- Classic (snooker)
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Classic Tournament information Venue Bournemouth International Centre Location Bournemouth Country England Established 1980 Organisation(s) World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association Format Ranking Final Year 1992 Final champion(s) Steve Davis The Classic was a professional snooker tournament, which began in 1980 and ended in 1992. It was originally a non-ranking event, but became ranking in 1984. Steve Davis has won the event six times and was the last champion.
History
The tournament started as the Wilsons Classic in January 1980. It was an eight man invitation event recorded by Granada Television. John Spencer defeated Alex Higgins 4–3 in the final to become the inaugural champion. The second event was held in December the same year, with Steve Davis defeating Dennis Taylor 4–1 in the final.[1]
In 1982 Lada became the sponsor of the event and it was renamed to Lada Classic. Steve Davis made the first televised maximum break in his quarter-finals match against John Spencer.[1][2] Terry Griffiths won in the final 9–8 against Steve Davis. In 1983 the field was expanded to 16 players and moved to the Spectrum Arena in Warrington.[1] Bill Werbeniuk reached the only final of his career, but lost 5–9 against Steve Davis.
In 1984 the event was granted ranking status. Steve Davis met Tony Meo in the final. Davis was level at 8 frames each with Tony Meo and only the colours were left in the deciding frame. As Meo lined up on the yellow, a spectator yelled out "Come on Tony!". Although Meo took time to compose himself after the shout, he missed the yellow and Davis cleared the colours to win.[1]
Mercantile Credit took over the sponsorship for the 1985 and the event was renamed "Mercentile Credit Classic". Willie Thorne won the only ranking tournament of his career, by beating Cliff Thorburn 13–8 in the final. In 1986 Jimmy White won his first ranking tournament, be defeating Thorburn 13–12 in the final. In 1987 the event moved to the Norbreck Castle Hotel in Blackpool, but only just the last 16 played in the final stages, as the opening rounds were played earlier in the season. Steve Davis won in the final 13–12 against Jimmy White. Davis won the event the following year, this time defeating John Parrott 13–11.[1]
In 1989 Doug Mountjoy won his second consecutive ranking tournament, having previously won the UK Championship, by defeating Wayne Jones 13–11. The following year was a tournaments of upsets, as only of four of the top sixteen players reached its seeded place. Steve James won his only ranking tournament by defeating Warren King 10–6 in the final.[1] The tournament moved to the Bournemouth International Centre in 1991. Stephen Hendry reached the final of the tournament in 1991 and 1992, but lost 4–10 against Jimmy White and 8–9 against Steve Davis respectively. After the 1992 event, it was discontinued and replaced with the Welsh Open.[1]
Winners
Year Winner Opponent Final score Season non-ranking 1980 John Spencer Alex Higgins 4–3 1979/80 1980 Steve Davis Dennis Taylor 4–1 1980/81 1982 Terry Griffiths Steve Davis 9–8 1981/82 1983 Steve Davis Bill Werbeniuk 9–5 1982/83 ranking 1984 Steve Davis Tony Meo 9–8 1983/84 1985 Willie Thorne Cliff Thorburn 13–8 1984/85 1986 Jimmy White Cliff Thorburn 13–12 1985/86 1987 Steve Davis Jimmy White 13–12 1986/87 1988 Steve Davis John Parrott 13–11 1987/88 1989 Doug Mountjoy Wayne Jones 13–11 1988/89 1990 Steve James Warren King 10–6 1989/90 1991 Jimmy White Stephen Hendry 10–4 1990/91 1992 Steve Davis Stephen Hendry 9–8 1991/92 References
- ^ a b c d e f g h Turner, Chris. "Classic". cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Chris Turner's Snooker Archive. http://www.cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/classic.html. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
- ^ "Snooker World Records". WWW Snooker. 2009-04-28. http://www.snooker.org/Plr/records.shtml. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
Snooker tournaments Ranking World Championship · UK Championship · World Open · Welsh Open · German Masters · China Open · Shanghai Masters · Australian Goldfields Open · Players Tour Championship (Paul Hunter Classic)Non-ranking The Masters · World Cup · Championship League · Wuxi Classic · Beijing International Challenge · World Seniors Championship · Scottish Professional Championship · Hainan Classic · Brazil Masters · General Cup InternationalWithdrawn tournaments Categories:- Snooker ranking tournaments
- Recurring events established in 1980
- Recurring events disestablished in 1992
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