1972 World Snooker Championship

The 1972 World Snooker Championship (also known as 1972 Park Drive World Snooker Championship for sponsorship reasons) was a professional snooker tournament that took place between March 1971 and 26 February 1972.[1] In a preliminary competition the eight qualifiers were reduced to two, and they joined the eight other entrants in the competition proper. Those in the qualifying section included Alex Higgins, who became the first champion who played qualifying matches, and four former amateur champions, Ron Gross, Maurice Parkin, Pat Houlihan and Geoff Thompson. This was the first time the event was sponsored by Park Drive.[2]

Park Drive World Snooker Championship
Tournament information
Final venueSelly Park British Legion
Final cityBirmingham
CountryEngland
Organisation(s)WPBSA
Winner's share£400
Highest break Alex Higgins (133)
Final
Champion Alex Higgins
Runner-up John Spencer
Score37–32
1971
1973

Higgins was not extended until the semi-final when Rex Williams led by six frames before the Irishman won by the odd frame with a 61 break. Williams had beaten Ray Reardon 25–23, in a match contested in five different club venues in Scotland. John Spencer beat Eddie Charlton in the second semi-final played in Bolton from 10 to 15 January.

The final, played at Birmingham's Selly Park British Legion from 21 to 26 February,[2] was evenly matched until Higgins struck the front with a 6–0 victory in the Thursday evening session, a gap which Spencer was never able to close. Higgins' win made him the youngest champion at the age of 22 years, 345 days until Stephen Hendry won the title in 1990. Higgins also made the highest break of the tournament with 133.[3] The prize money was by arrangement with individual promoters; the winner Alex Higgins won £400.[2]

Main draw

Sources:[4][5]

First round Best of 37 frames

Alex Higgins 19–11 Jackie Rea

John Pulman 19–7 John Dunning

 
Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
          
 
Best of 61 frames
 
 
John Spencer31
 
Best of 73 frames
 
Fred Davis21
 
John Spencer37
 
Best of 61 frames
 
Eddie Charlton32
 
Eddie Charlton31
 
Best of 73 frames
 
David Taylor25
 
John Spencer 32
 
Best of 61 frames
 
Alex Higgins37
 
Alex Higgins31
 
Best of 61 frames
 
John Pulman23
 
Alex Higgins31
 
Best of 49 frames
 
Rex Williams30
 
Rex Williams25
 
 
Ray Reardon23
 

Qualifying

Source:[5]

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gollark: Though TiddlyWiki and arguably Roam have already done pretty much that and done it better than I'm likely to.
gollark: One of my eternally unfinished side projects is a wiki-style note taking thing which could be neat.
gollark: Yes, I'm aware it's better business-wise, and I don't want to support that.
gollark: They could at least support bridging to XMPP or something natively.

References

  1. Turner, Chris. "On this Week: Ranking first for Carter". Eurosport. Archived from the original on 2 June 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2011.
  2. Turner, Chris. "World Professional Championship". cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Chris Turner's Snooker Archive. Archived from the original on 16 April 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  3. "2004 Embassy World Championship Information". Global Snooker Centre. Archived from the original on 8 December 2004. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  4. "1972 World Championships Results". Snooker Database. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  5. "Embassy World Championship". Snooker Scene. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
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