2016 Champion of Champions

The 2016 Dafabet Champion of Champions was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 7 and 12 November 2016 at the Ricoh Arena in Coventry, England.[1] It was the fourth staging of the tournament since it was revived in 2013. In the United Kingdom the tournament was broadcast on ITV4.

Dafabet Champion of Champions
Tournament information
Dates7–12 November 2016
VenueRicoh Arena
CityCoventry
CountryEngland
Organisation(s)WPBSA
FormatNon-ranking event
Total prize fund£300,000
Winner's share£100,000
Highest break John Higgins (143)
Final
Champion John Higgins
Runner-up Ronnie O'Sullivan
Score10–7
2015
2017

Neil Robertson was the defending champion,[2] but he was beaten 2–4 in the Group 1 semi-final by Stuart Bingham.

Prize fund

The breakdown of prize money for 2016 is shown below:[3]

  • Winner: £100,000
  • Runner-up: £50,000
  • Losing semi-finalist: £25,000
  • Group runner-up: £10,000
  • First round losers: £7,500
  • Total: £300,000

Players

Players qualified for the event by winning important tournaments since the previous Champion of Champions. Entry was guaranteed for the defending champion, winners of rankings events and winners of the following non-rankings events: 2016 Masters, 2016 Championship League and 2016 China Championship.[4] Remaining places were then allocated to winners of European Tour events (in the order they were played) and then, if required, to winners of the 2016 Snooker Shoot-Out, 2016 Six-red World Championship and 2016 World Seniors Championship. Ding Junhui was awarded a wildcard for being this year's World Championship runner-up, but later qualified on his own right by winning the Six-red World Championship and 2016 Shanghai Masters.[5]

With several players winning more than one tournament, there were fewer than 16 players who qualified by winning tournaments. Remaining places were allocated to the highest ranked player, not already qualified, on the one-year ranking list. After the 2016 International Championship there had only been 14 different winners and, with only one event left, Stuart Bingham, who was 8th in the one-year ranking list, qualified at that stage.[6] The final place was left for the winner of the 2016 China Championship, a non-ranking event. During the China Championship Marco Fu withdrew and Joe Perry, 9th on the one-year ranking list, replaced him. At that stage John Higgins was the only non-qualified player left in the China Championship and, since he was 10th on the one-year ranking list, he therefore became the final qualifier. Moreover, he subsequently went on to win the tournament by beating Ronnie O'Sullivan 10–7 in the final.

The following players qualified for the tournament:[7][8]

SeedPlayerQualified asRef.
1 Neil RobertsonWinner of 2015 Champion of Champions, 2015 UK Championship and 2016 Riga Masters
2 Mark SelbyWinner of 2016 World Snooker Championship, 2016 Gdynia Open, 2016 Paul Hunter Classic and 2016 International Championship
3 Ronnie O'SullivanWinner of 2016 Masters and 2016 Welsh Open
4 Shaun MurphyWinner of 2016 World Grand Prix
Mark AllenWinner of 2016 Players Championship Grand Final
Judd TrumpWinner of 2016 China Open, 2016 Championship League and 2016 European Masters
Ding JunhuiWinner of 2016 Six-red World Championship and 2016 Shanghai Masters
Martin GouldWinner of 2016 German Masters
w/d Marco FuWinner of 2015 Gibraltar Open
Anthony McGillWinner of 2016 Indian Open
Ali CarterWinner of 2016 World Open
Robin HullWinner of 2016 Snooker Shoot-Out
Mark DavisWinner of 2016 World Seniors Championship
Liang WenboWinner of 2016 English Open
John HigginsWinner of 2016 China Championship
Stuart BinghamHighest ranked player, not already qualified, on the one-year ranking list after 2016 International Championship[9][10]
Joe PerryQualified from the one-year ranking list after Marco Fu's withdrawal

Four players were seeded. The seedings were determined in early October. Defending champion Neil Robertson was the 1st seed, while Mark Selby and Ronnie O'Sullivan were seeded 2nd and 3rd respectively for being the winner of last season's Triple Crown events. As Robertson was seeded twice for winning the UK Championship, Shaun Murphy became the 4th seed for being the highest ranked player not seeded after the 2016 Shanghai Masters.[9]

Main draw

Group semi-finals (Last 16)
Best of 7 frames
Group finals (Quarter-finals)
Best of 11 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
Final
Best of 19 frames
            
1 Neil Robertson 2
Stuart Bingham 4
  Stuart Bingham 4
Group 1 (8 November)
Ding Junhui 6
  Ding Junhui 4
Ali Carter 2
  Ding Junhui 5
John Higgins 6
  Judd Trump 4
Anthony McGill 3
  Judd Trump 4
Group 4 (10 November)
John Higgins 6
4 Shaun Murphy 2
John Higgins 4
John Higgins 10
3 Ronnie O'Sullivan 7
3 Ronnie O'Sullivan 4
Robin Hull 2
3 Ronnie O'Sullivan 6
Group 3 (7 November)
Martin Gould 2
  Martin Gould 4
Mark Davis 3
3 Ronnie O'Sullivan 6
Mark Allen 2
  Mark Allen 4
Joe Perry 2
Mark Allen 6
Group 2 (9 November)
2 Mark Selby 5
2 Mark Selby 4
Liang Wenbo 0

Final

Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Brendan Moore.
Ricoh Arena, Coventry, England, 12 November 2016.
John Higgins
 Scotland
10–7 Ronnie O'Sullivan (3)
 England
Afternoon: 75–0 (75), 19–69 (68), 74–3 (74), 1–100 (88), 0–90 (90), 79–0 (79), 74–4 (65), 29–88 (61), 48–82
Evening: 62–23 (60), 64–21 (63), 0–77 (74), 88–0 (83), 0–134 (130), 76–0 (76), 86–1 (86), 113–0 (58)
86 Highest break 130
0 Century breaks 1
10 50+ breaks 6

Century breaks

References

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