2021 Champion of Champions

Snooker tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2021 Champion of Champions (officially the 2021 Cazoo Champion of Champions)[1] was a professional snooker tournament that took place between 15 and 21 November 2021 at the University of Bolton Stadium in Bolton, England.[2] It was the 11th Champion of Champions event, the first of which was held in 1978. The tournament featured 16 participants, primarily winners of significant tournaments since the previous year's event. As an invitational tournament, it carried no world ranking points.[3]

Dates15–21 November 2021 (2021-11-15 2021-11-21)
CityBolton
CountryEngland
Quick facts Tournament information, Dates ...
2021 Cazoo Champion of Champions
Tournament information
Dates15–21 November 2021 (2021-11-15 2021-11-21)
VenueUniversity of Bolton Stadium
CityBolton
CountryEngland
OrganisationMatchroom Sport
FormatNon-ranking event
Total prize fund£440,000
Winner's share£150,000
Highest break Yan Bingtao (CHN) (140)
Final
Champion Judd Trump (ENG)
Runner-up John Higgins (SCO)
Score10–4
2020
2022
Close

Mark Allen was the defending champion, but he withdrew from the event for personal reasons.[4] His place was awarded to Ding Junhui, the next eligible player on the world ranking list.[5]

Judd Trump faced John Higgins in the final. Although Higgins took a 3–0 lead, Trump won ten of the next 11 frames to secure a 10–4 victory and his first Champion of Champions title with its prize of £100,000.[6] Trump lost just five frames across the four matches he played in the tournament.[7]

Format

Prize fund

  • Winner: £150,000
  • Runner-up: £60,000
  • Semi-final: £30,000
  • Group runner-up: £17,500
  • First round loser: £12,500
  • Total: £440,000[8]

Qualification

Qualification for the event was made through winning events from the previous year. Events shown below in grey are for players who had already qualified for the event. The 2021 World Snooker Championship runner-up Shaun Murphy was awarded a position in the event as well as remaining players being made up by the highest ranked players in the world rankings. Mark Allen, who had qualified as defending champion, withdrew prior to the event during the 2021 English Open.[9][10]

More information Tournament, Date of tournament final ...
Qualification table
TournamentDate of tournament finalWinner
2020 Champion of Champions8 November 2020 Mark Allen (NIR)
2020 UK Championship6 December 2020 Neil Robertson (AUS)
2021 Masters17 January 2021 Yan Bingtao (CHN)
2021 World Championship3 May 2021 Mark Selby (ENG)
2020 World Grand Prix (2020–21 season)20 December 2020 Judd Trump (ENG)
2021 German Masters31 January 2021 Judd Trump (ENG)
2021 Players Championship28 February 2021 John Higgins (SCO)
2021 WST Pro Series21 March 2021 Mark Williams (WAL)
2021 Championship League Invitational2 April 2021 Kyren Wilson (ENG)
2021 Tour Championship28 March 2021 Neil Robertson (AUS)
2021 Championship League (2021–22 season)13 August 2021 David Gilbert (ENG)
2021 British Open22 August 2021 Mark Williams (WAL)
2020 Northern Ireland Open22 November 2020 Judd Trump (ENG)
2020 Scottish Open13 December 2020 Mark Selby (ENG)
2021 Welsh Open21 February 2021 Jordan Brown (NIR)
2021 Northern Ireland Open17 October 2021 Mark Allen (NIR)
2021 English Open7 November 2021 Neil Robertson (AUS)
2021 World Championship (runner-up)3 May 2021 Shaun Murphy (ENG)
2021 Gibraltar Open7 March 2021 Judd Trump (ENG)
2021 Shoot Out7 February 2021 Ryan Day (WAL)
2021 World Seniors Championship9 May 2021 David Lilley (ENG)
Qualified through the world rankings22 August 2021 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
17 October 2021 Stephen Maguire (SCO)
17 October 2021 Ding Junhui (CHN)
7 November 2021 Stuart Bingham (ENG)
Close
Player also qualified by winning another tournament

Tournament draw

Group semi-finals (last 16)
Best of 7 frames
Group finals (quarter-finals)
Best of 11 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
Final
Best of 19 frames
            
 Judd Trump (ENG) (1) 4
 David Lilley (ENG) 1
England Judd Trump (1) 6
Group 1 (15 November)
Wales Ryan Day 0
 Ryan Day (WAL) 4
 Stephen Maguire (SCO) (8) 2
England Judd Trump (1) 6
England Kyren Wilson (5) 0
 Kyren Wilson (ENG) (5) 4
 Jordan Brown (NIR) 2
England Kyren Wilson (5) 6
Group 4 (16 November)
Australia Neil Robertson (4) 4
 Mark Williams (WAL) 2
 Neil Robertson (AUS) (4) 4
England Judd Trump (1) 10
Scotland John Higgins (6) 4
 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG) (3) 4
 Stuart Bingham (ENG) 2
England Ronnie O'Sullivan (3) 1
Group 3 (18 November)
Scotland John Higgins (6) 6
 Ding Junhui (CHN) 3
 John Higgins (SCO) (6) 4
Scotland John Higgins (6) 6
China Yan Bingtao 5
 Shaun Murphy (ENG) (7) 1
 Yan Bingtao (CHN) 4
China Yan Bingtao 6
Group 2 (17 November)
England Mark Selby (2) 3
 David Gilbert (ENG) 3
 Mark Selby (ENG) (2) 4

Final

Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Paul Collier
Bolton Whites Hotel, Bolton, England, 21 November 2021
Judd Trump (1)
 England
10–4 John Higgins (6)
 Scotland
Afternoon: 0–100 (73), 0–86, 43–75, 76–0 (63), 100–32 (62), 61–1 (61), 74–6, 66–0, 0–70 (70)
Evening: 74–9 (74), 71–24, 85–47 (51), 117–0 (68), 73–23 (59)
74 Highest break 70
0 Century breaks 0
7 50+ breaks 2

Century breaks

A total of 12 century breaks were made during the tournament.[11]

References

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