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2024 Welsh Open (snooker)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Snooker competition

2024BetVictorWelsh Open
Tournament information
Dates12–18 February 2024 (2024-02-12 –2024-02-18)
VenueVenue Cymru
CityLlandudno
CountryWales
OrganisationWorld Snooker Tour
FormatRanking event
Total prize fund£427,000
Winner's share£80,000
Highest break Gary Wilson (ENG) (147)
Final
Champion Gary Wilson (ENG)
Runner-up Martin O'Donnell (ENG)
Score9–4
2023
2025
Snooker tournament

The2024 Welsh Open (officially the2024 BetVictor Welsh Open) was a professionalsnooker tournament that took place from 12 to 18 February 2024 atVenue Cymru inLlandudno, Wales. Qualifiers took place from 25 to 27 January at theBarnsley Metrodome inBarnsley, England. The 33rd edition of theWelsh Open, first held in1992, it was the 13thranking event of the2023‍–‍24 season, following theGerman Masters and preceding thePlayers Championship. It was the fourth and last tournament in theHome Nations Series and the eighth and last tournament in the season'sEuropean Series. Sponsored byBetVictor, the tournament was broadcast by theBBC andDMAX domestically, byEurosport andDiscovery+ in the United Kingdom and Europe, and by other broadcasters worldwide. The winner received theRay Reardon Trophy and £80,000 from a total prize fund of £427,000.

Robert Milkins was the defending champion, having defeatedShaun Murphy 9‍–‍7 in the final of the2023 event, but he lost 0‍–‍4 toGary Wilson in the last 16. Wilson went on to win the tournament with a 9‍–‍4 victory over first‑time ranking finalistMartin O'Donnell. It was the third ranking title of his career, following his wins at theScottish Openin 2022 and2023. He advanced to a career high of 12th in the world rankings after his win.

The tournament's main stage produced a total of 52century breaks, the highest of which was amaximum break by Gary Wilson in the second frame of his semi‑final match againstJohn Higgins. It was Wilson's fifth maximum break in professional competition and the 11th maximum in Welsh Open history.Mark Allen made the 600th century break of his professional career in his last‑64 match againstMa Hailong. The qualifiers produced an additional 14 centuries, the highest being a 146 break byRobbie Williams in his match againstPeng Yisong.

Overview

[edit]
Venue Cymru inLlandudno, Wales, where the tournament was staged.

The event was the 33rd consecutive edition of theWelsh Open since it was first played in1992, making it snooker's third-longest-running ranking tournament after theWorld Championship andUK Championship.[1] The fourth and last event in the season'sHome Nations Series,[2] the eighth and last event in theEuropean Series,[3] and the 13th ranking tournament of the2023‍–‍24 season,[4] it took place from 12 to 18 February 2024 atVenue Cymru inLlandudno, Wales.[5][6] The defending champion wasRobert Milkins, who defeatedShaun Murphy 9‍–‍7 in the2023 final.[7]

Format

[edit]

Qualifiers took place from 25 to 27 January at theBarnsley Metrodome inBarnsley, England. Qualifying matches involving the top 16 players in the world rankings and two Welshwildcards (Riley Powell andLiam Davies) were held over and played at the main venue in Llandudno.[8] All matches were played as the best of sevenframes until the quarter‑finals, which were the best of nine. The semi‑finals were the best of 11, and the final was a best-of-17- frames match played over twosessions.[6]

Broadcasters

[edit]

The main stage of the event was broadcast byBBC Wales,BBC Online,BBC Red Button, andDMAX in the United Kingdom;Eurosport andDiscovery+ in the rest of Europe;CCTV-5,Migu [zh], andHuya in mainland China;Now TV in Hong Kong;Astro SuperSport in Malaysia and Brunei;TrueVisions in Thailand; Sportcast in Taiwan; Premier Sports Network in the Philippines; Fastsports in Pakistan; andMatchroom.live in all other territories.[9]

The qualifying matches were broadcast by Discovery+ in Europe (including the United Kingdom); Migu and Huya in China; and Matchroom.live in all other territories.[10]

Prize fund

[edit]

The tournament winner received theRay Reardon Trophy.[11] The breakdown of prize money for the event is shown below:[5]

  • Winner: £80,000
  • Runner-up: £35,000
  • Semi-final: £17,500
  • Quarter-final: £11,000
  • Last 16: £7,500
  • Last 32: £4,500
  • Last 64: £3,000
  • Highest break: £5,000
  • Total: £427,000

Summary

[edit]

Qualifying

[edit]
Amateur playerBarry Pinches(pictured in 2016) replacedDavid Grace, who withdrew. Pinches defeated the2020 champion and seventh seedShaun Murphy 4‍–‍3 on the lastblack.

Qualifying took place from 25 to 27 January at theBarnsley Metrodome inBarnsley, England.[12]Martin Gould withdrew for medical reasons and was replaced bySydney Wilson.[13]Si Jiahui won threeframes in a row to defeatStephen Maguire 4‍–‍2, whileMatthew Stevens made back-to-backcentury breaks of 137 and 120 as he defeatedLouis Heathcote 4‍–‍3.[12][14]Robbie Williams made a 146 break, the highest of his career and the highest of the qualifying stage, as hewhitewashedPeng Yisong. The2021 championJordan Brown lost the first three frames againstLyu Haotian but recovered to win four consecutive frames, taking thedeciding frame on the lastblack.Stuart Bingham andZhou Yuelong received warnings forconceding frames before thesnookers required stage in their respective defeats toMarco Fu andAdam Duffy.[15]Fan Zhengyi defeated the2022 championJoe Perry 4‍–‍2.David Gilbert made a 136 break as he whitewashedKen Doherty, who scored only 15 points in the match.[16][12][17] Three-time winnerStephen Hendry lost 2‍–‍4 toRoss Muir.[18]

Qualifying matches featuring the top 16 seeds and two Welshwildcards were held over and played inLlandudno on 12 and 13 February.[8][12] The top two players in the world rankings,Ronnie O'Sullivan andJudd Trump, withdrew from the tournament and were replaced respectively by Alfie Davies andDuane Jones, both Welsh amateurs.[19][20]David Grace also withdrew and was replaced by amateurBarry Pinches,[21] who came from 2‍–‍3 behind to defeat the seventh seedShaun Murphy, winning the deciding frame on the last black after requiring asnooker.[12][22] The defending championRobert Milkins trailedJamie Jones 2‍–‍3 but won the match after taking the deciding frame on thecolours.Neil Robertson made eight breaks of 50 or more, including a 103, as he defeatedJackson Page 4‍–‍1.Barry Hawkins made a 142 break as he whitewashedHe Guoqiang.[23] The reigning World ChampionLuca Brecel won his first professional match in two months as he defeatedJiang Jun in a decider.Mark Selby defeatedYuan Sijun 4‍–‍2, winning the match in the 69-minute sixth frame after Yuan failed six times to escape from a snooker on the lastblue ball.[24]Elliot Slessor defeated the 11th seedAli Carter 4‍–‍1.[6]

Early rounds

[edit]

Last 64

[edit]
Mark Allen(pictured in 2015) compiled his 600th careercentury break during his whitewash win overMa Hailong.

The last-64 matches were played from 12 to 14 February as the best of seven frames.[6] The defending champion Milkins made breaks of 140 and 83 to defeatAllan Taylor.Xiao Guodong made a 134 break to tie the scores at 3‍–‍3 against Hawkins, but Hawkins won the deciding frame.Jamie Clarke was whitewashed by Duffy.Gary Wilson made two century breaks of 120 and 105 in his 4‍–‍2 win overIulian Boiko, andMark Williams defeatedSanderson Lam 4‍–‍3, making breaks of 90, 117, and 96. Robbie Williams defeated the 12th seedDing Junhui 4‍–‍2, making a 119 break in the fifth frame.Ricky Walden lost the first three frames against Stevens but recovered to win the match by taking four consecutive frames.Martin O'Donnell made breaks of 113 and 97 as he defeatedChris Wakelin 4‍–‍1.Mark Allen whitewashed tour debutantMa Hailong, making atotal clearance of 141 in the third frame, the 600th century of his professional career.[25][26]Jack Lisowski beatLiam Pullen 4‍–‍2, winning the final frame on the last black.[27]

Elliot Slessor received awalkover to the last 32 afterAndrew Higginson withdrew.[6] Higginson's father, Dave Higginson, died on the morning of 14 February.[28]Stan Moody made a 103 break to tie the scores at 2‍–‍2 against Brown and went on to win in a deciding frame. FacingDominic Dale, Alfie Davies made a 125 break in the first frame and led 3‍–‍1, but Dale recovered to win the match in a decider. Brecel made breaks of 83, 119, 62, and 75 as he whitewashedJoe O'Connor, who scored only 29 points in the match.Kyren Wilson made a 111 break to win the first frame againstAnthony Hamilton, but Hamilton won four frames in a row for a 4‍–‍1 victory. After losing the first two frames, Dott won four in a row to defeatWu Yize 4‍–‍2, whileDylan Emery beatNoppon Saengkham by the same score, making a 121 break in the sixth frame.Jak Jones defeated the 14th seedZhang Anda 4‍–‍1. The sixth seed Selby lost 2‍–‍4 toAaron Hill in a match that included a 10-minutesafety battle on the lastgreen in the fourth frame.[29] Afterward, Hill commented: "Mark [Selby] is one of the greats and one of the players I look up to, I know my game is good enough to be beating them."[28]

Last 32

[edit]

The last-32 matches were played from 14 to 15 February as the best of seven frames.[6]Anthony McGill defeated the ninth seed and two-time winner Mark Williams 4‍–‍1.[29]Matthew Selt made a 135 break in his 4‍–‍1 win over Duane Jones. Robbie Williams defeated Duffy 4‍–‍2. Milkins made breaks of 77 and 91 as he whitewashed Gilbert. Higgins defeatedRyan Day 4‍–‍1, making a 124 break in the third frame, and Allen made breaks of 63, 76, 110, and 52 to defeat Si 4‍–‍1. Neil Robertson made breaks of 68 and 69 to win the first two frames against Walden, but Walden took four consecutive frames with breaks of 96, 68, 69, and 65 to win 4‍–‍2. Trailing Wilson 1‍–‍3, Lisowski won the next two frames with breaks of 65 and 113, but Wilson won the deciding frame on thecolours.[28]

After losing the first two frames toDaniel Wells, Fu tied the scores with back-to-back centuries of 122 and 113 and went on to win 4‍–‍2.Hossein Vafaei made a 116 break against Jak Jones, but Jones won 4‍–‍2. Dale defeated Moody 4‍–‍1, making a 122 break in the second frame. Hamilton won the first two frames against O'Donnell, taking the first frame after twore-racks and the second with a 133 break. However, O'Donnell won four frames in a row, making breaks of 71, 62, and 110, as he secured a 4‍–‍2 victory.Tom Ford defeated Hawkins 4‍–‍1. Fan lost the first frame to Hill, but took the next four with breaks of 80, 59, 97, and 79 to win 4‍–‍1. Brecel defeated Dott 4‍–‍1 and Slessor beat Emery by the same score.[30]

Last 16

[edit]
John Higgins(pictured in 2014) recovered from a 1‍–‍3 deficit to beatMatthew Selt 4‍–‍3, winning thedeciding frame on thecolours.

The last-16 matches were played on 15 February as the best of seven frames.[6] Allen made a 110 break in the fourth frame to complete a whitewash win over Robbie Williams. Allen said: "I have come here to win, it would be great to add anotherHome Nations title to my cabinet. I am fighting for everything out there, choosing the correct shots and giving it my best." Wilson eliminated the defending champion Milkins, also with a whitewash. Trailing McGill 0‍–‍2, Walden made breaks of 138 and 99 as he won three frames in a row to lead McGill 3‍–‍2, but McGill took the last two frames for a 4‍–‍3 victory. Brecel lost the first frame to Ford but won four consecutive frames to reach his first ranking quarter-final ofthe season.[31]

From 1‍–‍3 behind against Selt, Higgins tied the scores at 3–3 and the match went to a deciding frame that lasted over 40 minutes. Higgins secured victory after Selt missed the lastyellow. Welshman Dale whitewashed Jones, and commented: "To win another ranking title would be unthinkable for me, at my age. But to do it in theWelsh Open would be the icing on the cake." Slessor won a deciding frame against Fan with a 77 break, and O'Donnell defeated Fu 4‍–‍2.[32]

Later rounds

[edit]

Quarter-finals

[edit]
The world number 76Martin O'Donnell(pictured in 2013) defeated the reigning World ChampionLuca Brecel 5‍–‍3. O'Donnell went on to reach the first ranking final of his career.

The quarter-finals were played on 16 February as the best of nine frames.[6] Higgins made breaks of 62 and 131 as he won the first two frames against Allen. Allen tied the scores at the mid-session interval but Higgins won three consecutive frames for a 5‍–‍2 victory, reaching his fourth ranking semi-final of the season. Higgins commented: "[Allen] is one of the elite players, you have to play well to beat him. It's a brilliant win for me." He attributed the win to his newcue, saying: "I went back to the size I used about 25 years ago. That seems to be working right now. Hopefully things can come together because I have been knocking on the door for a while and it hasn't opened yet."[33] Slessor compiled a 128 break as he took a 3‍–‍1 lead over Dale. Dale won two of the next three frames, but Slessor took the eighth to win 5‍–‍3 and reach the third ranking semi-final of his career. Saying he was "delighted to win", Slessor commented: "I have been working with [coach] Chris Henry this season and my game has turned a corner."[33][34]

Wilson won all four frames before the mid-session interval to lead McGill 4‍–‍0 and won the fifth on the last black to complete a whitewash victory. He said after the match: "I have tried to stick to what I'm doing, because it was working at the [2023 Scottish Open]. That has helped me to just go out and play without any rubbish in my head, and to be a bit more consistent. In the past I would not be able to play certain shots, but I don't feel that way any more."[35] The reigning World Champion Brecel led the world number 76 O'Donnell 2‍–‍1 and 3‍–‍2, but O'Donnell took the next two frames, making a 130 break in the sixth, to lead 4‍–‍3. O'Donnell then took frame eight on the last black to win 5‍–‍3. It was his second win over Brecel that season, after a 4‍–‍2 victory in the last 32 of the 2023 Scottish Open. O'Donnell reached his second career ranking semi-final, after the2018 Shoot Out.[36][37] He commented: "I do try hard out there, sometimes too hard. I still try to play as if it means everything, but I am able to handle defeats better and move on. I have played a bit quicker too and that seems to be helping."[35]

Semi-finals

[edit]

The semi-finals were played on 17 February as the best of 11 frames.[6] In the first semi-final, O'Donnell took a led 5‍–‍3 lead over Slessor. Slessor made breaks of 95 and 65 to force a deciding frame, but O'Donnell won the decider with a 126 break to reach the first ranking final of his career.[38][39] He commented: "It means everything to reach my first final. There have been some dark times in the last few years. My fiancée Anna and kids have picked me up and got me through those dark days." Calling his performance "useless" and describing his safety play as "embarrassing", Slessor said: "I have played some good stuff this week but it's very disappointing to play like that in the semis."[40]

In the second semi-final, Wilson faced Higgins, a five-time winner of the event.[41] Wilson attempted amaximum break in the first frame, but missed the 14thred to end the break on 104. Wilson successfully completed a maximum in the second frame, the fifth of his career and the 11th time a maximum had been made at the Welsh Open.[42] Wilson led 4‍–‍0 and 5‍–‍1 before Higgins won three frames in a row with breaks of 69, 66, and 78 to come within one frame at 5‍–‍4. Wilson took the 10th frame with a 73 break to win 6‍–‍4.[43][44] Wilson said: "I didn't do a lot wrong and played very well in patches." He added: "The 147 was early in the match, I wasn't even thinking about it at the start, I was just looking to build a lead." Higgins commented: "He was deadly for the first three-and-a-half frames, incredible. [Wilson] played superbly. I give him credit, there was nothing I could do."[38]

Final

[edit]
Gary Wilson(pictured in 2016) made amaximum break in the semi-finals and went on to secure his firstWelsh Open title, beatingMartin O'Donnell 9‍–‍4 in the final.

The final was a best-of-17-frames match, played over twosessions on 18 February, between the world number 16 Wilson and the world number 76 O'Donnell, withLeo Scullion officiating.[6] Wilson competed in his fifth ranking final, while O'Donnell contested his first. Wilson made a 98 break in the opening frame and produced three furtherhalf-century breaks to lead 4‍–‍0 and 5‍–‍1. O'Donnell was six points ahead in the seventh frame when he missed a pot on the last yellow; Wilson cleared the colours to lead 6‍–‍1. O'Donnell made a 92 break to win the last frame of the afternoon session, leaving Wilson with a four-frame advantage at 6‍–‍2.[45]

When play resumed for the evening session, O'Donnell won the 41-minute ninth frame after a re-rack. Wilson took the 10th with a 100 break, the only century of the final. O'Donnell won the 11th with an 85 break, but Wilson won the 43-minute 12th frame to lead 8‍–‍4 and went on to complete a 9‍–‍4 victory. It was Wilson's first Welsh Open title and his third ranking title, following his wins at theScottish Openin 2022 and 2023. His second ranking title of the season, it advanced him to a career high of 12th in the world rankings.[46] Wilson called the final a "scrappy game" and commented: "I lost mycue action in the last few frames. You go through ups and downs all the time—I'm just happy to get over the line and get another tournament." Runner-up O'Donnell, who moved up to 60th in the rankings after the tournament, congratulated his opponent but expressed disappointment with his performance, saying: "I felt okay at the start but then started missing too many easy balls and got tense. I will learn from today and hopefully there are good things coming for me."[47][48][49]

Main draw

[edit]

The draw for the tournament is shown below. Numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the top 32seeded players, and players in bold denote match winners. All matches were played as the best of seven frames until the quarter-finals, which were the best of nine. The semi-finals were the best of 11, and the final was a best-of-17-frames match played over twosessions.[50][51]

Top half

[edit]
Last 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
          
 Robert Milkins (ENG)(1)4
 Allan Taylor (ENG)1
EnglandRobert Milkins4
EnglandDavid Gilbert0
 David Gilbert (ENG)(32)4
 Oliver Lines (ENG)2
EnglandRobert Milkins0
EnglandGary Wilson4
 Jack Lisowski (ENG)(16)4
 Liam Pullen (ENG)2
EnglandJack Lisowski3
EnglandGary Wilson4
 Gary Wilson (ENG)(17)4
 Iulian Boiko (UKR)[a]2
EnglandGary Wilson5
ScotlandAnthony McGill0
 Anthony McGill (SCO)(24)4
 Long Zehuang (CHN)1
ScotlandAnthony McGill4
WalesMark Williams1
 Mark Williams (WAL)(9)4
 Sanderson Lam (ENG)3
ScotlandAnthony McGill4
EnglandRicky Walden3
 Ricky Walden (ENG)(25)4
 Matthew Stevens (WAL)3
EnglandRicky Walden4
AustraliaNeil Robertson2
 Neil Robertson (AUS)(8)4
 Stuart Carrington (ENG)3
EnglandGary Wilson6
ScotlandJohn Higgins4
 Mark Allen (NIR)(5)4
 Ma Hailong (CHN)0
Northern IrelandMark Allen4
ChinaSi Jiahui1
 Si Jiahui (CHN)(28)4
 Andrew Pagett (WAL)2
Northern IrelandMark Allen4
EnglandRobbie Williams0
 Ding Junhui (CHN)(12)2
 Robbie Williams (ENG)4
EnglandRobbie Williams4
EnglandAdam Duffy2
 Jamie Clarke (WAL)0
 Adam Duffy (ENG)4
Northern IrelandMark Allen2
ScotlandJohn Higgins5
 Ryan Day (WAL)(20)4
 David Lilley (ENG)2
WalesRyan Day1
ScotlandJohn Higgins4
 John Higgins (SCO)(13)4
 Tian Pengfei (CHN)1
ScotlandJohn Higgins4
EnglandMatthew Selt3
 Matthew Selt (ENG)(29)4
 Ross Muir (SCO)1
EnglandMatthew Selt4
WalesDuane Jones1
 Duane Jones (WAL)[b]4
 Liam Davies (WAL)1

Bottom half

[edit]
Last 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
          
 Alfie Davies (WAL)[c]3
 Dominic Dale (WAL)4
WalesDominic Dale4
EnglandStan Moody1
 Jordan Brown (NIR)3
 Stan Moody (ENG)4
WalesDominic Dale4
WalesJak Jones0
 Zhang Anda (CHN)(14)1
 Jak Jones (WAL)4
WalesJak Jones4
IranHossein Vafaei2
 Hossein Vafaei (IRN)(19)4
 Julien Leclercq (BEL)1
WalesDominic Dale3
EnglandElliot Slessor5
 Noppon Saengkham (THA)(22)2
 Dylan Emery (WAL)4
WalesDylan Emery1
EnglandElliot Slessor4
 Elliot Slessor (ENG)w/o
 Andrew Higginson (ENG)w/d
EnglandElliot Slessor4
ChinaFan Zhengyi3
 Fan Zhengyi (CHN)4
 Ben Mertens (BEL)2
ChinaFan Zhengyi4
Republic of IrelandAaron Hill1
 Mark Selby (ENG)(6)2
 Aaron Hill (IRL)4
EnglandElliot Slessor5
EnglandMartin O'Donnell6
 Barry Pinches (ENG)[d]1
 Daniel Wells (WAL)4
WalesDaniel Wells2
Hong KongMarco Fu4
 Marco Fu (HKG)4
 Zak Surety (ENG)3
Hong KongMarco Fu2
EnglandMartin O'Donnell4
 Kyren Wilson (ENG)(10)1
 Anthony Hamilton (ENG)4
EnglandAnthony Hamilton2
EnglandMartin O'Donnell4
 Chris Wakelin (ENG)(23)1
 Martin O'Donnell (ENG)4
EnglandMartin O'Donnell5
BelgiumLuca Brecel3
 Tom Ford (ENG)(18)4
 Ian Burns (ENG)2
EnglandTom Ford4
EnglandBarry Hawkins1
 Barry Hawkins (ENG)(15)4
 Xiao Guodong (CHN)3
EnglandTom Ford1
BelgiumLuca Brecel4
 Graeme Dott (SCO)4
 Wu Yize (CHN)2
ScotlandGraeme Dott1
BelgiumLuca Brecel4
 Luca Brecel (BEL)(2)4
 Joe O'Connor (ENG)0
Note: w/o =walkover; w/d = withdrawn

Final

[edit]
Final: Best of 17 frames. Referee:Leo Scullion
Venue Cymru,Llandudno, Wales, 18 February 2024[52]
Gary Wilson(17)
 England
9–4Martin O'Donnell
 England
Afternoon:98–1,74–44,102–0,106–5, 23–73,67–4,59–45, 1–92
Evening: 24–59,101–19 (100), 22–101,68–44,82–0
(frame 10)100Highest break92 (frame 8)
1Century breaks0

Qualifying

[edit]

Qualification for the tournament took place from 25 to 27 January at theBarnsley Metrodome inBarnsley, England. Matches involving the top 16 players in the world rankings and two Welshwildcards (Riley Powell andLiam Davies) were held over and played at the final venue.[8] Numbers in parentheses after the players' names denote the top 32seeded players, and players in bold denote match winners.[53][12]

Llandudno

[edit]

The results of the held-over matches played inLlandudno on 12 February were as follows:[12][50]

The result of the one held-over match played on 13 February was as follows:[12][50]

Barnsley

[edit]

The results of the qualifying matches played inBarnsley were as follows:[12][54]

25 January

[edit]

26 January

[edit]

27 January

[edit]

Century breaks

[edit]

Main stage centuries

[edit]

A total of 52century breaks were made during the main stage of the tournament.[50][55]

Qualifying stage centuries

[edit]

A total of 14 century breaks were made during the qualifying stage of the tournament.[54][56]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abIulian Boiko replacedMuhammad Asif, who withdrew.[6]
  2. ^abDuane Jones replacedJudd Trump, who withdrew.[19]
  3. ^abAlfie Davies replacedRonnie O'Sullivan, who withdrew.[21]
  4. ^abBarry Pinches replacedDavid Grace, who withdrew.[21]
  5. ^Haydon Pinhey replacedDean Young, who withdrew.[6]
  6. ^Sydney Wilson replacedMartin Gould, who withdrew.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Higgins wins record fifth Welsh crown".WPBSA. 4 March 2018.Archived from the original on 19 February 2024. Retrieved20 February 2024.
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  3. ^Caulfield, David (25 January 2024)."Welsh Open: qualifiers draw, schedule, and results".SnookerHQ.com. Retrieved12 September 2025.
  4. ^"Calendar 2023/2024 - snooker.org".www.snooker.org. Retrieved12 September 2025.
  5. ^ab"BetVictor Welsh Open".World Snooker Tour.Archived from the original on 19 February 2024. Retrieved19 February 2024.
  6. ^abcdefghijklm"BetVictor Welsh Open (2024)".snooker.org. 18 February 2024.Archived from the original on 19 February 2024. Retrieved19 February 2024.
  7. ^"Bob Bonanza: Milkins wins title and bonus".World Snooker Tour. 19 February 2023.Archived from the original on 4 February 2024. Retrieved19 February 2024.
  8. ^abc"BetVictor Welsh Open 2024 draw".World Snooker Tour. 21 December 2023. Archived fromthe original on 21 December 2023. Retrieved21 December 2023.
  9. ^"How to watch the BetVictor Welsh Open".World Snooker Tour. 6 February 2024.Archived from the original on 7 February 2024. Retrieved7 February 2024.
  10. ^"How to watch the qualifiers".World Snooker Tour. 18 January 2024.Archived from the original on 23 January 2024. Retrieved25 January 2024.
  11. ^"Welsh Open Snooker trophy named after legend Ray Reardon".BBC Sport. 28 September 2016. Retrieved12 September 2025.
  12. ^abcdefghi"Welsh Open Qualifiers (2024)".snooker.org. 18 February 2024.Archived from the original on 19 February 2024. Retrieved19 February 2024.
  13. ^"O'Sullivan, Gould and Vafaei withdraw".World Snooker Tour. 26 January 2024.Archived from the original on 27 January 2024. Retrieved27 January 2024.
  14. ^"Stevens through to Llandudno".World Snooker Tour. 25 January 2024.Archived from the original on 27 January 2024. Retrieved27 January 2024.
  15. ^"Welsh Open snooker: Stuart Bingham and Zhou Yuelong tumble out of Welsh Open amid controversial concession calls".Eurosport. 26 January 2024.Archived from the original on 26 January 2024. Retrieved7 February 2024.
  16. ^"2024 Welsh Open: David Gilbert v Ken Doherty".World Snooker Tour. 27 January 2024. Retrieved12 September 2025.
  17. ^"Boiko builds momentum".World Snooker Tour. 27 January 2024.Archived from the original on 27 January 2024. Retrieved27 January 2024.
  18. ^Kane, Desmond (25 January 2024)."Welsh Open snooker: Stephen Hendry loses to Ross Muir in qualifying as Gary Wilson, Graeme Dott and Si Jiahui advance".Eurosport.Archived from the original on 25 January 2024. Retrieved12 February 2024.
  19. ^ab"Trump withdraws from Welsh Open".World Snooker Tour. 6 February 2024.Archived from the original on 6 February 2024. Retrieved6 February 2024.
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