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Home Nations Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Snooker tournament
Home Nations Series
Tournament information
LocationBrentwood
Belfast
Edinburgh
Llandudno
CountryUnited Kingdom
Established2016; 10 years ago (2016)
Organisation(s)World Snooker Tour
Format4ranking events
Winner's share£150,000 (series)
£100,000 (per event)
Recent edition2024–25
Current champion Neil Robertson (AUS)

TheHome Nations Series (officially theBetVictor Home Nations Series for sponsorship reasons) is a series ofrankingsnooker tournaments organised by theWorld Snooker Tour, held throughout the season in each of the fourhome nations in theUnited Kingdom under the names ofEnglish Open,Welsh Open,Scottish Open andNorthern Ireland Open.[1] The series was devised in 2015 byBarry Hearn, the chairman of the tour at the time, and started its first edition during the2016–17 snooker season.

The series features an inclusion of two wildcard spots for the local amateur players in each event, selected by the respective national governing bodies.[2] The best-performing player of the series is entitled to the Home Nations Bonus (BetVictor Bonus), a £150,000 bonus prize awarded on top of the player's winnings.Neil Robertson is the current series champion.[3]

History

[edit]
TheWaterfront Hall inBelfast has hosted the Northern Ireland Open since 2017
TheBrentwood Centre inEssex hosts the English Open
Further information:Classic (snooker),International Open (snooker),Scottish Masters, andNorthern Ireland Trophy

Whilst professional snooker tournaments were increasing in popularity throughout theBritish Isles during the 1980s, the events are largely uncoordinated; there was never a snooker season with all four home nations holding at least one open event within the same season.

On 29 April 2015, it is announced that from the2016–17 snooker season on, a "Home Nations Series" would be added to the season's calendar. Being the home of snooker, the series includes tournaments of the four countries in the United Kingdom by combining the existingScottish Open andWelsh Open with the newly createdEnglish Open and theNorthern Ireland Open. There was a special bonus of £1 million on offer to the player who would win all four tournaments in the same season until 2020, when it was dropped in light of the then-ongoingCOVID-19 pandemic.[4] As for the individual events of the series, they offer the second-lowest prize fund of all regular format snooker ranking events only ahead of theBritish Open (theSnooker Shoot Out has the lowest prize fund of all ranking events).

The series received a new logo as a part of the WST's rebranding in 2024.

Timeline of Home Nations snooker open events

Trophies and prizes

[edit]

The trophies of the individual tournaments are named after well-known snooker players of the respective countries:

BetVictor Bonus

[edit]

Besides the prize money players could earn within an event, a bonus prize of £150,000 is also awarded to the player who earned the most cumulative prize money across all the Home Nations Series events. It was initially set up under theEuropean Series banner since the2021-22 season, where all Home Nations Series events were included; it was until the2024-25 season when the European Series was discontinued, and the bonus prize is now won solely based on the performance within the Home Nations Series events.[9]

For previous BetVictor Series Bonus winners, seeEuropean Series § Series winners.
SeasonWinnerBonus prizeRef.
2024–25 Neil Robertson (AUS)£150,000[10]

Format

[edit]

All tournaments within the series are ranking tournaments of theWorld Snooker Tour and are played with 128 players. After first nominating all professional players, the wildcard players will be nominated and finally top‑up players from theQ School order of merit. Up to and including the last 16, the matches are played as best‑of‑seven frames, in the quarter‑finals as best‑of‑nine, semi‑finals as best‑of‑eleven frames, and in the final best‑of‑seventeen.

From inception, and until the2024‍–‍25 season, the tournaments were generally played as a flat‑draw format. In the2021‍–‍22 season, the last 128 round was modified slightly by being turned into a mini‑qualifying round, where players outside of the top 16 have to win a match in order to play at the final venue. The top 16 still play in the qualifying round, but their matches are held over to be played at the final venue instead.[11]

Starting from the 2024‍–‍25 season, all tournaments in the series were changed to adopt a tiered system, bringing them more into line with other events that have moved towards protecting higher-ranked professionals. The new format means that the Top 32 players on the world rankings at the designated cut‑off point are automatically sent through to the Last 64 round and will not play a qualifying round. Everyone below the Top 32 will play in a two‑round qualifying format: the first round will see those professionals seeded 65‍–‍96 playing in a match against those professionals seeded 97‍–‍128. The winners of that first round will play in a second round, where they will be facing professionals seeded 33‍–‍64, with the qualifying winners being placed randomly against the Top 32. The justification for the change in format was described by the World Snooker Tour as "giving the lower ranked players the opportunity to earn prize money through the earlier rounds and beyond, while ensuring that television audiences and ticket‑holders can see the leading players at the final venue."[12]

Results

[edit]
SeasonTournamentCityWinnerScoreRunner-up
2016–17English OpenManchester Liang Wenbo (CHN)9–6 Judd Trump (ENG)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Mark King (ENG)9–8 Barry Hawkins (ENG)
Scottish OpenGlasgow Marco Fu (HKG)9–4 John Higgins (SCO)
Welsh OpenCardiff Stuart Bingham (ENG)9–8 Judd Trump (ENG)
2017–18English OpenBarnsley Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)9–2 Kyren Wilson (ENG)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Mark Williams (WAL)9–8 Yan Bingtao (CHN)
Scottish OpenGlasgow Neil Robertson (AUS)9–8 Cao Yupeng (CHN)
Welsh OpenCardiff John Higgins (SCO)9–7 Barry Hawkins (ENG)
2018–19English OpenCrawley Stuart Bingham (ENG)9–7 Mark Davis (ENG)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Judd Trump (ENG)9–7 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
Scottish OpenGlasgow Mark Allen (NIR)9–7 Shaun Murphy (ENG)
Welsh OpenCardiff Neil Robertson (AUS)9–7 Stuart Bingham (ENG)
2019–20English OpenCrawley Mark Selby (ENG)9–1 David Gilbert (ENG)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Judd Trump (ENG)9–7 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
Scottish OpenGlasgow Mark Selby (ENG)9–6 Jack Lisowski (ENG)
Welsh OpenCardiff Shaun Murphy (ENG)9–1 Kyren Wilson (ENG)
2020–21English OpenMilton Keynes Judd Trump (ENG)9–8 Neil Robertson (AUS)
Northern Ireland OpenMilton Keynes Judd Trump (ENG)9–7 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
Scottish OpenMilton Keynes Mark Selby (ENG)9–3 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
Welsh OpenNewport Jordan Brown (NIR)9–8 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)
2021–22Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Mark Allen (NIR)9–8 John Higgins (SCO)
English OpenMilton Keynes Neil Robertson (AUS)9–8 John Higgins (SCO)
Scottish OpenLlandudno Luca Brecel (BEL)9–5 John Higgins (SCO)
Welsh OpenNewport Joe Perry (ENG)9–5 Judd Trump (ENG)
2022–23Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Mark Allen (NIR)9–4 Zhou Yuelong (CHN)
Scottish OpenEdinburgh Gary Wilson (ENG)9–2 Joe O'Connor (ENG)
English OpenBrentwood Mark Selby (ENG)9–6 Luca Brecel (BEL)
Welsh OpenLlandudno Robert Milkins (ENG)9–7 Shaun Murphy (ENG)
2023–24English OpenBrentwood Judd Trump (ENG)9–7 Zhang Anda (CHN)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Judd Trump (ENG)9–3 Chris Wakelin (ENG)
Scottish OpenEdinburgh Gary Wilson (ENG)9–5 Noppon Saengkham (THA)
Welsh OpenLlandudno Gary Wilson (ENG)9–4 Martin O'Donnell (ENG)
2024–25English OpenBrentwood Neil Robertson (AUS)9–7 Wu Yize (CHN)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Kyren Wilson (ENG)9–3 Judd Trump (ENG)
Scottish OpenEdinburgh Lei Peifan (CHN)9–5 Wu Yize (CHN)
Welsh OpenLlandudno Mark Selby (ENG)9–6 Stephen Maguire (SCO)
2025–26English OpenBrentwood Mark Allen (NIR)9–8 Zhou Yuelong (CHN)
Northern Ireland OpenBelfast Jack Lisowski (ENG)9–8 Judd Trump (ENG)
Scottish OpenEdinburgh Chris Wakelin (ENG)9–2 Chang Bingyu (CHN)
Welsh OpenLlandudno

Records

[edit]

The highest record number of tournaments won in the same season is two, being achieved byMark Selby in the2019–20 season (English and Scottish Open),Gary Wilson in the2023–24 season (Scottish and Welsh Open), andJudd Trump in the2020–21 and the2023–24 seasons (English and Northern Ireland Open).

No player has yet to win all four tournaments in their career, and no native players have won the Scottish and Welsh Open since 2000, before the series was even formed.

Champions

[edit]
PlayerTotalEnglish
Open
Northern
Ireland
Open
Scottish
Open
Welsh
Open
Winning
span
 Judd Trump (ENG)624002018–2023
 Mark Selby (ENG)520212019–2025
 Neil Robertson (AUS)420112017–2024
 Mark Allen (NIR)412102018–2025
 Gary Wilson (ENG)300212022–2024
 Stuart Bingham (ENG)210012017–2018
 Liang Wenbo (CHN)110002016
 Mark King (ENG)101002016
 Marco Fu (HKG)100102016
 Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG)110002017
 Mark Williams (WAL)101002017
 John Higgins (SCO)100012018
 Shaun Murphy (ENG)100012020
 Jordan Brown (NIR)100012021
 Luca Brecel (BEL)100102021
 Joe Perry (ENG)100012022
 Robert Milkins (ENG)100012023
 Kyren Wilson (ENG)101002024
 Lei Peifan (CHN)100102024
 Jack Lisowski (ENG)101002025
 Chris Wakelin (ENG)100102025
Total events3910101092016–2025

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Home Nations Series".Livesnooker.com. Archived fromthe original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved10 January 2018.
  2. ^"Home Nations Snooker Events To Include Wild Cards - World Snooker".Worldsnooker.com. 23 July 2016. Retrieved10 January 2018.
  3. ^Tour, World Snooker (2025-02-11)."Robertson Wins BetVictor Bonus".World Snooker Tour. Retrieved2025-09-19.
  4. ^Slater, Nigel (23 October 2020)."Barry Hearn reveals why he's dropped snooker's £1 million bonus".theoldgreenbaize.com.
  5. ^"English Open snooker trophy named after Steve Davis".World Snooker Tour. 26 Sep 2016. Archived fromthe original on February 20, 2020. Retrieved12 August 2023.
  6. ^"Northern Ireland Open trophy to be named after Alex Higgins".World Snooker Tour. 27 Sep 2016. Archived fromthe original on February 20, 2020. Retrieved12 August 2023.
  7. ^"Scottish Open trophy named after Stephen Hendry".World Snooker Tour. 30 Sep 2016. Archived fromthe original on February 20, 2020. Retrieved12 August 2023.
  8. ^"Welsh Open trophy honour for Reardon".World Snooker Tour. 28 Sep 2016. Archived fromthe original on February 20, 2020. Retrieved12 August 2023.
  9. ^"Neil Robertson wins Home Nations Series BetVictor Bonus prize and collects £150,000".Totally Snookered. 2025-02-15. Retrieved2025-03-12.
  10. ^Tour, World Snooker (2025-02-11)."Robertson Wins BetVictor Bonus".World Snooker Tour. Retrieved2025-03-12.
  11. ^"2021-22 Snooker Calendar Announced".wst.tv. 7 May 2021. Archived fromthe original on May 6, 2021. Retrieved7 May 2021.
  12. ^"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. Retrieved5 April 2024.
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