2007 WPA Men's World Nine-ball Championship

The 2007 World Nine-ball Championship was the 18th annual international nine-ball pool tournament for men sanctioned by the World Pool-Billiard Association (WPA). It was held at the Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines from 3–11 November 2007. It was the second consecutive time the tournament has been held in the Philippines.

2007 WPA World 9-Ball Championship
Tournament details
CountryPhilippines
CityPasay
Venue(s)International Convention Center
Dates3–11 November 2007 (2007-11-03 – 2007-11-11)
FormatDouble elimination / Single elimination
Participants128
Final positions
ChampionsEngland Daryl Peach
Runner-upPhilippines Roberto Gomez
← 2006
2010 →

The tournament is sponsored by Matchroom Sport, which has sponsored the event since 1999. 128 participants from 46 WPA member countries competed for US$400,000 in total prize money, including defending champion Ronato Alcano of the Philippines. The overall winner received a purse of $100,000, the highest-ever payout for the tournament.

Format edit

The Format of qualifying used on 2006 was used for 2007. Several last-minute qualifying tournaments were held in the Metro Manila area a few weeks before the tournament starts.

All matches are in winner's break: the winner of the previous rack will break on the next rack, it was reverted from alternate break used in 2006.

There are 32 seeded players prior to the group stages; they are distributed 2 per group. The defending champion, Ronnie Alcano, is seeded #1.

Also, a double-elimination tournament will be used for the group stages; instead of 32 groups of 4, there will be 16 groups of eight, with the top four advancing. Each player will be seeded 1–8 in their groups, with a routine double-elimination tournament following the first round; however the player that wins twice will advance to the quarterfinals and will not take part in other group matches, in contrast if a player loses two games, he is eliminated. The top four players in each group therefore would have won twice. After the group stages, the routine 64-man single elimination tournament follows.[citation needed]

In the initial group stages the format consists of races to 9 racks. The last 64 play races to 10 racks. This is followed by the round of 16 (quarterfinals and semifinals) where the races are to 11 racks. The race in the finals jumps to 17 racks.[1]

Notable occurrences edit

  • On day 1, a group match (race to 9) between Charles Williams and Ricky Yang took over 2 and half hours to complete, with both players accused of playing too slowly. Calls were made for moves to outlaw overly-slow play in future years.
  • On day 3, Jeremy Jones of the U.S. and Finland's Mika Immonen almost came to blows after Immonen eliminated Jones from contention, 9–6 at the group stages.[2]
  • There was high drama on day 4, Tuesday afternoon at the Big Dome when fire broke out in the lighting rig over Table 5 on the upper tier. Each of the outside tables has a light box with fluorescent tubes that light the table and a short circuit sent sparks flying and before long the box was ablaze. Matchroom Sport's John McDonald alerted venue staff and only his quick thinking saved the table as he and cameraman Lawrence 'Lol' Lustig covered it to stop debris and foam raining down onto the felt. Before long temporary lights were installed and play was able to commence at the designated time.
  • On the quarterfinals, Francisco Bustamante, leading Daryl Peach 10–9 in a race to 11 match, failed to play position on the 3-ball and snookered himself behind the 9-ball. A kick shot struck both the 3 and 9 balls, fluking the 9 into a corner pocket. With the player and crowd celebrating the win, a lengthy inquiry began, in which the referee and tournament officials studied frame-by-frame replays of the shot, before concluding that the 9 had been struck first, and the shot was therefore a foul. After the lengthy break in play, in which Bustamante insisted the shot had been legal, Peach held his nerve amongst a partisan Filipino crowd to run the last two racks of the match to win 11–10, en route to his World Championship victory the following day.

Players edit

By nation edit

The WPA considered the home nations of England and Scotland as separate entities for the tournament and the codes of "ENG" and "SCO" was subsequently shown in the TV broadcast instead of "GBR."[3]

Champion
Runner-up
Semifinals
Quarterfinals
Last 16
Last 32
Last 64
Group stages
  • 15 players: Philippines
  • 14 players: Chinese Taipei (Taiwan)
  • 11 players: United States
  • 7 players: Germany
  • 6 players: Canada and England
  • 5 players: Japan
  • 4 players: Australia
  • 3 players: China, Holland (Netherlands), Indonesia, Italy, Poland, Scotland, Serbia and Singapore.
  • 2 players: Chile, Hong Kong, Korea, Malaysia, Spain and Vietnam.
  • 1 player: Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Eritrea, Finland, Hungary, India, Iran, Ireland, Malta, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Qatar, Russia, Slovenia, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey and UAE

Seeded edit

Unseeded players who advanced to the round of 64 edit

Player boldfaced made it to the final.

Group stage edit

Group 1 edit

Group 2 edit

Group 3 edit

Group 4 edit

Group 5 edit

Group 6 edit

Group 7 edit

Group 8 edit

Group 9 edit

Group 10 edit

Group 11 edit

Group 12 edit

Knockout stages edit

Section 1 edit

Last 64
Race to 10
Nov 7
Last 32
Race to 10
Nov 8
Last 16
Race to 11
Nov 9
Quarterfinals
Race to 11
Nov 10
            
1   Alcano 6
17   Peach 10
17   Peach 10
  Lee 7
  Lee 10
  Hundal 6
17   Peach 11
  Stolka 5
  Erculj 3
  Stolka 10
  Stolka 10
  Wu Y-L 2
  Andam 5
  Wu Y-L 10
17   Peach 11
9   F Bustamante 10
9   F Bustamante 10
25   Alcaide 1
9   F Bustamante 10
  van den Berg 8
  van den Berg 10
23   Majid 4
9   F Bustamante 11
8   Pagulayan 2
8   Pagulayan 10
  Pham 6
8   Pagulayan 10
  Condo 2
  Condo 10
  Kwang 2

Section 2 edit

Last 64
Race to 10
Nov 7
Last 32
Race to 10
Nov 8
Last 16
Race to 11
Nov 9
Quarterfinals
Race to 11
Nov 10
            
  Ko 8
  Mladenovic 10
  Mladenovic 2
  Martel 10
  Tschudi 4
  Martel 10
  Martel 8
12   Immonen 11
12   Immonen 10
28   Fu 5
12   Immonen 10
27   Drago 6
27   Drago 10
  Lofty 7
12   Immonen 7
  Földes 11
13   Van Boening 10
  Gabica 7
13   Van Boening 8
  Földes 10
  Földes 10
  Dabovic 2
  Földes 11
  Lu 5
  Lu 10
  Chamat 6
  Lu 10
  Babica 3
  Manalo 1
  Babica 10

Section 3 edit

Last 64
Race to 10
Nov 7
Last 32
Race to 10
Nov 8
Last 16
Race to 11
Nov 9
Quarterfinals
Race to 11
Nov 10
            
30   Luong 10
  Strickland 8
30   Luong 3
  Kawabata 10
  Kawabata 10
4   Yang 3
  Kawabata 9
  J Bustamante 11
19   Petroni 9
3   Wu C-C 10
3   Wu C-C 8
  J Bustamante 10
  J Bustamante 10
  Orcollo 6
  J Bustamante 8
  Boyes 11
11   Stepanov 10
6   Reyes 5
11   Stepanov 10
  de Luna 4
  de Luna 10
21   Corteza 7
11   Stepanov 4
  Boyes 11
  Uchigaki 7
  Rye 10
  Rye 8
  Boyes 10
  Boyes 10
  Tot 6

Section 4 edit

Last 64
Race to 10
Nov 7
Last 32
Race to 10
Nov 8
Last 16
Race to 11
Nov 9
Quarterfinals
Race to 11
Nov 10
            
  Gallego 5
  Kuo 10
  Kuo 10
  Ortmann 7
  Ortmann 10
  Stojanovic 7
  Kuo 11
24   Deuel 7
10   Engert 7
7   Chang 10
7   Chang 9
24   Deuel 10
  Zulfikri 4
24   Deuel 10
  Kuo 4
    Gomez 11
  Oi 8
2   Souquet 10
2   Souquet 2
16   Feijen 10
  Williams 7
16   Feijen 10
16   Feijen 0
  Gomez 11
  Delahunty 0
18   Chao 10
18   Chao 2
  Gomez 10
  Gomez 10
  Lely 1

Semifinals and final edit

Semi-finals
Race to 11
Nov 10
Final
Race to 17
Nov 11
      
 17    Peach 11
    Földes 2
 17    Peach 17
    Gomez 15
    Boyes 4
    Gomez 11

Country representation edit

Country Last 64 Last 32 Last 16 Quarterfinals Semifinals Final
  England 4 2 2 2 2 1
  Philippines 13 5 4 3 1 1
  Hungary 1 1 1 1 1 -
  Chinese Taipei 10 7 2 1 - -
  Finland 1 1 1 1 - -
  Germany 4 3 1 - - -
  United States 4 2 1 - - -
  Netherlands 3 2 1 - - -
  Japan 3 1 1 - - -
  Canada 1 1 1 - - -
  Russia 1 1 1 - - -
  Serbia 3 1 - - - -
  Australia 2 1 - - - -
  Vietnam 2 1 - - - -
  Malta 1 1 - - - -
  Poland 1 1 - - - -
  South Korea 1 1 - - - -
Other countries 9 - - - - -

Final edit

November 11 Daryl Peach   17–15   Roberto Gomez Araneta Coliseum, Quezon City
Referee: Michaela Tabb

References edit

  1. ^ FSN New York broadcast of 2007 WPA Men's World Nine-ball Championship (aired January 3, 2008) (highlights from group 6). On screen diagram of race format. Viewed on January 3, 2008
  2. ^ Bustamante waltzes to Last 64 slot[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ 2007 World Pool Championship website Archived 2012-09-19 at archive.today -- note the use of "England" and "Scotland" instead of "Great Britain" or "United Kingdom"

External links edit