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2004 European Open (snooker)

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2004European Open
Tournament information
Dates1–6 March 2004 (2004-03-01 –2004-03-06)
VenueHilton Conference Centre
CityPortomaso
CountryMalta
OrganisationWPBSA
FormatRanking event
Total prize fund£400,000[1]
Winner's share£48,000[1]
Highest break Stephen Maguire (SCO) (137)[2]
Final
Champion Stephen Maguire (SCO)
Runner-up Jimmy White (ENG)
Score9–3
2003
2005
Snooker tournament

The2004 European Open was the 2004 edition of theEuropean Opensnooker tournament, held from 1 to 6 March 2004, at theHilton Conference Centre,Portomaso,Malta. It was the final year the event was known as European Open, as the event was renamed to Malta Cup in next year.Stephen Maguire defeatedJimmy White by nineframes to three (9–3) in the final to claim his firstranking-event title, transforming him from "talented underachiever into a world-ranking event winner", according toThe Times. In the semi-finals Maguire defeatedStephen Lee and White beatTony Drago. The tournament was the fifth of eightWPBSA ranking events in the2003/2004 season, following theWelsh Open and preceding theIrish Masters.

Tournament summary

[edit]

Prior to the 1988/1989 season noranking tournament had been continuously staged outside of the United Kingdom (although theWorld Championship had been held twice in Australia). Thesnooker governing body, theWorld Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), decided to include overseas events and the first two locations chosen were Canada and Europe. The European Open was first held in1989 in Deauville, France, and was suspended for 1997/1998 and 2000/2001. It moved to theHilton Conference Centre,Portomaso,Malta for the first time in 2004 and was renamed theMalta Cup the following season.[3]

The 2004 tournament was the fifth of eight WPBSA ranking events in the2003/2004 season, following theWelsh Open and preceding theIrish Masters.[4] Held in January, the Welsh Open was won byRonnie O'Sullivan, who defeatedSteve Davis by nineframes to eight (9–8) in the final.[5] The defending European Open champion was also O'Sullivan, who defeatedStephen Hendry 9–6 inlast year's final.[6]Paul Hunter, who had defeated O'Sullivan in the final of the non-rankingMasters in February, entered the tournament "playing the best snooker of his career", according to Phil Yates ofThe Times.[7]

Qualifying

[edit]

The qualifying stage was played between playersranked 17 and those ranked lower for one of 16 places in the final stage. The matches were best-of-9 frames until the semi-finals. In March 2004 Maltese playerTony Drago defeatedAdrian Gunnell 5–2 in a match held over from the qualifying stage in November.[8]

Round 1

[edit]

The qualifiers went through to face members of the top 16. In this round, Davis came from 2–4 down to beatJoe Swail 5–4, in a match where both players missed chances. In the deciding frame, Davis won on thepink ball after Swail had missed the brown. After the match, Davis said it was a historic day as he had never won a match in the country.[9]Stephen Lee received awalkover to the next round after his opponentRobin Hull withdrew for medical reasons.[9][10] World number 41Stephen Maguire made abreak of 89 in the final frame of his match againstPeter Ebdon to win 5–4, and world number three O'Sullivan opened his match againstMarco Fu with acentury break of 110 and went on to win 5–1.[9]Chris Small, who suffers from the spinal conditionankylosing spondylitis, whitewashedUK championMatthew Stevens 5–0, in a match lasting almost three hours and which saw Stevens lose two frames on the black ball.[10][11]Neil Robertson defeatedKen Doherty 5–3, andJoe Perry beatDavid Roe by the same scoreline. In the last match of the day,David Gray beatFergal O'Brien 5–3.[9]

World number oneMark Williams was defeated 1–5 byAnthony Hamilton, who made a break of 133.[12] Williams refused to answer questions at the post-match press conference, explaining: "I'm not saying anything because if I do I could be in trouble so I'm keeping my mouth shut."[13] Hunter and Hendry made high breaks of 49 and 55 in defeatingBrian Morgan andJimmy Michie 5–1, respectively.[12] After the match Hendry—the world number two and a seven-timeworld champion said "I feel like going to apologise to each fan one by one because it was such a bad match".[13]John Higgins whitewashedBarry Pinches 5–0, compiling a 132 break in the last frame in a match where Pinches made a high break of 33.[14]Jimmy White overcameJames Wattana 5–4 having trailed 2–3.Graeme Dott defeatedDrew Henry 5-3 andQuinten Hann beatSimon Bedford 5–0. In the last game of the day, Drago beatAlan McManus 5–4.[13]

Round 2

[edit]

In round two O'Sullivan defeated Small 5–1, coming from behind to win in each of the first three frames with breaks of 58, 81, and 46. A break of 112 completed the victory, after which O'Sullivan said his opponent had made him work.[15] In the fifth frame O'Sullivan continued playing despite needing snookers, later explaining, "I wanted to keep playing because I was enjoying it so much".[16] White made breaks of 72, 52, 69, 51, and 65 in defeating Hendry 5–3, after which Hendry said his performance was "horrendous", and White said his refusal to go out the night before contributed to his performance.[17] In the sixth frame White led by 41 points before missing an easy red, allowing Hendry to win on the black with a 55 break to level at 3–3. White dominated the next two frames for the victory.[18] Higgins, without a tournament victory for over two years, whitewashed Dott 5–0 with breaks of 82, 81, 57, and 52, and said it was the "best [he had] felt for ages".[19] Drago defeated Hunter 5–2 to reach the quarter-finals of a ranking events for the first time since 1998, in a low-quality match where Drago made one break over 50. Lee defeated Davis 5–3 in a four-hour match,[18] and Higgins completed a second whitewash when he beat Dott 5–0, bringing his career record against Dott to 9–1.[20] Maguire defeated Perry 5–4 to reach his first ranking quarter-final,[21] and Hann beat Hamilton 5–1 to claim the final place in the next round.[17]

Quarter-finals

[edit]

In the quarter-finals Lee defeated O'Sullivan 5–4 in a match that lasted 3 hours and 32 minutes. O'Sullivan came from 2–3 down to lead 4–3 before Lee leveled the match. In the final frame O'Sullivan led 36–0, before Lee made a 46 break and fluked a snooker that enabled him to claim victory. O'Sullivan said his performance was very poor, while Lee said he was quietly confident.[22][23] White defeated Robertson 5–3 to reach his third semi-final of the season. White led 4–1 and was 56 points ahead in the sixth but missed a straightforward green, allowing Robertson to win on the black with a 67 break. Robertson took the next frame before a risky long pot in the eighth allowed White to win the match. White—who last won a ranking title12 years ago prior at this event—said, "Everyone knows I've been in front so many times in the past and tossed it away so I was having nightmares out there".[24] Drago quickly won the first four frames of his match against Hann, conceding the fifth, before completing a 5–1 victory, after which he said the crowd support helped him. Maguire caused an upset when he beat Higgins 5–3, a match that saw Maguire lose the first two frames before winning the next four. After the match Maguire he said he had "starting to think about winning it now".[22]

Semi-finals

[edit]

The semi-finals were best-of-11 frames. White reached his first final in four years when he defeated Drago 6–4. Leading 4–1 White made a break of 104 to win the sixth frame, before missing a straightforward red to allow his opponent to win the seventh with an 84 break. Drago won the next two in 15 minutes with breaks of 44 and 109—completing the latter in four minutes[25]—before an 86 break gave White the victory, after which White said, "Playing Tony here, I got a taste of what players have against me at the Masters when the crowd are all on my side but they were fair and I enjoyed every minute of it."[26][27]

In the other semi-final Maguire beat Lee 6–4 in an error-strewn match which lasted four hours.[26] After winning the first two frames Maguire lost the next three, but "kept his cool" to seal the victory.[27] Maguire said the match was a "battle" and that he was surprised at how badly his opponents had played in the tournament, while Lee said he "just blew up" and that, "When you’re as poor as that you get into such a state of mind that you can’t think straight".[26][27]

Final

[edit]

The match was White's 23rd appearance in a final and his first since the2000 British Open. In the best-of-17 final Maguire defeated White 9–3 to win his first ranking title at the age of 22, earning £48,000 in prize money.[26][28] The victory, according toThe Times, transformed Maguire from "talented underachiever into a world-ranking event winner";[29] according toBBC Sport his victory was a surprise.[30]

In the afternoon session Maguire made two sizeable breaks and one of 137 to lead 3–0. He won the next frame and compiled a century in the fifth. The sixth frame was awarded to Maguire, when White violated thethree-miss rule.Snookered in the jaws of a corner pocket, White twice attempted to hit the pack of five reds off a side cushion and missed. On his third attempt he adopted a slow roll to the pack and again missed. In the evening session, trailing 0–6, White won his first frame before the next four were shared, the last of which included a break of 125 by White. At 8–2 a break of 57 gave Maguire the victory.[28]

After his victory Maguire acknowledged the influence ofTerry Griffiths who had been working with him on the mental side of the game: "He's been on the phone just telling me to keep calm and that I can do it if I believe in myself".[31] Maguire said he always knew he was good enough to win a tournament and that he would aim for a top-16 finish for the season.[30][31] White said, "Stephen outplayed me in safety, potting and position so he deserved to win" and, "He gave me a good bashing. I'm pleased for him because he's a nice lad but I'm disappointed because I didn't compete".[32]

Prize fund

[edit]

The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:[1]

  • Winner: £48,000
  • Final: £24,000
  • Semi-final: £12,000
  • Quarter-final: £7,900
  • Last 16: £6,900
  • Last 32: £5,500
  • Last 48: £2,900
  • Last 64: £2,100
  • Last 80: £1,600
  • Last 96: £1,050
  • Stage one highest break: £1,800
  • Stage two highest break: £5,000
  • Stage one maximum break: £5,000
  • Stage two maximum break: £20,000
  • Total: £400,000

Main draw

[edit]

Numbers to the left of the players' names are the tournamentseedings. Players in bold denote match winners.[4][33]

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 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)5
19 Marco Fu (HKG)1
1 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)5
18 Chris Small (SCO)1
9 Matthew Stevens (WAL)0
18 Chris Small (SCO)5
1 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)4
5 Stephen Lee (ENG)5
11 Steve Davis (ENG)5
27 Joe Swail (NIR)4
11 Steve Davis (ENG)3
5 Stephen Lee (ENG)5
5 Stephen Lee (ENG)w/o
32 Robin Hull (FIN)w/d
5 Stephen Lee (ENG)4
41 Stephen Maguire (SCO)6
7 Peter Ebdon (ENG)4
41 Stephen Maguire (SCO)5
41 Stephen Maguire (SCO)5
16 Joe Perry (ENG)4
16 Joe Perry (ENG)5
57 David Roe (ENG)3
41 Stephen Maguire (SCO)5
4 John Higgins (SCO)3
13 Graeme Dott (SCO)5
25 Drew Henry (SCO)3
13 Graeme Dott (SCO)0
4 John Higgins (SCO)5
4 John Higgins (SCO)5
36 Barry Pinches (ENG)0
41 Stephen Maguire (SCO)9
15 Jimmy White (ENG)3
3 Stephen Hendry (SCO)5
60 Jimmy Michie (ENG)1
3 Stephen Hendry (SCO)3
15 Jimmy White (ENG)5
15 Jimmy White (ENG)5
34 James Wattana (THA)4
15 Jimmy White (ENG)5
 Neil Robertson (AUS)3
12 David Gray (ENG)5
33 Fergal O'Brien (IRL)3
12 David Gray (ENG)2
 Neil Robertson (AUS)5
6 Ken Doherty (IRL)3
 Neil Robertson (AUS)5
15 Jimmy White (ENG)6
24 Tony Drago (MLT)4
8 Paul Hunter (ENG)5
45 Brian Morgan (ENG)1
8 Paul Hunter (ENG)2
24 Tony Drago (MLT)5
10 Alan McManus (SCO)4
24 Tony Drago (MLT)5
24 Tony Drago (MLT)5
14 Quinten Hann (AUS)1
14 Quinten Hann (AUS)5
 Simon Bedford (ENG)0
14 Quinten Hann (AUS)5
20 Anthony Hamilton (ENG)1
2 Mark Williams (WAL)1
20 Anthony Hamilton (ENG)5
Key[4][33]

w/o = walkover
w/d = withdrew

Final

[edit]

Scores in bold denote winning frame scores and the winning participant.[4]

Final: Best of 17 frames.[33] Referee:Jan Verhaas.
Hilton Conference Centre,Portomaso,Malta, 6 March 2004.[4]
Stephen Maguire (41)
 Scotland
9–3Jimmy White (15)
 England
Afternoon:121–2 (96),79–44 (72),137–0 (137),81–23,113–8 (103),58–6[i 1], 63–67,62–60 (62)
Evening:18–91 (78),77–1,0–125 (125),86–6 (57)
137Highest break125
2Century breaks1
650+ breaks2

Qualifying

[edit]

Qualifying for the tournament took place atPontin's inPrestatyn,Wales between 31 October and 5 November 2003.[34]

Round 1

[edit]

Best of 9 frames

EnglandAndrew Norman4–5ScotlandSteven Bennie
EnglandAndrew Higginson2–5WalesIan Preece
ScotlandBilly Snaddon4–5EnglandMartin Gould
EnglandPaul Wykes3–5EnglandPaul Sweeny
EnglandRory McLeod5–2EnglandCarlo Giagnacovo
EnglandPeter Lines2–5EnglandTom Ford
WalesPaul Davies3–5EnglandAdrian Rosa
Republic of IrelandColm Gilcreest5–4NorwayKurt Maflin
EnglandMunraj Pal5–4EnglandChris Melling
WalesRyan Day5–3ChinaLiu Song
EnglandMatthew Couch1–5EnglandMichael Rhodes
EnglandCraig Butler5–1ThailandSupoj Saenla
ScotlandMartin Dziewialtowski5–1EnglandMichael Wild
ThailandAtthasit Mahitthi5–3EnglandAndy Neck
Republic of IrelandLeo Fernandez5–4WalesIan Sargeant
ThailandKwan Poomjang5–4CyprusMehmet Husnu
EnglandRicky Walden5–1EnglandJames Leadbetter
WalesLee Walker5–2CanadaAlain Robidoux
EnglandLuke Fisher2–5ScotlandScott MacKenzie
Northern IrelandJason Prince5–4ChinaDing Junhui
EnglandJoe Johnsonw/d–w/oRepublic of IrelandGarry Hardiman
Northern IrelandTerry Murphy5–1Scotland Gary Thomson
EnglandWayne Brown1–5AustraliaNeil Robertson
IcelandKristján Helgasonw/d–w/oEnglandLuke Simmonds
EnglandTony Jones2–5EnglandDarryn Walker
EnglandDavid Gilbert3–5WalesPhilip Williams
EnglandAdrian Gunnell5–1Republic of IrelandJoe Delaney
EnglandJason Ferguson5–2EnglandStuart Mann
EnglandSimon Bedford5–3EnglandStephen Croft
EnglandJamie Cope5–4England Ian Brumby
Australia Johl Younger2–5AustraliaSteve Mifsud
EnglandBradley Jones1–5Northern IrelandJoe Meara

Round 2–5

[edit]
Round 2
Best of 9 frames
Round 3
Best of 9 frames
Round 4
Best of 9 frames
Round 5
Best of 9 frames
ScotlandSteven Bennie3EnglandShaun Murphy4EnglandJonathan Birch5Hong KongMarco Fu5
WalesIan Preece5WalesIan Preece5WalesIan Preece3EnglandJonathan Birch0
EnglandMartin Gould5EnglandDave Finbow3Republic of IrelandMichael Judge5ScotlandChris Small5
EnglandPaul Sweeny4EnglandMartin Gould5EnglandMartin Gould2Republic of IrelandMichael Judge2
EnglandRory McLeod5EnglandAlfie Burden0EnglandBarry Hawkins5Northern IrelandJoe Swail5
EnglandTom Ford3EnglandRory McLeod5EnglandRory McLeod2EnglandBarry Hawkins3
EnglandAdrian Rosa2EnglandAndy Hicks3EnglandStuart Bingham5FinlandRobin Hull5
Republic of IrelandColm Gilcreest5Republic of IrelandColm Gilcreest5Republic of IrelandColm Gilcreest2EnglandStuart Bingham1
EnglandMunraj Pal5Northern IrelandPatrick Wallace5ScotlandStephen Maguire5WalesDominic Dale0
WalesRyan Day4EnglandMunraj Pal4Northern IrelandPatrick Wallace2ScotlandStephen Maguire5
EnglandMichael Rhodes4EnglandDavid Roe5EnglandGary Wilkinson2EnglandMark King4
EnglandCraig Butler5EnglandCraig Butler0EnglandDavid Roe5EnglandDavid Roe5
ScotlandMartin Dziewialtowski5EnglandSean Storey5ScotlandJamie Burnett3ScotlandDrew Henry5
ThailandAtthasit Mahitthi2ScotlandMartin Dziewialtowski3EnglandSean Storey5EnglandSean Storey1
Republic of IrelandLeo Fernandez4PakistanShokat Ali5EnglandBarry Pinches5EnglandRobert Milkins1
ThailandKwan Poomjang5ThailandKwan Poomjang2PakistanShokat Ali2EnglandBarry Pinches5
EnglandRicky Walden0EnglandJimmy Michie5EnglandNigel Bond4WalesAnthony Davies4
WalesLee Walker5WalesLee Walker1EnglandJimmy Michie5EnglandJimmy Michie5
ScotlandScott MacKenzie5ScotlandMarcus Campbell4ThailandJames Wattana5EnglandAli Carter4
Northern IrelandJason Prince2ScotlandScott MacKenzie5ScotlandScott MacKenzie3ThailandJames Wattana5
Republic of IrelandGarry Hardiman5EnglandMike Dunn5Republic of IrelandFergal O'Brien5EnglandJohn Parrott4
Northern IrelandTerry Murphy4Republic of IrelandGarry Hardiman1EnglandMike Dunn3Republic of IrelandFergal O'Brien5
AustraliaNeil Robertson5WalesDarren Morgan2EnglandMark Davis1EnglandIan McCulloch1
EnglandLuke Simmonds0AustraliaNeil Robertson5AustraliaNeil Robertson5AustraliaNeil Robertson5
EnglandDarryn Walker1BelgiumBjorn Haneveer5EnglandBrian Morgan5EnglandMark Selby1
WalesPhilip Williams5WalesPhilip Williams3BelgiumBjorn Haneveer4EnglandBrian Morgan5
EnglandAdrian Gunnell5EnglandNick Walker0Northern IrelandGerard Greene4MaltaTony Drago[i 2]5
EnglandJason Ferguson1EnglandAdrian Gunnell5EnglandAdrian Gunnell5EnglandAdrian Gunnell2
EnglandSimon Bedford5EnglandNick Dyson4EnglandStuart Pettman2EnglandDave Harold4
EnglandJamie Cope3EnglandSimon Bedford5EnglandSimon Bedford5EnglandSimon Bedford5
AustraliaSteve Mifsud4EnglandRod Lawler5EnglandMichael Holt5EnglandAnthony Hamilton5
Northern IrelandJoe Meara5Northern Ireland Joe Meara1EnglandRod Lawler3EnglandMichael Holt2

Century breaks

[edit]

[34]

Qualifying stage centuries

[edit]

Televised stage centuries

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Maguire was awarded the frame when White violated thethree-miss rule.
  2. ^Match was held over to the venue in Malta.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"European Open Prize Money".worldsnooker.com.World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association. Archived fromthe original on 5 April 2004. Retrieved27 January 2023.
  2. ^Camilleri, Valhmor (7 March 2004)."Magnificent Maguire stuns White to land first title".The Times of Malta.Archived from the original on 27 January 2023. Retrieved27 January 2023.
  3. ^European Open. German Open. German Masters. Irish Open. cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk (Chris Turner's Snooker Archive). Retrieved 12 September 2010.Archived 16 February 2012
  4. ^abcde"European Open 2004"Archived 2021-04-26 at theWayback Machine. Snooker.org. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  5. ^"Welsh Open 2004"Archived 2011-07-18 at theWayback Machine. Snooker.org. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  6. ^"European Open 2003"Archived 2011-07-18 at theWayback Machine. Snooker.org. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  7. ^Yates, Phil."Hunter hoping to sustain peak form"[dead link].The Times. 1 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  8. ^Proby, Johnny."Irish interest ends in Malta"Archived 2005-01-12 at theWayback Machine.RTÉ Sport. 2 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  9. ^abcd"Davis squeezes past Swail" .BBC Sport. 1 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  10. ^abYates, Phil."Small overcomes pain and Stevens"[dead link].The Times. 2 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  11. ^Dee, John."Snooker: O'Sullivan ahead in century race"Archived 2019-02-19 at theWayback Machine.The Daily Telegraph. 2 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  12. ^abDee, John."Snooker: Williams shocked by Hamilton"Archived 2016-03-01 at theWayback Machine.The Daily Telegraph. 3 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  13. ^abc"Williams falls at the first" .BBC Sport. 2 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  14. ^Proby, Johnny."Higgins easily through in Malta"Archived 2005-02-05 at theWayback Machine.RTÉ Sport. 2 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  15. ^"O'Sullivan eases past Small".BBC Sport. 3 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  16. ^"O'Sullivan into quarters, Davis falls to Lee".RTÉ Sport. 3 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  17. ^ab"White too strong for Hendry".BBC Sport. 3 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  18. ^abYates, Phil."Drago earns place in last eight with help from the locals"[dead link].The Times. 4 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  19. ^Dee, John."Snooker: White hot effort bad for Hendry"Archived 2019-07-27 at theWayback Machine.The Daily Telegraph. 4 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  20. ^Proby, Johnny."White and Higgins safely through"Archived 2005-01-12 at theWayback Machine.RTÉ Sport. 3 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  21. ^Dee, John."Snooker: Maguire reaches first final"Archived 2016-03-04 at theWayback Machine.The Daily Telegraph. 6 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  22. ^ab"Lee ends O'Sullivan hopes" .BBC Sport. 4 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  23. ^Dee, John."Snooker: O'Sullivan off colour"Archived 2016-03-10 at theWayback Machine.The Daily Telegraph. 5 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  24. ^Yates, Phil."White wobbles on way to semi-finals"[dead link].The Times. 5 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  25. ^Boylan, James."White seals final place".RTÉ Sport. 6 March 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  26. ^abcdYates, Phil."White on verge of glory after composed display"Archived 2021-01-15 at theWayback Machine.The Times. 6 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  27. ^abc"White through to final" .BBC Sport. 5 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  28. ^ab"Maguire overwhelms White" .BBC Sport. 6 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  29. ^"Sport in Brief"[dead link].The Times. 8 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  30. ^ab"Maguire ready for big time" .BBC Sport. 10 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  31. ^ab"Maguire hails Griffiths" .BBC Sport. 7 March 2004. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  32. ^"White laments poor display" .BBC Sport. 22 March 2004. Retrieved 3 October 2010.
  33. ^abc"2004 European Open". World of Snooker. Archived fromthe original on 5 June 2004. Retrieved14 November 2020.
  34. ^ab"2003-4 European Open". Global Snooker Centre. Archived fromthe original on 18 June 2004. Retrieved27 January 2023.

Sources

[edit]
European Open
Irish Open
Malta Cup
European Masters
Ranking events
Non-ranking events
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