2021 UK Championship
The 2021 UK Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 23 November to 5 December 2021 at the York Barbican, in York, England. The event was the first Triple Crown and fifth ranking event of the 2021–22 snooker season. The tournament featured a prize fund of £1,009,000, with the winner receiving £200,000. It was sponsored by car retail company Cazoo and broadcast in the UK by the BBC and Eurosport.
Neil Robertson was the defending champion, having defeated Judd Trump 10–9 in the 2020 final, but he lost 2–6 in the first round to amateur John Astley. Many other top seeds exited the tournament in the early rounds, with 11 of the world's top 13 ranked players eliminated before the last-16 stage. For the first time in the tournament's history, no top-16 player reached the final, which was contested between China's Zhao Xintong and Belgium's Luca Brecel, both of whom made their first appearances in a Triple Crown final. Zhao won the event with a 10–5 victory in the final to claim his first ranking title. The event featured 119 century breaks, with Gary Wilson making the highest, his fourth career maximum break, in his first-round match against Ian Burns.
Aged 24, Zhao became the youngest winner of the UK Championship since Trump in 2011. He became the fourth non-British winner in the tournament's history, after Ireland's Patsy Fagan, China's Ding Junhui, and Australia's Robertson. He also became the fourth player from mainland China to win a ranking title, after Ding, Liang Wenbo and Yan Bingtao. His win enabled him to enter the top 16 for the first time and secure a place in the second Triple Crown event of the season, the 2022 Masters.
This edition of the tournament was the last to be played under the flat-128 draw format. From the following edition, the tournament reverted to a tiered draw format, with the top 16 being seeded through to the venue, with all others playing a World Championship-style qualifying event prior to the main stages.
Overview
The 2021 UK Championship was a professional snooker tournament that took place from 23 November to 5 December 2021 at the York Barbican, in York, England. The UK Championship was first held in 1977 as the United Kingdom Professional Snooker Championship, open to British residents only. At the 1984 event, it became a ranking tournament open to players of any nationality, which it has remained ever since. The event was the first Triple Crown tournament, and the fifth ranking event of the 2021–22 snooker season. There were 128 participants, 119 players from the World Snooker Tour, and 9 invited amateur players.The defending champion was Neil Robertson, who defeated Judd Trump 10–9 in the previous year's final. The tournament was broadcast live in the United Kingdom by BBC Sport, and shown on Eurosport in Europe. Worldwide, the event was covered by China Central Television and Superstars Online in China, and by Sky Sport in New Zealand. It was simulcast in Hong Kong by Now TV; DAZN covered the event across Canada, Brazil and the United States. It was sponsored by vehicle rental company Cazoo.
Prize fund
The breakdown of prize money for the event is shown below:- Winner: £200,000
- Runner-up: £80,000
- Semi-final: £40,000
- Quarter-final: £24,500
- Last 16: £17,000
- Last 32: £12,000
- Last 64: £6,500
- Highest : £15,000
- Total: £1,009,000
Summary
Reigning world champion Selby, Williams, Ding Junhui, and reigning Masters champion Yan Bingtao all lost in the last 64. Selby trailed world number 63 Hossein Vafaei 0–5, but won the next two frames before Vafaei a in frame eight to win the match 6–2. Williams led world number 56 Anthony Hamilton 3–0, but lost the match 5–6, after which he apologised for falling asleep during the sixth frame, stating he had been feeling unwell following a case of COVID-19. Ding lost 3–6 to world number 55 Sam Craigie, guaranteeing that he would drop out of the top 16 after the tournament and be ineligible to compete in the Masters for the first time since 2006. After Craigie potted the final pink in frame eight, referee Maike Kesseler awarded him the frame for a 5–3 lead while the cue ball was still in motion. Craigie then placed his cue on the table and the cue ball collided with it. Speaking for the BBC studio, pundit Ken Doherty argued that the referee should have called a foul, respotted the pink, and given Ding the opportunity to come back to the table and attempt to level the match at 4–4; however, the frame had been awarded to Craigie prematurely. Speaking on Eurosport, pundit Alan McManus also criticised Kesseler for awarding the frame before the cue ball had come to rest. Yan lost 3–6 to world number 53 Ben Woollaston.
Five more seeded players exited in the round of 32. Third seed Trump, the previous year's runner-up, suffered a shock 3–6 defeat to world number 35 Selt. John Higgins and Mark Allen fell victim to comebacks by their opponents, with Higgins losing 5–6 to Zhao Xintong after leading 5–3, and Allen losing 5–6 to David Gilbert after leading 5–2. Stephen Maguire was whitewashed 0–6 by world number 40 Luca Brecel, while Stuart Bingham lost 5–6 to world number 45 Noppon Saengkham, despite coming back from 0–5 behind to force a. Eleven of the world's top-13-ranked players were eliminated before the last-16 stage of the tournament. Overall, just five seeded players reached the last 16: Ronnie O'Sullivan, Kyren Wilson, Barry Hawkins, Jack Lisowski, and Anthony McGill. All five seeds progressed to the quarter-finals, along with Zhao, Brecel, and world number 102 Andy Hicks.
File:Zhao Xintong PHC 2016-1.jpg|thumb|alt=photo|Zhao Xintong won the first ranking event of his career, defeating Luca Brecel 10–5 in the final.
In the quarter-finals, Wilson defeated seven-time champion O'Sullivan. During their match, O'Sullivan repeatedly complained to referee Jan Verhaas about audience members distracting him as they entered and exited the auditorium, and interrupted his breaks to sit in his chair for several minutes at a time while the crowd settled down. He also requested that a photographer be removed from the arena floor. O'Sullivan came from 3–5 behind to level the match, but Wilson won the deciding frame for a 6–5 victory. The other quarter-finals were more one-sided as Brecel defeated McGill 6–2, Zhao won six consecutive frames to beat Lisowski 6–2, and Hawkins defeated Hicks 6–1. In the first semi-final, Brecel defeated Wilson 6–4, compiling four century breaks and three other breaks over 50, to become the first player from continental Europe to reach a Triple Crown final. In the second semi-final, Zhao defeated Hawkins 6–1, making a century break and an additional five breaks over 70, to reach his first ranking final.
The final was played on 5 December 2021 between Brecel and Zhao as the best-of-19 frames held over two. It was the first in the tournament's history not to feature a player in the top 16 in the world rankings, and the second not to feature a player from the United Kingdom. Zhao led 5–3 after the afternoon session, and then won five of the seven frames played in the evening session to defeat Brecel 10–5 and win the first ranking title of his career. Zhao became the tournament's fourth non-British winner, after Ireland's Patsy Fagan, China's Ding, and Australia's Robertson. He also became the fourth player from mainland China to win a ranking title, after Ding, Liang, and Yan. He moved up from 26th to ninth in the world rankings, which secured his place in the 2022 Masters in January. As runner-up, Brecel moved up the rankings from 40th to 18th.
Tournament draw
The draw for the event is shown below. Players in bold denote match winners.Top half
Section 1
Section 2
Section 3
Section 4
Bottom half
Section 5
Section 6
Section 7
Section 8
Finals
Final
Century breaks
A total of 119 century breaks were made during the tournament. Gary Wilson made the highest, his fourth career maximum break, in his first-round match against Ian Burns.- 147, 104 Gary Wilson
- 142, 115 Fergal O'Brien
- 139, 131, 120, 115, 108 Ronnie O'Sullivan
- 139 Li Hang
- 138, 129, 128, 103 Dominic Dale
- 138 Zhang Anda
- 136, 129, 107, 106, 100 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh
- 136, 118 Ben Woollaston
- 135, 133, 130, 117 Anthony McGill
- 135 Louis Heathcote
- 135 Andy Hicks
- 134, 131, 112 John Higgins
- 134, 129 Ding Junhui
- 134, 101 Ali Carter
- 133, 130, 112, 112, 105, 102 Luca Brecel
- 132, 131, 109 Graeme Dott
- 132, 100 Judd Trump
- 131, 128, 121, 119, 103, 100 Noppon Saengkham
- 131, 115 David Gilbert
- 131 Gerard Greene
- 130 Aaron Hill
- 130 Ashley Hugill
- 129, 102 Ricky Walden
- 128 Jordan Brown
- 128 Matthew Selt
- 128 Craig Steadman
- 127, 105, 104, 100 Stephen Maguire
- 126, 110 Jack Lisowski
- 125 Duane Jones
- 124 Neil Robertson
- 122, 121, 118, 102, 102 Cao Yupeng
- 122, 120, 120, 114, 110, 100 Zhao Xintong
- 121, 117, 115, 113, 110, 102 Kyren Wilson
- 120 Ian Burns
- 120 Gao Yang
- 119 John Astley
- 118 Yuan Sijun
- 115, 109 Wu Yize
- 115, 105 Hossein Vafaei
- 114, 113 Robbie Williams
- 114 Ben Hancorn
- 113 Stuart Carrington
- 113 Peter Lines
- 113 Kurt Maflin
- 112, 106 Mark Williams
- 111 Simon Lichtenberg
- 111 Joe Perry
- 110 Fan Zhengyi
- 107, 100 Yan Bingtao
- 107 Scott Donaldson
- 105 Ashley Carty
- 105 Sam Craigie
- 104 David Grace
- 104 Allan Taylor
- 103, 103 Barry Hawkins
- 103 Martin Gould
- 102 Michael White
- 101 Mark King
- 101 Lei Peifan