Ronnie O'Sullivan vs Anthony McGill | HD | QF | 2014 UK Snooker Championship
Ronnie O'Sullivan vs
Anthony McGill | HD | QF | 2014
UK Snooker Championship
History
The UK Championship was first held in
1977 in
Tower Circus,
Blackpool as the
United Kingdom Professional Snooker Championship, an event open only to
British residents and passport holders.
Patsy Fagan won the inaugural tournament by defeating
Doug Mountjoy by 12 frames to 9 in the final and won the first prize of £
2000.
The following year the event moved to the
Guild Hall,
Preston, where it remained until
1998.[3]
The rules were changed in
1984 when the tournament was granted ranking status and all professionals were allowed to enter. Since then, it has carried more ranking points than any tournament other than the
World Championship.[3]
The tournament has seen many memorable finals. In 1977 and
1979, it provided Patsy Fagan and
John Virgo with their first and only major tournament wins respectively. In
1980, it was
Steve Davis's first of his 73 professional tournament wins. In
1981, the final between
Davis and
Terry Griffiths set the stage for four more final battles between Davis and Griffiths that were to dominate the rest of the season before their unexpected losses in the first round of the
1982 World Championship.
In
1983,
Alex Higgins beat Davis 16–15 after having trailed 7–0 at the end of the first session. In
1985,
Willie Thorne, then on the brink of emerging as a major force to be reckoned with in the game, led Davis 13–10 at the start of the evening session, only to miss a simple blue off its spot and lose 16–14. The victory regenerated Davis's confidence after his devastating World Championship loss;
Thorne, on the other hand, never won another ranking title.
In
1988, Doug Mountjoy, widely viewed as just making up the numbers against the rising
Stephen Hendry, produced a stunning display of character and ability to win 16–12 and become the second-oldest ever winner of a ranking event; even more astonishingly, he was to win the
Mercantile Credit Classic the following month, which at the time made Mountjoy only the fourth player to win two ranking tournaments in a row.
Stephen Hendry's
1989 win prefigured his decade of dominance similar to the one prefigured by Davis's win in 1980; its significance was emphasised by the fact that the losing finalist was Davis himself. Hendry's 16–15 win the following year, over Davis again, spoke to his unique qualities of nerve. The Hendry/
Ken Doherty final of
1994 is considered by many players as one of Hendry's best performance, as he won 10–5 making 7 century breaks along the way, six of which were in the span of eight frames played. Doherty has appeared in two more memorable finals.
In
1993, Ronnie O'Sullivan became the youngest-ever winner of the tournament (and any ranking tournament) aged just 17. Eight years later, in
2001, he delivered the final's best winning margin since it had become the best of 19 frames in the 1993 tournament, beating Ken Doherty
10–1. Three years later, in 2004,
Stephen Maguire repeated the feat against
David Gray. Doherty almost won the tournament in the
2002 final against
Mark Williams, but lost 9–10 in a dramatic deciding frame.
The UK Championship trophy on display at the
Alexandra Palace during the
2014 Masters
The 2005 tournament saw Davis, aged 48, reached his first ranking tournament final for almost two years and make his highest break in tournament play for 23 years. In a match that featured the widest age gap between finalists in professional tournament history, he lost 6–10 to the 18 year-old
Ding Junhui. The following year,
Peter Ebdon won the title and, in doing so, became the first and only man to have both won and lost a
World and a
UK Championship final to Stephen Hendry. The event offered £
500,
000 prize money, with the winner receiving £70,000.
In
2007, the tournament was won by Ronnie O'Sullivan for the fourth time, again with some ease, as he beat Stephen Maguire
10–2 in the final. The tournament was also notable for the longest televised frame (77 minutes) between
Marco Fu and
Mark Selby and Ronnie O'Sullivan's maximum
147 break in the deciding frame of the semi-final. The 2009 final saw the reigning world champion
John Higgins lose to Ding Junhui, after he missed the brown and the chance to go 8–6 in front.