IBSF U21 World Snooker Championship 2010

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U21 World Snooker Championship 2010
Billiard Picto 2-black.svg
Venue: Northwest Snooker Center,
Letterkenny , Ireland
Opening: July 31, 2010
Endgame: August 10, 2010

Winner: EnglandEngland Sam Craigie
Finalist: China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang
Highest Break: 139 ( Sam Craigie ) EnglandEngland
2009
 
2011

The IBSF U21 World Snooker Championship 2010 was the 22nd edition of the Junior World Snooker Championship hosted by the International Billiards & Snooker Federation . It took place from July 31st to August 10th at the Northwest Snooker Center in Letterkenny in the north of the Republic of Ireland .

The Englishman Sam Craigie became world champion with a 9: 8 win against the Chinese Li Hang in the final. Craigie also received a tour card for the 2011/12 Main Tour season for the win .

mode

The 74 participating players were divided into 10 groups of seven or eight players, in which they competed against each other in round robin mode . The top four in each group qualified for the main tournament. 16 players played a preliminary round, the 8 winners then played a top 32 elimination tournament with the remaining 24 players until the world champion was determined.

Round 1

The preliminary round was played in best-of-7 mode .

game Player 1 Result Player 2
1 Mohamed Ibrahim EgyptEgypt 24 : 24th IrelandIreland Jason Devaney
2 Campbell Dunlop ScotlandScotland 04 : 04th LibyaLibya Osama Anga
3 Thurston Grixti MaltaMalta 4th0: 40 IrelandIreland Tony Moore
4th Khalid Khamali United Arab EmiratesUnited Arab Emirates 4th1: 41 IrelandIreland Sean Conway
5 Roman Dietzel GermanyGermany 04 : 04th IrelandIreland David Cassidy
6th Dylan Murray Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland 24 : 24th PolandPoland Adam Stefanów
7th Kusai Sharif LibyaLibya 4th2: 42 IrelandIreland Josh Boileau
8th Patchara Mayoe ThailandThailand 34 : 34th ThailandThailand Chinnapat Kamsad

Top 32 to the final

  Round 1
best of 9 frames
Round of 16
best of 9 frames
Quarterfinals
Best of 11 frames
Semi-final
best of 13 frames
Final
Best of 17 frames
                                     
 EnglandEngland Nick Jennings 5              
 EgyptEgypt Mohamed Ibrahim 2  
 EnglandEngland Nick Jennings 5
   PolandPoland Michał Zieliński 4th  
 IrelandIreland Greg Casey 2
 PolandPoland Michał Zieliński 5  
 EnglandEngland Nick Jennings 4th
   IrelandIreland Vincent Muldoon 6th  
 IrelandIreland Vincent Muldoon 5    
 BelgiumBelgium Kristof Vermeiren 0  
 IrelandIreland Vincent Muldoon 5
   ScotlandScotland Campbell Dunlop 2  
 ScotlandScotland Campbell Dunlop 5
 QatarQatar Ali Alobaidli 1  
 IrelandIreland Vincent Muldoon 3
   China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 7th  
 ScotlandScotland Michael Leslie 5
 IrelandIreland Tony Moore 2  
 ScotlandScotland Michael Leslie 4th
   China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 5  
 China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 5
 IsraelIsrael Shahar Ruberg 1  
 China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 6th
   WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Jamie Clarke 1  
 Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland Declan Brennan 5    
 BelgiumBelgium Jurian Heusdens 3  
 Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland Declan Brennan 4th
   WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Jamie Clarke 5  
 IrelandIreland Sean Conway 3
 WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Jamie Clarke 5  
 China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 8th
   EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 9
 EnglandEngland Stephen Craigie 5
 GermanyGermany Roman Dietzel 1  
 EnglandEngland Stephen Craigie 5
   China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Yan 2  
 AustraliaAustralia Shaun Dalitz 0
 China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Yan 5  
 EnglandEngland Stephen Craigie 6th
   ThailandThailand Yuttapop Pakpoj 5  
 IrelandIreland Gareth Boyle 5    
 ScotlandScotland Robert Carlisle 4th  
 IrelandIreland Gareth Boyle 1
   ThailandThailand Yuttapop Pakpoj 5  
 Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland Dylan Murray 1
 ThailandThailand Yuttapop Pakpoj 5  
 EnglandEngland Stephen Craigie 6th
   EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 7th  
 ScotlandScotland Rhys Clark 5
 IrelandIreland Josh Boileau 1  
 ScotlandScotland Rhys Clark 4th
   BelgiumBelgium Julius Grauls 5  
 BelgiumBelgium Julius Grauls 5
 AustraliaAustralia Kurt Brown 4th  
 BelgiumBelgium Julius Grauls 1
   EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 6th  
 WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Kishan Hirani 5    
 Hong KongHong Kong Wong Yun Shing 2  
 WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Kishan Hirani 4th
   EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 5  
 ThailandThailand Patchara Mayoe 1
 EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 5  

Century breaks

EnglandEngland Sam Craigie 139, 103, 102 (2 ×)
China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Yan 135, 134, 128, 121
IrelandIreland Vincent Muldoon 135, 127, 126, 125, 122, 101
ThailandThailand Yuttapop Pakpoj 131, 113, 111
EnglandEngland Stephen Craigie 129, 116, 115 (2 ×), 113, 112, 102, 100
IrelandIreland Jason Devaney 120
WalesFlag of Wales (1959 – present) .svg Jamie Clarke 118
Northern IrelandNorthern Ireland Declan Brennan 118
AustraliaAustralia Shaun Dalitz 117
IrelandIreland David Cassidy 115
EgyptEgypt Karim Mohamed Metwaly 114
China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China Li Hang 113, 112, 105 (2 ×), 100
PolandPoland Michał Zieliński 109
IrelandIreland Greg Casey 105
ScotlandScotland Ross Higgins 101

swell

  1. World Under 21 Snooker Championship 2010 - Results ( Memento from November 30, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  2. 2010 World Under-21 Championship - Men. Cuetracker.net, accessed February 22, 2018 .