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International Open Series

The International Open Series (often referred to as Pontins International Open Series or PIOS[1][2] for sponsorship purposes), was a series of snooker tournaments that ran from the 2001/02 season until the 2009/10 season. It was originally called the Open Tour but was renamed in 2005/2006.[3]

International Open Series
Tournament information
VenueWorld Snooker Centre
LocationPrestatyn
CountryWales
Established2001
Organisation(s)WPBSA (2001/02)
EASB (2002/03–2009/10)
FormatProfessional (2001/02)
Pro-am (2002/03)
Amateur (2003/04–2009/10)
Final year2009/10
Final championEngland Jack Lisowski

History

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The tour was established to provide players not on the WPBSA Main Tour or Challenge Tour with professional competition, and the best performers were promoted to the Challenge Tour.[3] It was organised by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) during its first season, but the English Association of Snooker and Billiards (EASB), an amateur body, took it over from 2002/03.[3] The event was open to professionals, amateurs and international players for the first couple of seasons, but following the EASB's split from the WPBSA for 2003/04 the entry criteria were revised barring professional and non-English players from entering.[3] After the Challenge Tour was discontinued, the entry criteria were revised again to allow international amateur players to compete, and from 2005/06 the competition promoted players directly to the Main Tour.[4] The series was abandoned after the 2009/10 season and replaced by the Q School in the 2010/11 season.

Event finals

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Season Event Winner Runner-up Final score
WPBSA Open Tour (professional non-ranking)[3]
2001/02 Event 1 England  Mark Gray England  Shaun Murphy 5–2
Event 2 England  Brian Morgan Republic of Ireland  Leo Fernandez 5–2
Event 3 Finland  Robin Hull Republic of Ireland  Colm Gilcreest 5–4
Event 4 England  Matthew Couch England  Munraj Pal 5–3
Event 5 England  Lee Spick England  Mark Gray 5–3
Event 6 England  Stuart Bingham England  Matthew Selt 5–4
EASB Open Tour (pro-am)[3]
2002/03 Event 1 Wales  Ryan Day Wales  James Reynolds 5–4
Event 2 Wales  Ryan Day England  Mark Gray 5–3
Event 3 England  Rory McLeod England  Mark Gray 5–2
Event 4 England  Ricky Walden England  Jamie Cope 5–1
EASB Open Tour (amateur)[3]
2003/04 Event 1 England  David KL Taylor England  Darren McVicar 4–3
Event 2 England  James Tatton England  Lee Richardson 4–2
Event 3 England  Lee Richardson England  Jamie Barratt 4–0
Event 4 England  Sean Bullock England  Andy Radford 4–0
Event 5 England  Andy Radford England  Mark Sutton 4–0
Event 6 England  Eddie Cooper England  Nick Spelman 4–2
Event 7 England  Alan Trigg England  Wayne Cooper 4–1
Event 8 England  Paul Davison England  Wayne Cooper 4–2
Final play-off England  Wayne Cooper England  Nick Spelman 5–1
PIOS (amateur)[4]
2005/06 Event 1 China  Tian Pengfei England  Martin Gould 6–3
Event 2 England  Mark Joyce England  James Leadbetter 6–3
Event 3 China  Liu Song England  Stephen Rowlings 6–1
Event 4 Republic of Ireland  Colm Gilcreest England  Mark Joyce 6–3
Event 5 England  Chris Melling England  Paul Davison 6–5
Event 6 China  Liu Song England  Paul Davison 6–3
Event 7 China  Tian Pengfei China  Liu Song 6–3
Event 8 England  Andrew Higginson England  Jamie O'Neill 6–3
2006/07 Event 1 England  Munraj Pal Norway  Kurt Maflin 6–3
Event 2 Northern Ireland  Julian Logue England  Alex Davies 6–5
Event 3 Republic of Ireland  Leo Fernandez Wales  Lee Walker 6–5
Event 4 England  Kuldesh Johal Wales  Lee Walker 6–4
Event 5 Norway  Kurt Maflin England  Ashley Wright 6–3
Event 6 England  Jamie O'Neill England  Ashley Wright 6–2
Event 7 Belgium  Bjorn Haneveer England  Craig Steadman 6–2
Event 8 Scotland  James McBain Norway  Kurt Maflin 6–4
2007/08 Event 1 England  Simon Bedford England  Gary Wilkinson 6–3
Event 2 England  Kuldesh Johal Wales  Andrew Pagett 6–4
Event 3 England  Paul Davison England  Michael King 6–2
Event 4 England  Matthew Couch England  Michael Wild 6–3
Event 5 England  Peter Lines Wales  Daniel Wells 6–5
Event 6 England  Kuldesh Johal England  Simon Bedford 6–5
Event 7 Wales  Jamie Jones England  Peter Lines 6–2
Event 8 England  Liam Highfield England  Justin Astley 6–2
2008/09 Event 1 Belgium  Bjorn Haneveer England  Andrew Atkinson 6–2
Event 2 China  Xiao Guodong Thailand  Noppadol Sangnil 6–5
Event 3 Pakistan  Shokat Ali Wales  Michael White 6–3
Event 4 England  Craig Steadman England  Mike Hallett 6–1
Event 5 England  Chris Norbury England  Alfie Burden 6–2
Event 6 China  Xiao Guodong England  Jack Lisowski 6–0
Event 7 Thailand  Thepchaiya Un-Nooh England  Lee Page 6–3
Event 8 England  Joe Jogia England  Ben Woollaston 6–5
2009/10 Event 1 England  Jack Lisowski England  Liam Highfield 6–5
Event 2 England  Liam Highfield England  Neal Jones 6–2
Event 3 England  Paul Davison England  Kyren Wilson 6–4
Event 4 Wales  Jamie Jones Wales  Jak Jones 6–0
Event 5 Scotland  Anthony McGill England  Farakh Ajaib 6–0
Event 6 England  Kyren Wilson England  Liam Highfield 6–4
Event 7 England  Paul Davison England  Justin Astley 6–2
Event 8 England  Jack Lisowski England  Justin Astley 6–1

Order of Merit winners

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[4]

Season Winner
2005/06 China  Liu Song
2006/07 Norway  Kurt Maflin
2007/08 England  Kuldesh Johal
2008/09 England  Joe Jogia
2009/10 England  Jack Lisowski

References

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  1. ^ "Pontin's &– Working with Global Snooker". London: Global Snooker. 2009. Archived from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
  2. ^ "Pontin's International Open Series: Rules of Entry 2009/10" (PDF). Global-Snooker.com: Maximum Snooker Coverage. 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2010.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Hayton, Eric (2004). The CueSport Book of Professional Snooker. Suffolk: Rose Villa Publications. pp. Introduction & 178–186. ISBN 978-0-9548549-0-4.
  4. ^ a b c "Pontins International Open Series". Chris Turner's Snooker Archive. Archived from the original on 28 February 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2010.