2018 World Cup of Pool
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Find sources: "2018 World Cup of Pool" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2021)
Find sources: "2018 World Cup of Pool" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2021)
Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 15–20 May |
Venue | Luwan Gymnasium |
City | Shanghai |
Country | China |
Organisation | Matchroom Sport |
Total prize fund | $250,000 |
Winner's share | 60,000ドル |
Final | |
Champion | China A |
Runner-up | Austria |
Score | 10–3 |
← 2017 2019 → |
Snooker tournament
The 2018 World Cup of Pool was the twelfth edition of the tournament. The event took place in Luwan Gymnasium, Shanghai, China, from 15 to 20 May 2018.[1]
Prize fund
[edit ]- Winners (per pair): 60,000ドル
- Runners-up (per pair): 30,000ドル
- Semi-finalists (per pair): 15,000ドル
- Quarter-finalists (per pair): 9,000ドル
- Last 16 losers (per pair): 4,500ドル
- Last 32 losers (per pair): 3,625ドル
Participating nations
[edit ]- Seeded teams:
- Austria (Mario He & Albin Ouschan)
- China A (Wu Jia-qing & Liu Haitao)
- Chinese Taipei (Chang Jung-Lin & Cheng Yu-hsuan)
- Philippines (Carlo Biado & Jeff de Luna)
- Germany (Ralf Souquet & Joshua Filler)
- USA (Shane Van Boening & Skyler Woodward)
- Spain (David Alcaide & Francisco Sánchez Ruíz)
- Netherlands (Niels Feijen & Marc Bijsterbosch)
- Canada (Jason Klatt & Alex Pagulayan)
- Japan (Naoyuki Ōi & Tōru Kuribayashi)
- Finland (Mika Immonen & Petri Makkonen)
- China B (Dejing Kong & Ming Wang)
- England (Imran Majid & Mark Gray)
- Greece (Alexander Kazakis & Nick Malaj)
- Russia (Ruslan Chinakhov & Fedor Gorst)
- Poland (Mateusz Śniegocki & Wiktor Zieliński)
- Unseeded teams:
- Albania (Eklent Kaçi & Edmond Zaja)
- Scotland (Jayson Shaw & Scott Gillespie)
- Sweden (Christian Sparrenloev-Fischer & Tomas Larsen)
- South Korea (Ryu Seung-woo & Jeong Young-hwa)
- Estonia (Denis Grabe & Mark Mägi)
- Indonesia (Arun & Feri Satriyadi)
- Singapore (Aloysius Yapp & Toh Lian Han)
- Thailand (Nitiwat Kanjanasri & Tanut Makkamontree)
- Malaysia (Muhammad Almie & Darryl Chia)
- Hong Kong (Lo Ho Sum & Robbie Capito)
- New Zealand (Matt Edwards & Marco Teutscher)
- Australia (James Delahunty & Justin Sajich)
- Chile (Alejandro Carvajal & Enrique Rojas)
- Kuwait (Bader Al Awadhi & Mohammad Al Khashawi)
- Vietnam (Dương Quốc Hoàng & Nguyễn Anh Tuấn)
- South Africa (Richard Halliday & Jacobus Le Roux)
Tournament bracket
[edit ] Round 1
Race to 7 Round 2
Race to 7 Quarter-finals
Race to 9 Semi-finals
Race to 9 Final
Race to 10
Race to 7 Round 2
Race to 7 Quarter-finals
Race to 9 Semi-finals
Race to 9 Final
Race to 10
1
Austria
7
Chile
3
1
Austria
7
16
Poland
6
16
Poland
7
Kuwait
4
1
Austria
9
8
Netherlands
3
9
Canada
3
Scotland
7
Scotland
2
8
Netherlands
7
8
Netherlands
7
Thailand
5
1
Austria
9
12
China B
8
5
Germany
7
5
Germany
5
12
China B
7
12
China B
7
12
China B
9
4
Philippines
1
13
England
7
13
England
0
4
Philippines
7
4
Philippines
7
1
Austria
3
2
China A
10
3
Chinese Taipei
7
Albania
1
3
Chinese Taipei
7
14
Greece
1
14
Greece
7
3
Chinese Taipei
9
6
USA
5
11
Finland
7
Malaysia
3
11
Finland
5
6
USA
7
6
USA
7
3
Chinese Taipei
7
2
China A
9
7
Spain
7
Vietnam
3
7
Spain
7
Sweden
3
10
Japan
5
Sweden
7
7
Spain
8
2
China A
9
15
Russia
4
2
China A
7
2
China A
7
Estonia
6
References
[edit ]- ^ "World Cup of Pool - Matchroom Pool". Matchroom Pool. Retrieved 2018年08月21日.