English Open (snooker)

Snooker tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The English Open is a professional ranking snooker tournament held in Brentwood, as part of the four-event Home Nations Series. The winner is awarded the Steve Davis Trophy, named in honour of the English six-time world champion.[1] The reigning champion is Mark Allen from Northern Ireland.

VenueBrentwood Centre
LocationBrentwood
CountryEngland
Established2016
Quick facts Tournament information, Venue ...
English Open
Tournament information
VenueBrentwood Centre
LocationBrentwood
CountryEngland
Established2016
Organisation(s)World Snooker Tour
FormatRanking event
Total prize fund£550,400
Winner's share£100,000
Recent edition2025
Current champion Mark Allen (NIR)
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History

On 29 April 2015, World Snooker chairman Barry Hearn announced that a new event called the "English Open" would be held for the first time in 2016 in Manchester, England, as part of a new Home Nations Series, with the existing Welsh Open and Scottish Open and the new Northern Ireland Open tournaments.[2][3] The inaugural event took place between 10 and 16 October 2016,[4] and was won by Liang Wenbo.[5]

After relocations to Barnsley, Crawley and Milton Keynes, the tournament was subsequently played at the Brentwood Centre in Brentwood, Essex since 2022; Steve Dawson, the chairman of WST, has claimed Essex to be the "root" of the game,[6] hence the choice of the venue. It also coincides with the birthplace of Hearn's Matchroom Sport, the main promoter of snooker, founded in Brentwood back in 1982.

A separate qualification event for the tournament was removed from the 2024 event, and all matches from round one is now staged at the main venue.

Winners

More information Year, Winner ...
Year Winner Runner-up Final score Venue City Season
2016[7]  Liang Wenbo (CHN)  Judd Trump (ENG) 9–6 EventCity Manchester, England 2016/17
2017[8]  Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)  Kyren Wilson (ENG) 9–2 Barnsley Metrodome Barnsley, England 2017/18
2018[9]  Stuart Bingham (ENG)  Mark Davis (ENG) 9–7 K2 Crawley, England 2018/19
2019[10]  Mark Selby (ENG)  David Gilbert (ENG) 9–1 2019/20
2020[11]  Judd Trump (ENG)  Neil Robertson (AUS) 9–8 Marshall Arena Milton Keynes, England 2020/21
2021[12]  Neil Robertson (AUS)  John Higgins (SCO) 9–8 2021/22
2022[13]  Mark Selby (ENG)  Luca Brecel (BEL) 9–6 Brentwood Centre Brentwood, England 2022/23
2023[14]  Judd Trump (ENG)  Zhang Anda (CHN) 9–7 2023/24
2024[15]  Neil Robertson (AUS)  Wu Yize (CHN) 9–7 2024/25
2025  Mark Allen (NIR)  Zhou Yuelong (CHN) 9–8 2025/26
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Finalists

More information Name, Nationality ...
Name Nationality Winner Runner-up Finals
Judd Trump  England 2 1 3
Neil Robertson  Australia 2 1 3
Mark Selby  England 2 0 2
Liang Wenbo  China 1 0 1
Ronnie O'Sullivan  England 1 0 1
Stuart Bingham  England 1 0 1
Mark Allen  Northern Ireland 1 0 1
Kyren Wilson  England 0 1 1
Mark Davis  England 0 1 1
David Gilbert  England 0 1 1
John Higgins  Scotland 0 1 1
Luca Brecel  Belgium 0 1 1
Zhang Anda  China 0 1 1
Wu Yize  China 0 1 1
Zhou Yuelong  China 0 1 1
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More information Legend ...
Legend
The names of active players are marked in bold.
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References

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