| 2018 Champion of Champions | 11 November 2018 | Ronnie O'Sullivan|ENGSummaryThe event featured 16 participants, split into four groups of four players. There were eight seeded players, based on the world snooker rankings, and each of the top four seeds was placed into a separate group. As defending champion, Ronnie O'Sullivan was seeded first, world champion Judd Trump second, Mark Selby third and Neil Robertson fourth. Each group was played over the course of a single day as single-elimination, rather than a round-robin competition.Group stagesThe championship began on 4 November 2019, with players from group four competing in the first round. The opening match was between Neil Robertson and 2019 Championship League winner Martin Gould. Robertson defeated Gould 4–0, the highest of the match being just 67. In the other group four match, 2019 China Championship winner Shaun Murphy played Reanne Evans, the 2019 World Women's Snooker champion. Speaking to the press before the match, Evans reflected that whilst it was an honour to play in the competition despite not being on the World Snooker Tour, there was still a disparity between the men's and women's games. She also commented that the prize money for appearing at the event was double that of any she had received before, despite having won the World Women's Championship on 12 occasions. Murphy developed an early lead by winning the first three frames of the match, before Evans took the next three to force a. She went whilst playing a in the final frame, allowing Murphy to make a break of 130 and win the match 4–3. Murphy praised Evans afterwards, saying that he really hoped "we see more of Reanne on the main event". He also remarked later that the audience was supporting Evans and even his wife was "reluctant to wish good luck today". Murphy and Robertson competed in the group four final. Murphy again took the first three frames of the match, before Robertson drew level at 3–3 after a break of 100 and two breaks of 90 plus. The two players shared the next four frames, both experiencing issues with the table, to tie the match at 5–5. Robertson took the deciding frame to win 6–5. In the group three matches, played on 5 November, three-time world champion Mark Selby defeated first-time ranking event winner Yan Bingtao 4–0. The 2018 Scottish Open winner Mark Allen defeated the 2019 Indian Open winner Matthew Selt. In the group three final, Allen recovered from 1–2 behind to defeat Selby 6–2. The group two matches, played on 6 November, featured a first-round encounter between the reigning world champion Judd Trump and the six-red and World Cup winner Stephen Maguire. Trump won the first two frames, Maguire scoring just four points. Trump also took frames three and four, making three breaks of over 50, to win the match 4–0. The 2019 Snooker Shoot Out winner Thepchaiya played Kyren Wilson in the other group two first-round match. won three of the first four frames, with breaks of 63, 51 and 90, before Wilson made breaks of 102 and 98 to force a deciding frame. won the match 4–3 to progress to the group two final against Trump, which was a rematch of the 2019 World Open final, held the previous week. Trump won the first four frames of the match, scoring two centuries; won frame five but Trump then pulled ahead to 5–1. After replied with breaks of 61 and 66, Trump took the ninth frame to win the match 6–3. The group one matches took place on 7 November. World number three Ronnie O'Sullivan played 2019 World Seniors Championship winner Jimmy White in the first match. White took the first three frames, before O'Sullivan won the next two.[ During frame six, White suffered a at a crucial point where he could have won the match, allowing O'Sullivan to force a deciding frame, which he won.] Two former world champions, John Higgins and Stuart Bingham, met in the other group one first-round match, which Higgins won 4–2. O'Sullivan defeated Higgins 6–3 in the group one final. O'Sullivan's during the match was just 13 seconds per shot.Knockout stagesThe semi-finals were played as the best of 11 frames. The first semi-final was held on 8 November between Ronnie O'Sullivan and Neil Robertson. The pair had met in the finals of two events in the 2019 Coral Cup series—the Tour Championship and the Players Championship—with O'Sullivan winning on both occasions. The match was even throughout, with no more than one frame separating the two players.[ Robertson compiled a break of 108 in frame five to open up a 3–2 lead, but O'Sullivan won three of the next four frames to lead 5–4. Robertson won frame 10 with a break of 135, the highest of the tournament at that point, to force a deciding frame.] O'Sullivan gained the first chance of the final frame, but whilst playing the, allowing Robertson to make a break of 90 to win the match 6–5.[ Robertson later commented that the match was "definitely one of the best matches been involved in".] Mark Allen and Judd Trump met in the second semi-final on 9 November. Trump won the first three frames of the match, but Allen took the next four, including the tournament's highest break of 140, to lead 4–3. Trump made a break of 86 to tie the match, and then clinched frame nine after a when potting a. With a break of 98 in frame 10, Trump won the match 6–4. The final between Trump and Robertson was played as a best-of-19-frames match over two sessions on 10 November. The referee for the final was Desislava Bozhilova. Robertson won the first two frames, including a break of 112 in the second frame, and took an early 3–1 lead. Trump then made three consecutive centuries in frames five to seven, totalling 367 points without reply, to go ahead 4–3. Breaks of 96 and 111 gave Robertson the next two frames to retake the lead at 5–4 after the first session. Trump took the first frame of the second session, but Robertson replied with a break of 104. Trump won the next two frames to go 7–6 ahead, and retained the lead until Robertson made a break of 135 in the 16th frame to tie the match at 8–8. Trump in frame 17, but he secured the required and went 9–8 ahead. Robertson required a snooker in frame 18 to avoid losing the match; he succeeded in forcing a, which he potted to draw level at 9–9. He then made a break of 137 in the deciding frame to win the match 10–9. This was Robertson's second Champion of Champions victory, having won the event in 2015. He later commented: "I can't believe the pair of us playing a match like that. It's the best match I've ever been involved in". With a total of eight century breaks, the final set a new record for the most centuries in a best-of-19-frames match. There were 784,000 viewers on ITV4 across the two sessions of the final. This was the second-highest non-terrestrial viewing figure in the United Kingdom for the day, behind a Premier League football match between Liverpool F.C. and Manchester City F.C. on Sky Sports.
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