The 2024 Scottish Open (officially the 2024 BetVictor Scottish Open) is an upcoming professional snooker tournament that will take place from 9 to 15 December 2024 at the Meadowbank Sports Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland. It's the eleventh ranking event of the 2024–25 season (following the 2024 Shoot Out and preceding the 2025 German Masters), the third of four tournaments in the season's Home Nations Series (following the 2024 English Open and the 2024 Northern Ireland Open and preceding the 2025 Welsh Open). The winner will receive £100,000 from a total prize fund of £550,400, the Stephen Hendry trophy, and a place in the 2025 Champion of Champions invitational event.[1]
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 9–15 December 2024 |
Venue | Meadowbank Sports Centre |
City | Edinburgh |
Country | Scotland |
Organisation | World Snooker Tour |
Format | Ranking event |
Total prize fund | £550,400 |
Winner's share | £100,000 |
Defending champion | Gary Wilson (ENG) |
← 2023 |
Gary Wilson is the defending champion, having successfully defended his 2022 title by defeating Noppon Saengkham 9–5 in the 2023 final.[2][3]
Format
editThe event will take place from 9 to 15 December 2024 at the Meadowbank Sports Centre in Edinburgh, Scotland.[1] Qualifying will take place from 28 to 30 October 2024 in Sheffield, England.[4]
The WST implemented a new format for the four Home Nations events this season. In qualifying round one, players seeded 65–96 face those seeded 97–128. In qualifying round two, the 32 round one winners play those seeded 33–64. The 32 round two winners then play the top 32 seeds.[5]
Prize fund
editThe tournament winner will receive the Stephen Hendry trophy. The breakdown of prize money for the event, an increase of £123,400 from the previous event, is shown below:[1]
- Winner: £100,000
- Runner-up: £45,000
- Semi-final: £21,000
- Quarter-final: £13,200
- Last 16: £9,000
- Last 32: £5,400
- Last 64: £3,600
- Last 96: £1,000
- Highest break: £5,000
- Total: £550,400
Final rounds
editThe draw for the final rounds will be shown below.
Top half
editLast 64 Best of 7 frames | Last 32 Best of 7 frames | Last 16 Best of 7 frames | Quarter-finals Best of 9 frames | Semi-finals Best of 11 frames | ||||||||||||||
Bottom half
editLast 64 Best of 7 frames | Last 32 Best of 7 frames | Last 16 Best of 7 frames | Quarter-finals Best of 9 frames | Semi-finals Best of 11 frames | ||||||||||||||
Qualifying rounds
editThe draw for the early rounds is shown below. Numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the players' seeding, an "a" indicates amateur players who were not on the main World Snooker Tour, and players in bold denote match winners.[6][7]
Round 1 (Last 128) Best of 7 frames | Round 2 (Last 96) Best of 7 frames | |||||
Liu Hongyu (CHN) (65) | Long Zehuang (CHN) (64) | |||||
Reanne Evans (ENG) (109) | ||||||
Liam Davies (WAL) (96) | Lyu Haotian (CHN) (33) | |||||
Wang Yuchen (HKG) (113) | ||||||
Andrew Higginson (ENG) (80) | Fan Zhengyi (CHN) (49) | |||||
Paul Deaville (ENG) (a) | ||||||
Gong Chenzhi (CHN) (81) | Joe Perry (ENG) (48) | |||||
Antoni Kowalski (POL) (101) | ||||||
Lei Peifan (CHN) (88) | Dominic Dale (WAL) (41) | |||||
Haydon Pinhey (ENG) (105) | ||||||
Rory Thor (MAS) (73) | Daniel Wells (WAL) (56) | |||||
Mitchell Mann (ENG) (111) | ||||||
Ben Mertens (BEL) (89) | Jimmy Robertson (ENG) (40) | |||||
Robbie McGuigan (NIR) (98) | ||||||
Hammad Miah (ENG) (72) | David Lilley (ENG) (57) | |||||
Haris Tahir (PAK) (102) | ||||||
Stuart Carrington (ENG) (69) | Aaron Hill (IRL) (60) | |||||
Mink Nutcharut (THA) (106) | ||||||
Artemijs Žižins (LAT) (92) | Ricky Walden (ENG) (37) | |||||
Huang Jiahao (CHN) (108) | ||||||
Jiang Jun (CHN) (76) | Graeme Dott (SCO) (53) | |||||
Chris Totten (SCO) (104) | ||||||
Zak Surety (ENG) (85) | Robbie Williams (ENG) (44) | |||||
Jack Borwick (SCO) (a) | ||||||
Liam Pullen (ENG) (84) | Jordan Brown (NIR) (45) | |||||
Mostafa Dorgham (EGY) (100) | ||||||
Ma Hailong (CHN) (77) | Matthew Stevens (WAL) (52) | |||||
Baipat Siripaporn (THA) (114) | ||||||
Allan Taylor (ENG) (93) | Anthony McGill (SCO) (36) | |||||
Anton Kazakov (UKR) (a) | ||||||
Louis Heathcote (ENG) (68) | He Guoqiang (CHN) (61) | |||||
Joshua Thomond (ENG) (a) | ||||||
Ishpreet Singh Chadha (IND) (67) | Sanderson Lam (ENG) (62) | |||||
Ahmed Aly Elsayed (USA) (114) | ||||||
Liam Graham (SCO) (94) | Elliot Slessor (ENG) (35) | |||||
Farakh Ajaib (PAK) (107) | ||||||
Ian Burns (ENG) (78) | Martin O'Donnell (ENG) (51) | |||||
Simon Blackwell (ENG) (a) | ||||||
Alexander Ursenbacher (SUI) (83) | Ben Woollaston (ENG) (46) | |||||
Michael Holt (ENG) (99) | ||||||
Duane Jones (WAL) (86) | Scott Donaldson (SCO) (43) | |||||
Amir Sarkhosh (IRN) (97) | ||||||
Stan Moody (ENG) (75) | Tian Pengfei (CHN) (54) | |||||
Iulian Boiko (UKR) (a) | ||||||
Dean Young (SCO) (91) | Thepchaiya Un-Nooh (THA) (38) | |||||
Daniel Womersley (ENG) (a) | ||||||
Xing Zihao (CHN) (70) | Anthony Hamilton (ENG) (59) | |||||
Manasawin Phetmalaikul (THA) (112) | ||||||
Alfie Burden (ENG) (71) | Jamie Clarke (WAL) (58) | |||||
Julien Leclercq (BEL) (103) | ||||||
Bulcsú Révész (HUN) (90) | Yuan Sijun (CHN) (39) | |||||
Bai Yulu (CHN) (116) | ||||||
Ross Muir (SCO) (74) | w/o | Mark Davis (ENG) (55) | ||||
Ken Doherty (IRL) (118)[a] | w/d | Ross Muir (SCO) (74) | ||||
Jimmy White (ENG) (87) | Jackson Page (WAL) (42) | |||||
Hatem Yassen (EGY) (a) | ||||||
Andrew Pagett (WAL) (82) | Xu Si (CHN) (47) | |||||
Dylan Emery (WAL) (a) | ||||||
Oliver Lines (ENG) (79) | Jamie Jones (WAL) (50) | |||||
Ayaan Iqbal (SCO) (a) | ||||||
Cheung Ka Wai (HKG) (95) | Matthew Selt (ENG) (34) | |||||
Kreishh Gurbaxani (IND) (115) | ||||||
Ashley Carty (ENG) (66) | David Grace (ENG) (63) | |||||
Jonas Luz (BRA) (110) | ||||||
- Note: w/d=withdrawn; w/o=walkover
Notes
edit- ^ Ken Doherty withdrew and so Ross Muir was given a walkover.
References
edit- ^ a b c "BetVictor Scottish Open". World Snooker Tour. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ "Wilson defends Edinburgh crown". World Snooker Tour. 17 December 2023. Archived from the original on 18 December 2023. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
- ^ "Gary Wilson beats Noppon Saengkham to retain Scottish title". BBC Sport. 17 December 2023. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ "BetVictor Scottish Open Qualifiers Draw". World Snooker Tour. 16 October 2024. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ "Tiered format for Home Nations and German Masters in 2024/25". World Snooker Tour. 5 April 2024. Archived from the original on 5 April 2024. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
- ^ "BetVictor Scottish Open 2024 qualifiers matches". World Snooker Tour. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ "Scottish Open Qualifiers". snooker.org. Retrieved 17 October 2024.