five times and is now just two wins away from another Ray Reardon Trophy. Runner-up in the Masters and the Players Championship within the past six weeks, the 50-year-old has another chance to take Mark Williams’ record as the oldest ever ranking event winner. Higgins is into his 92nd ranking event semi-final and is targeting a 34th title.

The result ends Zhou’s hopes of winning the £150,000 BetVictor Home Nations Series bonus as he had to go all the way to the title this week. However Higgins’ next opponent, Lisowski, will land that windfall if he comes out on top on Saturday evening. 

Asked about that subplot by TNT Sports, Higgins said: “It will be Jack’s biggest money match he has ever played. But I think he could be totally fine, it might give him that spark just go out there and go for it. Like Rob Milkins a few years ago, he played amazingly to beat Shaun Murphy in the final, when the bonus was in the background.” 

….

12 thoughts on “The 2026 Welsh Open – Day 5 – QFs

    • Barry leapfrogs Ronnie into 12th place in the Provisional Rankings. Is that what you wanted , Csilla? 🙂

      • Nope, I don’t care. I love Barry, he is a lovely guy and I wish he had won more. Really I don’t have the slightest interest in Ronnie’s ranking and neither does he apparently. He could have played a lot of important tournaments, but apparently he prefers fooling around with the seniors, so it is very difficult to maintain an interest in his snooker playing and in any case what would be the point?

      • Aww, Csilla, reconsider. He was always somewhat picking and choosing during his career. I think he still has an eye on staying just in the top 16.
        If he is in Sheffield for the exhibition during the qualifiers, it looks like he would play in them if needed.

      • Oh, excuse me, the exhibition takes place in Ireland. But still not far away from Sheffield.

      • LOL I don’t think I need to worry about Ronnie’s ranking if he doesn’t. Yes, he was always picking and choosing, but the last two years were different with entering, even posting messages how he was primed to play (HK last year), then pulling out in the last minute. Same this year. It’s fine, although I do find it disappointing that he didn’t play important tournaments, but wants to fool around at the seniors. And I don’t think he would stand a chance at the worlds, maybe not even in the qualies. Yes, I would have preferred a nicer ending to his carer, but this is what it is and one just has to let go.

  1. What was the seeding procedure at the Crucible? Number one seed plays potentially which seed in Round 2?

Comments are closed.