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  • #46
    Frame scores:

    Final

    Reanne Evans v Maria Catalano
    06-67
    (56,45)101-06
    (69) 74-24
    (52) 70-32
    (45) 70-51
    (62) 95-27
    You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't

    Comment


    • #47
      Congratulations to all the winners!

      Thanks for all the updates.
      BTW: who won the World Seniors' event, Eva Palmius or June Banks?
      Winner of the 2009 UK Championship Lucky Dip
      Co-winner of Spike’s 2009 UK Championship number of centuries prediction contest

      Comment


      • #48
        June has literally JUST won the World Ladies Seniors 3-1 against Eva Palmius. That completes this years World Ladies Snooker Championships.

        World Ladies Champ - Reanne Evans
        World Junior Champ - Hannah Jones
        World Senior Champ - June Banks
        World Doubles Champs - Tatjana & Maureen Rowland
        World Mixed Doubles Champs - Joe Perry and Tatjana
        World Plate Champ - Tatjana


        The World Ladies Billiards is played to a finish tomorrow at Hall Green Stadium in Birmingham, only 8 runners. The event starts at 11am played over hour and a half matches and will be TD'd by Clive Scott. Here is the draw.

        Emma Bonney (current champ)
        Tina Owen-Sevilton

        Joanne Davies
        Jan Hughes

        Maureen Rowland
        Eva Palmius

        Chitra Magimairaj - (previous champ)
        Hannah Jones
        You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't

        Comment


        • #49
          REANNE Evans has again raised the bar in women’s snooker by winning the world title for a record sixth year running (on Wednesday, April 7).

          The undisputed world number one racked up six breaks of more than 40 in a 5-1 demolition of good friend Maria Catalano in the final at Cambridge Snooker Centre.

          In a blistering display of break building, after losing the first frame, Evans compiled runs of 56, 45, 69, 52, 45 and 62.

          It is now 61 matches since the 24-year-old mother-of-one, from Dudley, West Midlands, last tasted defeat on the World Ladies Billiards & Snooker Association circuit.

          This season she has won all six ranking events and the Wytech Masters.

          She collected £1,000, courtesy of sponsor Paul Wood, for clinching her 23rd ranking title.

          “It’s the most I’ve ever won for winning a tournament,” said Evans.

          “It’s brilliant. Doing the clean sweep has put the icing on the cake.

          “It’s going to take some beating by whoever comes up in the future. Hopefully, I’ve set the bar high enough.

          “In the first frame I was all over the place. I knew I was cueing well so I calmed down a bit and it worked.

          “Maria’s playing better and cueing a lot sweeter but she missed a couple to let me in.

          “That’s what you get from playing men. You get punished all day long so you learn from that. You don’t want to keep picking balls out so you try and punish them when they miss.”

          Evans believes the top of the women’s game is now like that, with players such as Catalano, June Banks, Katie Henrick and Emma Bonney.

          And she picked out ten-year-old rising star Jasmine Bolsover as the possible heir to her throne.

          “Jasmine looks brilliant. She’s probably going to be the one to take over. And, obviously, you’ve got Hannah (Jones) as well.

          “I’ll walk before she starts making 50s,” she laughed.

          In the semi-finals, world number four Henrick, 29, came close to finally breaking Evans’ remarkable run.

          However, Evans fought back from 2-0 and 3-2 down, and wrapped up the decider with a 78.

          “She played really well,” said Evans. “In the first three frames, I didn’t really see a ball. It was the best I’ve seen her play.”

          Despite the Henrick onslaught, Evans insisted defeat never crossed her mind.

          “You’ve still got to believe you can win,” she said. “You’ve got more confidence than anyone else but there’s also more pressure on you.

          “Everybody wants you to lose; they’re all trying their hardest to beat you. You’ve just got to maintain that standard.”

          The newly crowned champion is planning to spend the prize money on a holiday in Ibiza with three-year-old daughter Lauren.

          Round-robin breaks:

          Yu Ching Ching: 62, 46.
          Hannah Jones: 40
          Eva Palmius: 35
          Chitra Magimairaj: 32

          KNOCKOUT (breaks)

          LAST-16: Reanne Evans (53) beat Natascha Niermann 3-0, Chitra Magimairaj beat Jenny Poulter 3-0, Katie Henrick (67) beat Tatjana Vasiljeva (37) 3-1, June Banks beat Pam Wood 3-0, Emma Bonney (44) beat Jasmine Bolsover 3-0, Yu Ching Ching beat Chris Sharpe 3-1, Suzie Opacic beat Eva Palmius 3-2, Maria Catalano (48) beat Hannah Jones 3-0.

          QUARTER-FINALS (£150): Evans beat Magimairaj 4-0, Henrick beat Banks 4-3, Bonney beat Yu 4-1, Catalano (61, 56, 37, 36, 31) beat Opacic 4-1.

          SEMI-FINALS (£250): Evans (78) beat Henrick (49, 42) 4-3, Catalano (37, 32) beat Bonney (35) 4-2.

          FINAL (£1,000/£500): Evans beat Catalano 5-1.
          Frame scores, Evans first: 6-67, 101(56, 45)-6, 74(69)-24, 70(52)-32, 70(45)-51, 95(62)-27.
          Referee: Vic Hartley.

          PLATE

          TATJANA Vasiljeva, Latvia’s number one woman player, clinched the Plate trophy at her first WLBSA world championships.

          Vasiljeva, 26, who is coached twice a year by Terry Griffiths in Wales, defeated Vicky Ashby 2-0 in the final.

          “He’s a great coach,” she said. “I like Britain so much.”

          RESULTS (breaks):

          ROUND 1: Marianne Williams beat Maureen Rowland 2-0, Martina Lumsden beat Jan Hughes 2-0, Gaye Jones beat Naomi Clare 2-0, Vicky Ashby beat Joanne Davies 2-1, Jaique Ip Wan In beat Tina Owen-Sevilton 2-1.

          ROUND 2: Lumsden beat Natascha Niermann 2-0, Williams beat Hannah Jones 2-1, Ashby beat Jenny Poulter 2-0, Chris Sharpe beat Gaye Jones 2-0, Ip Wan In beat Pam Wood 2-0, Jasmine Bolsover beat Laura Alves 2-1.

          QUARTER-FINALS: Ip Wan In beat Williams 2-1, Tatjana Vasiljeva beat Martina Lumsden 2-1, Ashby beat Bolsover 2-0, Sharpe beat Palmius 2-0.

          SEMI-FINALS: Vasiljeva beat Ip Wan In 2-0, Ashby beat Sharpe 2-0.

          FINAL: Vasiljeva beat Ashby 2-0.

          JUNIORS

          PRE-tournament favourite Hannah Jones lived up to her billing by claiming the World Ladies Junior title for the third year running.

          The Derby schoolgirl, 13, defeated ten-year-old Jasmine Bolsover, from Woking, 2-0 in the final.

          Jones said: “I was very pleased to win it. Before the match, I thought Jasmine was going to win because her potting was amazing.

          “I played at a level higher because I was determined to win.”

          RESULTS

          ROUND-ROBIN: Hannah Jones beat Jasmine Bolsover 2-0, Joanne Davies beat Naomi Clare 2-1, Jones beat Davies 2-0, Bolsover beat Clare 2-0, Bolsover beat Davies 2-1, Jones beat Clare 2-0.

          FINAL: Jones beat Bolsover 2-0.

          SENIORS (aged 40 and over)

          JUNE Banks, making her first appearance on the WLBSA circuit this season due to work commitments, defeated Eva Palmius 3-1 to retain the World Ladies Seniors title.

          Banks, 41, from Orpington, Kent, who had slipped to 14th in the rankings, climbs three places to 11th.

          RESULTS

          PRELIMS: Jan Hughes beat Laura Alves 3-0, Pam Wood beat Maureen Rowland 3-1.

          QUARTER-FINALS: Hughes beat Wood 3-2, June Banks beat Marianne Williams 3-1, Chris Sharpe beat Jenny Poulter 3-1, Eva Palmius beat Gaye Jones 3-0.

          SEMI-FINALS: Banks beat Hughes 3-0, Palmius beat Sharpe 3-2.

          FINAL: Banks beat Palmius 3-1.

          MIXED DOUBLES

          TATJANA Vasiljeva insisted world No 12 Joe Perry is “the best” after the pair claimed the Mixed Doubles trophy.

          Vasiljeva and Perry edged past Pam Wood and Martin Gould 3-2 in a high-scoring final.

          Leading 2-1 and on a break of 67, world No 46 Gould, who had compiled a 105 in the first frame, missed a long red for the match.

          Perry replied with a 68 clearance to win by one point on the black - and he wrapped up the decider with a 62.

          “We dodged a couple of bullets but we won the last one nice and easy,” said Perry.

          “We thought it was all over. Then you get a chance so you just try and grab it with both hands. I felt really relaxed and just knocked them in. You don’t think too much about it; you just do what you’ve got to do.”

          Vasiljeva said: “I had huge pressure after the first frame when I made a bad safety shot and (Gould) made a 105 break.”

          And Perry, who vowed to return next year to defend the trophy, added: “The pressure for me is I don’t want to let Tatjana down.

          “We’re worthy winners; we deserved it; we’re a good team.”

          Wood and Gould knocked out defending champions Reanne Evans and Michael Holt in the last-four.

          RESULTS (breaks)

          QUARTER-FINALS: Pam Wood & Martin Gould (61, 55) beat Chris & Brian Sharpe 3-0, Tina Owen-Sevilton & Brian Harvey beat Natascha Niermann & Tim Dunkley 3-1.

          SEMI-FINALS: Wood & Gould (67) beat Reanne Evans & Michael Holt 3-1, Tatjana Vasiljeva & Joe Perry (46) beat Owen-Sevilton & Harvey 3-0.

          FINAL (£200/£100): Vasiljeva & Perry (68, 62) beat Wood & Gould (105, 42, 67) 3-2.

          LADIES DOUBLES

          BLUSHING bride Maureen Rowland capped her honeymoon by winning the World Ladies Doubles with Tatjana Vasiljeva.

          Maureen Logan, as was, ‘ran away’ to Gretna Green with fiancé Dave Rowland, 55, two days before setting off for the women’s world snooker championships.

          After being married in Gretna’s famous blacksmith’s shop, the lovebirds honeymooned at Cambridge Snooker Centre.

          Rowland, 56, from Wallsend, Tyne & Wear, lost three stones prior to the wedding.
          The 2-0 victory over Pam Wood and Laura Alves completed a hat-trick for Latvian Vasiljeva. The 26-year-old also won the Plate and the Mixed Doubles.

          RESULT

          FINAL: Tatjana Vasiljeva & Maureen Rowland beat Pam Wood & Laura Alves 2-0.

          The 2010 WLBSA World Billiards Championship will be held on Thursday, April 8, starting at 11am, at:

          Stadium Snooker Club
          Hall Green Stadium
          York Road
          Hall Green
          Birmingham
          B28 8LQ
          Tel: 08708 407380

          CAMBRIDGE DIARY

          Pam Wood’s missing cue

          A FRANTIC three-day search for her beloved Cedric ruined world No 21 Pam Wood’s build-up to the women’s world snooker championships.

          The 41-year-old from Newcastle left her favourite cue, nicknamed Cedric, leaning against the boot of her car as she left her local club – and then drove off.

          One hour before catching the train to Cambridge, Wood received a phone call from the club saying it had been handed in.

          Referees v Ladies match

          LADIES captain Jan Hughes is being forced to send out for fresh supplies of wooden spoons.

          For the third year running, the ladies took on a team of referees after the first day’s round-robin matches. And for the third year running, Hughes presented a wooden spoon to referees captain Colin Selby after a 683-545 aggregate points victory.

          Selby admitted: “We were stuffed.”

          Dressed to kill (and guess who’s dying)

          NATASCHA Niermann was dressed to kill for the mixed pairs. And a former professional is in her firing line.

          Wearing a short skirt (a size too small), red stockings and high-heeled black boots, Niermann was less than impressed when she was stood up minutes before the event kicked off.

          And the eight-time German national champion was distinctly underwhelmed when the WLBSA’s press officer was offered up as a replacement.

          Martin Gould’s trick shot

          STORIES circulate about this shot but few people have actually witnessed it.

          In the third frame of the Mixed Doubles final, Middlesex professional Martin Gould slammed a red towards the left-hand top corner pocket.

          It hit the jaws, jumped onto the top of the cushion, rolled along the rail and fell into the middle pocket.

          Youngest qualifier

          AT the tender age of ten years and 110 days, Woking’s pint-sized potter Jasmine Bolsover beat Yu Ching Ching to become the youngest to qualify for the knockout stage of a women’s world championship.

          Tim Dunkley (WLBSA press officer)
          http://www.snooker-coach.co.uk

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally Posted by snookerdad View Post
            Dressed to kill (and guess who’s dying)

            NATASCHA Niermann was dressed to kill for the mixed pairs. And a former professional is in her firing line.

            Wearing a short skirt (a size too small), red stockings and high-heeled black boots, Niermann was less than impressed when she was stood up minutes before the event kicked off.

            And the eight-time German national champion was distinctly underwhelmed when the WLBSA’s press officer was offered up as a replacement.
            How bad was this?
            Co-winner of Spike’s 2009 UK Championship number of centuries prediction contest.

            RIP Noel. RIP.

            Comment


            • #51
              Thanks for the updates , must have been hard work

              Comment


              • #52
                No problem. It is just tiring back and forth, the lights the headaches - oh woe is me...

                Anyway we left Cambridge last night and have travelled to Birmingham for the World Ladies Billiards.

                Results up on World Ladies Snooker. Shouldn't take long as there are only 8 entrants.

                For the forum though here are the latest result: Hannah led the 2007 World Champion right to the last 10 minutes when Chitra knocked in a 46 break. That would have been a major upset. As it is business as usual on the tables.

                World Ladies Billiards 2010

                Quarter Finals
                (37) Emma Bonney 357 v 212 Tina Owen Sevilton
                Joanne Davies 162 v 172 Jan Hughes
                Maureen Rowland 129 v 201 Eva Palmius
                Hannah Jones 225 v 261 Chitra Magimairaj (46)

                Semi Final
                Emma Bonney v Jan Hughes
                Eva Palmius v Chitra Magimairaj

                Final


                ----------------------------------------------------------------------
                World Ladies Billiards Plate 2010

                Semi Final
                Tina Owen Sevilton v Hannah Jones
                Joanne Davies v Maureen Rowland
                You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't

                Comment


                • #53
                  Some pictures from day 5 http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...9&l=a98f3839c4
                  (a few more to come)

                  and news from today: As expected Emma Bonney won the Billiards World Champ.
                  Proud winner of the 2008 Bahrain Championship Lucky Dip
                  http://ronnieosullivan.tv/forum/index.php

                  Comment


                  • #54
                    Originally Posted by Monique View Post
                    Some pictures from day 5 http://www.facebook.com/album.php?ai...9&l=a98f3839c4
                    (a few more to come)

                    and news from today: As expected Emma Bonney won the Billiards World Champ.
                    Yes she did in a close contest.

                    Tina Owen-Sevilton beat Joanne Davies in the plate final as well.
                    You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      PORTSMOUTH’S Emma Bonney continued her domination of women’s billiards by claiming her fifth world title at the Hall Green Stadium, Birmingham (on Thursday, April 8).

                      The 33-year-old edged past Indian star Chitra Magimairaj 269-220 in the 90-minute final.

                      Bonney, who defeated 2006 and 2007 champion Magimairaj in last year’s final in Cambridge, collected £400 from Paul Wood, sponsor of the World Ladies Billiards & Snooker Association’s world championships.

                      She said: “I’m certainly pleased to have beaten Chitra again. I know Chitra is a good player and comes all the way over from India. That’s her main game.”

                      Two days after being knocked out of the women’s world snooker championships at the semi-final stage in Cambridge, the Queen of the South headed north in a bid to clinch the three-ball trophy for the third year running.

                      At one point Magimairaj led by 60. But Bonney clawed back the deficit with 20 minutes left and held a slim 25-point lead with five minutes to go.

                      “We both had a couple of flukes,” admitted Bonney. “She had one quite near the end. I thought she might take advantage of it and go on and make a break and win. But she didn’t.”

                      Magimairaj, who pocketed £200, also picked up the £50 high-break prize for a timely run of 46 at the end of her quarter-final match against 13-year-old Hannah Jones. The break averted a major upset as Jones had been leading up to the last ten minutes.

                      Bonney, who “loves” her new job in Boots in the centre of Portsmouth, was forced to turn down a place on the English-Billiards Open Series, which tours venues around Europe, because of the expense.

                      “I’d just like to be able to play in some tournaments and improve my game,” she said. “I tend to go all year without really playing much billiards, which obviously isn’t very good. It’s difficult with the money situation and having to work.”

                      But she was grateful to be playing in a sponsored event.

                      “Paul Wood, the guy who’s put the money up, is absolutely brilliant and he loves billiards. And he lays on a lovely lunch as well!” she laughed.

                      The tournament was officiated by Clive Scott and his team of referees from the English Amateur Billiards Association.

                      RESULTS (breaks)

                      QUARTER-FINALS (£50): Emma Bonney (37) beat Tina Owen-Sevilton 357-212, Jan Hughes beat Joanne Davies 172-162, Eva Palmius beat Maureen Rowland 201-129, Chitra Magimairaj (46) beat Hannah Jones 261-225.

                      SEMI-FINALS (£100): Bonney (45) beat Hughes 448-89, Magimairaj (45, 42) beat Palmius 313-186.

                      FINAL (£400/£200): Bonney (36) beat Magimairaj (42) 269-220.

                      PLATE

                      SEMI-FINALS: Owen-Sevilton beat Jones 137-75, Davies beat Rowland 108-54.

                      FINAL: Owen-Sevilton beat Davies 273-99.

                      ENTRY LIST

                      Emma Bonney (Portsmouth); Chitra Magimairaj (India); Tina Owen-Sevilton (Taunton); Hannah Jones (Derby); Joanne Davies (Derby); Maureen Rowland (Wallsend, Tyne & Wear); Jan Hughes (St Neots, Cambs); Eva Palmius (Isleham, Cambs).

                      Tim Dunkley (WLBSA press officer)
                      http://www.snooker-coach.co.uk

                      Comment

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