Malta Cup

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Malta Cup
250px
Tournament information
Venue Hilton Conference Centre
Location Portomaso
Country Malta
Established 1989
Organisation(s) World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association
Format Non-ranking event
Total prize fund £76,000
Final year 2008
Final champion(s) England Shaun Murphy

The Malta Cup was a professional snooker tournament that was on the World Snooker calendar betweeb the 1988/1989 and 2007/2008 seasons. It was previously known as the European Open (which had been held several times in Malta) and was the sole ranking tournament in Europe outside the British Isles.

History

Prior to the 1988/89 season, there were no ranking events outside the United Kingdom. There were, however, many successful invitation events, so the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association decided to extend the tour with some overseas events. The first two were held in Canada and Europe. The first European event was the European Open in 1988 in Deauville, France with the sponsorship of ICI. The event then was held at the Palais des Sports in Lyon, France for 1992 and at the Imax Centre in Rotterdam, Netherlands with the sponsorship of Tulip.[1]

The event was then moved to Belgium. It was held in Tongeren in 1992 and Antwerp between 1993–1994 with sponsorship from Humo. The event was moved to the first half of the season in 1993/1994, thus there were two events in 1993, in February and December. The event was moved back to its original place in the calendar in 1995/1996 and took place in Valletta, Malta between 1996–1997. The event wasn't held in the following season.[1] In 1998/1999 it was briefly revived for just one season as the Irish Open. The following season the Malta Grand Prix was the only continental European ranking event and in 2000/2001 there weren't any at all for the first time in 13 seasons.[1]

The European Open was revived in 2001/2002 and was held in Valletta, Malta. In 2003 the event was for the first and only time held in England (Torquay). The following year it returned to Malta, this time held in Portomaso. The following season event was renamed the Malta Cup.[1] The 2006 event was the first ranking tournament, where no English player reached the quarter-finals. It became an invitation event in 2007/2008, but it was discontinued afterwards.[2]

There was only one maximum break in the history of the tournament. At the 1989 event Alain Robidoux compiled it in the first qualifying round against Jim Meadowcroft.[1][3]

Winners

Year Winner Runner-up Final score Season
European Open (ranking)[1][4]
1989 England John Parrott Wales Terry Griffiths 9–8 1988/89
1990 England John Parrott Scotland Stephen Hendry 10–6 1989/90
1991 England Tony Jones England Mark Johnston-Allen 9–7 1990/91
1992 England Jimmy White England Mark Johnston-Allen 9–3 1991/92
1993 England Steve Davis Scotland Stephen Hendry 10–4 1992/93
1993 Scotland Stephen Hendry England Ronnie O'Sullivan 9–5 1993/94
1994 Scotland Stephen Hendry England John Parrott 9–3 1994/95
1996 England John Parrott England Peter Ebdon 9–7 1995/96
1997 Scotland John Higgins England John Parrott 9–5 1996/97
Irish Open (ranking)[1]
1998 Wales Mark Williams Scotland Alan McManus 9–4 1998/99
European Open (ranking)[1][4]
2001 Scotland Stephen Hendry England Joe Perry 9–2 2001/02
2003 England Ronnie O'Sullivan Scotland Stephen Hendry 9–6 2002/03
2004 Scotland Stephen Maguire England Jimmy White 9–3 2003/04
Malta Cup (ranking)[2][5]
2005 Scotland Stephen Hendry Scotland Graeme Dott 9–7 2004/05
2006 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty Scotland John Higgins 9–8 2005/06
2007 England Shaun Murphy Wales Ryan Day 9–4 2006/07
Malta Cup (non-ranking)[2][5]
2008 England Shaun Murphy Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty 9–3 2007/08

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.