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1995 German Open (snooker) - Wikipedia

1995 German Open (snooker)

The 1995 German Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 3 and 10 December 1995 at the Messe Frankfurt in Frankfurt, Germany. It was the first ranking event held in Germany. John Higgins won the inaugural event defeating Ken Doherty 9–3 in the final.

1995 German Open
Tournament information
Dates3–10 December 1995 (1995-12-03 – 1995-12-10)
VenueMesse Frankfurt
CityFrankfurt
CountryGermany
OrganisationWPBSA
FormatRanking event
Winner's share£40,000
Highest break John Higgins (SCO) (139)
Final
Champion John Higgins (SCO)
Runner-up Ken Doherty (IRL)
Score9–3
← First
1996

Summary

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The tournament involved the top 16 players in the world ranking who were joined by 16 qualifiers and 4 wild-card players. The four lowest ranked qualifiers played the wild-card players, winning all their four matches and advancing to the last-32.[1] Four of the top-16 players lost in the last-32 round, including Ronnie O'Sullivan and Jimmy White. Further top-ranked players were beaten in the last-16 stage, including Steve Davis, John Parrott and James Wattana. Tony Drago led Stephen Hendry 3–1 but Hendry then won the next four frames to win the match 5–3.[1]

Three Scots, Stephen Hendry, Alan McManus and John Higgins, won their quarter-final matches and were joined in the semi-finals by Ken Doherty.[1] Hendry led Doherty 3–2 but Doherty then won the next four frames to win the match 6–5. In the other semi-final, Higgins beat McManus in the deciding frame after a break of 58.[1] The final was level at three frame each before Higgins won the next six frames to win 9–3 and take the first prize of £40,000.[1] Higgins made a break of 139 in the 11th frame of the final to win the high break prize of £5,000.[1]

Wildcard round

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The four lowest ranked qualifiers played four continental players, three from Germany and one from Belgium.[1]

Match Score
WC1   Dave Finbow (ENG) 5–1   Yvan van Velthoven (BEL)
WC2   Mark King (ENG) 5–0   Dieter Johns (GER)
WC3   Chris Small (SCO) 5–0   Thomas Schweser (GER)
WC4   Yasin Merchant (IND) 5–0   Peter Wagner (GER)

Main draw

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[2][1]

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   Stephen Hendry (SCO) 5
  Joe Swail (NIR) 2
1   Stephen Hendry 5
14   Tony Drago 3
14   Tony Drago (MLT) 5
  Mick Price (ENG) 1
1   Stephen Hendry 5
  Rod Lawler 3
15   Terry Griffiths (WAL) 0
  Rod Lawler (ENG) 5
  Rod Lawler 5
5   James Wattana 2
5   James Wattana (THA) 5
  Gary Wilkinson (ENG) 3
1   Stephen Hendry 3
9   Ken Doherty 6
7   Jimmy White (ENG) 3
  Steve James (ENG) 5
    Steve James 3
  Mark Bennett 5
13   Dave Harold (ENG) 1
  Mark Bennett (WAL) 5
  Mark Bennett 2
9   Ken Doherty 5
9   Ken Doherty (IRL) 5
  Dean Reynolds (ENG) 3
9   Ken Doherty 5
4   John Parrott 4
4   John Parrott (ENG) 5
  Martin Clark (ENG) 2
9   Ken Doherty 3
11   John Higgins 9
3   Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG) 3
  Mark King (ENG) 5
  Mark King 3
11   John Higgins 5
11   John Higgins (SCO) 5
  Chris Small (SCO) 2
11   John Higgins 5
8   Darren Morgan 4
12   Nigel Bond (ENG) 5
  Willie Thorne (ENG) 0
12   Nigel Bond 1
8   Darren Morgan 5
8   Darren Morgan (WAL) 5
  Billy Snaddon (SCO) 4
11   John Higgins 6
6   Alan McManus 5
6   Alan McManus (SCO) 5
  Mark Williams (WAL) 1
6   Alan McManus 5
10   Peter Ebdon 4
10   Peter Ebdon (ENG) 5
  Yasin Merchant (IND) 1
6   Alan McManus 5
16   David Roe 3
16   David Roe (ENG) 5
  Neal Foulds (ENG) 3
16   David Roe 5
  Steve Davis 4
2   Steve Davis (ENG) 5
  Dave Finbow (ENG) 1

Final

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Final: Best of 17 frames.
Messe Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany, 10 December 1995.[1]
Ken Doherty (9)
  Ireland
3–9 John Higgins (11)
  Scotland
106–16 (105), 0–112 (70), 0–97 (97), 50–64 (50 Doherty), 55–8, 80–45 (80), 0–66, 10–73 (50), 42–77, 39–90 (50), 0–143 (139), 52–82
105 Highest break 139
1 Century breaks 1
5 50+ breaks 3

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "German Open 1995". Snooker.org. 20 April 2012. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  2. ^ "German Open". Snooker Scene. Archived from the original on 2013-01-24. Retrieved 20 November 2017.