2004 Players Championship (snooker)

Summary

The 2004 Players Championship (officially the 2004 Daily Record Players Championship) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 3–11 April 2004 at the S.E.C.C in Glasgow, Scotland. It was the seventh and penultimate ranking event of the 2003/2004 season.[1]

2004 Daily Record Players Championship
Tournament information
Dates3–11 April 2004 (2004-04-03 – 2004-04-11)
VenueSECC
CityGlasgow
CountryScotland
OrganisationWPBSA
FormatRanking event
Total prize fund£597,200
Winner's share£82,500
Highest break Ken Doherty (IRL) (145)
Final
Champion Jimmy White (ENG)
Runner-up Paul Hunter (ENG)
Score9–7
2003
2016

The tournament was a re-branding of the Scottish Open which had been held under various names since 1981. It was the last time the tournament was played until it returned to the calendar in 2016, under the original name from previous seasons.

Twelve years after his last ranking tournament success, Jimmy White aged 41 won his tenth ranking tournament by defeating Paul Hunter 9–7 in the final. This was White's first success in the tournament, having last appeared in the final in 1988 International Open, when he lost 12–6 to Steve Davis. It was also Hunter's last appearance in a ranking final.[1]

Prize fund edit

The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:[2]

Main draw edit

[3]

Last 48
Best of 9 frames
Last 32
Best of 9 frames
Last 16
Best of 9 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 9 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
Final
Best of 17 frames
1  Mark Williams5
32  Robin Hullw/d  Rod Lawler4
1  Mark Williams5
  Rod Lawlerw/o
  Mark King4
9  Matthew Stevens3
22  Mark King5  Mark King5
1  Mark Williams3
  Jimmy Michie2
7  Peter Ebdon5
7  Peter Ebdon5
27  Joe Swail4  Stuart Bingham3
7  Peter Ebdon5
  Stuart Bingham5
13  Graeme Dott3
13  Graeme Dott5
19  Marco Fu5  Marco Fu3
7  Peter Ebdon5
  Scott MacKenzie1
15  Jimmy White6
5  Stephen Lee4
30  John Parrott5  John Parrott5
  John Parrott2
  Mark Davis4
15  Jimmy White5
15  Jimmy White5
23  Dave Harold1  Shaun Murphy3
15  Jimmy White5
  Shaun Murphy5
  Ian McCulloch3
12  David Gray3
26  Ian McCulloch5  Ian McCulloch5
  Ian McCulloch5
  Nigel Bond4
  Drew Henry1
4  John Higgins4
25  Drew Henry5  Drew Henry5
15  Jimmy White9
  Michael Holt1
8  Paul Hunter7
8  Paul Hunter5
29  Mark Selby4  Ding Junhui0
8  Paul Hunter5
  Ding Junhui5
11  Steve Davis3
11  Steve Davis5
31  Anthony Davies3  Neil Robertson3
8  Paul Hunter5
  Neil Robertson5
3  Ronnie O'Sullivan2
14  Quinten Hann3
20  Anthony Hamilton2  Jamie Burnett5
  Jamie Burnett0
  Jamie Burnett5
3  Ronnie O'Sullivan5
3  Ronnie O'Sullivan5
24  Tony Drago4  Ryan Day4
8  Paul Hunter6
  Ryan Day5
6  Ken Doherty2
6  Ken Doherty5
17  Ali Carter5  Ali Carter3
6  Ken Doherty5
  Stuart Pettman1
16  Joe Perry2
16  Joe Perry5
21  Robert Milkins1  Barry Pinches4
6  Ken Doherty5
  Barry Pinches5
2  Stephen Hendry4
10  Alan McManus5
28  Dominic Dale5  Dominic Dale1
10  Alan McManus2
  Gary Wilkinson4
2  Stephen Hendry5
2  Stephen Hendry5
18  Chris Small2  Gerard Greene1
  Gerard Greene5

Final edit

Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee: Colin Brinded.
S.E.C.C., Glasgow, Scotland, 11 April 2004.[3]
Jimmy White (15)
  England
9–7 Paul Hunter (8)
  England
Afternoon: 73–33, 76–50, 7–77, 9–63, 66–31, 28–56, 59–18, 27–58
Evening: 10–52, 70–2 (51), 64–33, 100–0 (56), 76–0 (76), 9–71 (67), 54–58, 74–8
76 Highest break 67
0 Century breaks 0
3 50+ breaks 1

Qualifying edit

Qualifying for the tournament took place at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales between 11 and 15 March 2004.[4]

Round 1 edit

Best of 9 frames

Round 2–4 edit

Round 2
Best of 9 frames
Round 3
Best of 9 frames
Round 4
Best of 9 frames
  Tom Ford5  Rod Lawler5  Fergal O'Brien4
  Joe Delaney2  Tom Ford4  Rod Lawler5
  Craig Butler2  Jimmy Michie5  Brian Morgan4
  Kurt Maflin5  Kurt Maflin4  Jimmy Michie5
  Paul Wykes3  Mike Dunn3  James Wattana3
  Scott MacKenzie5  Scott MacKenzie5  Scott MacKenzie5
  Ian Preece0  Andy Hicks1  Stuart Bingham5
  Chris Melling5  Chris Melling5  Chris Melling4
  Jason Prince4  Bjorn Haneveer5  Mark Davis5
  Adrian Gunnell5  Adrian Gunnell1  Bjorn Haneveer2
  Philip Williams2  Shaun Murphy5  Stephen Maguire2
  Luke Simmonds5  Luke Simmonds0  Shaun Murphy5
  Mehmet Husnu5  Patrick Wallace5  Nigel Bond5
  Luke Fisher4  Mehmet Husnu4  Patrick Wallace2
  Simon Bedford1  Sean Storey3  Michael Holt5
  Adrian Rosa5  Adrian Rosa5  Adrian Rosa4
  Liu Song4  Dave Finboww/d  Michael Judge2
  Ryan Day5  Ryan Dayw/o  Ryan Day5
  Michael Rhodes2  Nick Walker5  Jamie Burnett5
  Martin Dziewialtowski5  Martin Dziewialtowski3  Nick Walker3
  Colm Gilcreest4  Alfie Burden2  Jonathan Birch2
  Neil Robertson5  Neil Robertson5  Neil Robertson5
  Jamie Cope2  Darren Morgan2  Barry Hawkins2
  Ding Junhui5  Ding Junhui5  Ding Junhui5
  Paul Davies3  David Roe5  Stuart Pettman5
  Paul Sweeny5  Paul Sweeny4  David Roe3
  Gary Thomson5  Marcus Campbell3  Barry Pinches5
  Stuart Mann2  Gary Thomson5  Gary Thomson3
  Lee Walker5  Nick Dyson4  Gary Wilkinson5
  Jason Ferguson3  Lee Walker5  Lee Walker3
  Munraj Pal2  Shokat Ali5  Gerard Greene5
  Leo Fernandez5  Leo Fernandez4  Shokat Ali1

Century breaks edit

[4]

Qualifying stage centuries edit

Televised stage centuries edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "playchamp". 16 February 2012. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012.
  2. ^ "2004 Players Championship – Information". Global Snooker Centre. Archived from the original on 14 October 2004. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Daily Record Players Championship 2004". Snooker.org. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  4. ^ a b "2004 Players Championship". Global Snooker Centre. Archived from the original on 10 October 2004. Retrieved 23 January 2023.