2013 International Championship
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The 2013 International Championship was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 27 October and 3 November 2013 at the Chengdu Eastern Music Park in Chengdu, China. It was the fifth ranking event of the 2013/2014 season.
Judd Trump was the defending champion, but he lost 5–6 against Alan McManus in the last 64.
Ding Junhui won his ninth ranking title by defeating Marco Fu 10–9 in the final. Ding became the first player to win three consecutive ranking titles since Stephen Hendry in 1993. This was also the third consecutive all-Asian ranking final, after Ding defeating Xiao Guodong at the Shanghai Masters and Aditya Mehta at the Indian Open.
Prize fund
The total prize money of the event was raised to £625,000 from the previous year's £600,000. The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:
| Winner: £125,000 Runner-up: £65,000 Semi-final: £30,000 Quarter-final: £17,500 Last 16: £12,000 Last 32: £7,000 Last 64: £3,000 | Non-televised highest break: £0 Televised highest break: £1,000 Total: £625,000 |
Wildcard round
These matches were played in Chengdu on 27 October 2013.
| Match | Score | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| WC1 | Alan McManus (SCO) | 6–5 | Zhou Yuelong (CHN) |
| WC2 | Jimmy White (ENG) | 6–4 | Yuan Sijun (CHN) |
| WC3 | Steve Davis (ENG) | 1–6 | Zhao Xintong (CHN) |
| WC4 | Kyren Wilson (ENG) | 6–1 | Lin Shuai (CHN) |
Main draw
Final
| Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Zheng Weili. Chengdu Eastern Music Park, Chengdu, China, 3 November 2013. | ||
| Marco Fu Hong Kong | 9–10 | Ding Junhui China |
| Afternoon: 61–52, 128–0 (128), 4–133 (108), 62–12, 4–92 (92), 0–138 (138), 2–127 (127), 0–126 (126), 93–22 Evening: 0–108 (108), 65–20, 105–0 (105), 76–6 (71), 0–95 (65), 105–9 (81), 8–60, 71–47, 5–64 (58), 0–99 (91) | ||
| 128 | Highest break | 138 |
| 2 | Century breaks | 5 |
| 4 | 50+ breaks | 9 |
Qualifying
These matches took place on 1 and 2 October 2013 at the Barnsley Metrodome in Barnsley, England. All matches were best of 11 frames.
Century breaks
Qualifying stage centuries
| 142 – Gerard Greene 140, 136, 107, 105 – Neil Robertson 132 – Sam Baird 130 – Mark Allen 129 – Stuart Carrington 124 – Ryan Clark 123, 103 – Gary Wilson 121 – Robbie Williams 119 – Chris Wakelin 118 – Pankaj Advani 115 – Ryan Day 109 – David Gilbert 108 – Michael Leslie 107 – Michael Wasley 107 – John Astley | 106, 103 – Stephen Maguire 106 – Stuart Bingham 106 – Liang Wenbo 103 – Joe Perry 103 – Alex Borg 102 – Fergal O'Brien 102 – Peter Ebdon 102 – Kurt Maflin 101 – Sean O'Sullivan 101 – Joe Swail 101 – Shaun Murphy 100 – Rod Lawler 100 – Daniel Wells 100 – Oliver Brown |
Televised stage centuries
| 143, 128, 117, 100, 100, 100 – Neil Robertson 143 – Mark Davis 138, 131, 127, 126, 121, 110, 110, 108, 108 – Ding Junhui 137 – Craig Steadman 134, 115, 107, 105, 103, 103, 102 – Joe Perry 134 – Peter Ebdon 128, 116, 112, 105, 103 – Marco Fu 127 – Matthew Selt 126, 121 – Graeme Dott 126 – Stephen Maguire 125 – Shaun Murphy 123, 111 – Mark Allen 123, 103 – Fergal O'Brien 122 – Kyren Wilson 121, 120 – Ronnie O'Sullivan 118, 111 – Liang Wenbo | 116, 107 – Mark Selby 114 – Barry Hawkins 110, 102 – Judd Trump 110 – Zhang Anda 109 – Zhao Xintong 109 – Stuart Bingham 107 – Joe Swail 106 – Zhou Yuelong 106 – Kurt Maflin 105 – John Higgins 104 – Dave Harold 103 – Xiao Guodong 103 – Rod Lawler 103 – Ryan Day 100 – David Gilbert |
External links
- at Facebook