Tenball

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Dates8 April – 20 May 1995 (1995-04-08 1995-05-20)
CityLondon
Tenball
Tournament information
Dates8 April – 20 May 1995 (1995-04-08 1995-05-20)
VenueMethodist Church Hall[1]
CityLondon
CountryUnited Kingdom
OrganisationITV, LWT
Winner's share£20,000
Final
ChampionEngland Jimmy White
Runner-upEngland Ronnie O'Sullivan
Score3–1

Tenball was a cue sports tournament that was staged only once, in 1995. It was a hybrid of snooker and pool rules and gameplay, played on a snooker table with snooker balls. An ITV/LWT TV series Tenball, hosted by Phillip Schofield, ran for one 1995 series, forming an eight-man tournament, ultimately won by Jimmy White.

ColourValue
Red1 point
Green3 points
Brown4 points
Blue5 points
Pink6 points
Black7 points
Black-and-yellow10 points
Tenball table
The setup at the beginning of the game, with the Tenball at the middle of the red balls in diamond rack
In front, the Tenball has a big yellow circle at the middle of the black cross with the number 10 written in white; in behind there is only the number 10 written in white on the black cross.

The game and the ITV/LWT TV series Tenball focused on a tournament that was created in 1995 by a team consisting of managers Russ Lindsay and Peter Powell, snooker player Steve Davis who devised the rules and entrepreneur Barry Hearn who was asked to do the promotion for the event to add razzmatazz to the show. The series was hosted by Phillip Schofield and its set was designed by Andy Walmsley.[2] The sole season, in 1995, saw Jimmy White win the tournament, while Peter Ebdon achieved the highest break of 122 [3] (out of a possible 200).[4][3]

The hybrid snooker/pool game played on the show featured a pack (rack) of 16 object balls in a diamond configuration, 15 reds worth 1 each and a black-and-yellow 10 ball, as well as various colour balls with differing point values, on specific spots.[5] The pack is not racked at the top of the table behind the pink spot as it would be in snooker, but, unlike in any other form of pool, racked in the middle of the table on the centre spot.[3]

Games competed over for ITV's Tenball series featured best of five frame matches. However, unlike in regular snooker, the first potted colour in a break associated the score for every colour potted in that break thereafter, rather than the score of the colour that the ball that was potted.[3][4] The series also promoted ball in hand similar to pool if a foul was played, or could receive ten points for each foul shot. Three consecutive fouls from a player would cause them to lose the frame.[4][1]

Prize money

Results

References

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