2009 World Snooker Championship
The 2009 World Snooker Championship was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 18 April and 4 May at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. This was the first time that the World Snooker Championship had been sponsored by Betfred.
Ronnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion, but he lost in the second round 11–13 against Mark Allen.
John Higgins won his third World title by defeating Shaun Murphy 18–9 in the final. It was Higgins' 20th ranking title.
Tournament summary
First round
- Debutants at the Crucible were Rory McLeod, Martin Gould, Andrew Higginson, and Ricky Walden. They were all defeated in the first round.
- Rory McLeod became the first ever black player at the Crucible.
- Only two out of the sixteen seeded players lost their first round matches. Peter Ebdon lost 5–10 against Nigel Bond, while Joe Perry lost 6–10 against Jamie Cope.
- Steve Davis qualified for the World Championship for a record 29th time, but lost his first round match 2–10 against Neil Robertson.
- In September 2013 Stephen Lee was found guilty of conspiring to lose his first round match 4–10 against Ryan Day, for which as part of other offences Lee received a 12-year ban and was ordered to pay £40,000 in costs.
Second round
- Hendry won his 1,000th frame at the Crucible during his match against Ding Junhui. In this very frame Hendry compiled a 140 break. In total, at that moment Hendry had played over 1,700 frames at the Crucible, more than any other player. Hendry went on to win the match 13–10 and qualified for the quarter-finals for a record 18th time. This was the second consecutive year that Hendry had knocked out Ding in the Last 16.
- Mark Allen beat defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan 13–11. Allen made his best appearance at the tournament, ultimately reaching the semi-finals. This would be the last time that O'Sullivan failed to reach the quarter finals until 2016.
- Neil Robertson won four frames on the final black during the second session of his match with Ali Carter, and went on to win the match 13–8.
- John Higgins beat Jamie Cope 13–12 having trailed 10–12.
- Stephen Maguire and Mark King set a new record for the longest frame ever played at the Crucible at 74 minutes 58 seconds, breaking the previous record of 74 minutes 8 seconds set in the 2006 final between Peter Ebdon and Graeme Dott.
- The match between Mark Selby and Graeme Dott saw a controversial decision by referee Alan Chamberlain. Dott was going in-off, but stopped the cue ball with his fist before it dropped into the pocket, believing that the in-off was obvious. Chamberlain called a foul and awarded four points to Selby. Convinced that he now had the cue ball in hand, as would be the norm after an in-off, Selby picked up the ball to place it inside the "D". However, Chamberlain then called a foul on him and awarded four points back to Dott. Chamberlain's reasoning was that since the cue ball had never left the bed of the table, Selby should have played the shot from where the cue ball finished. Both players and even members of the audience disputed Chamberlain's decision, but it remained unchanged.
Quarter-finals
- Hendry made the ninth 147 break of his career in the seventh frame of his match against Shaun Murphy. Hendry equalled Ronnie O'Sullivan's record for most 147s and became the second man to score a Crucible 147 more than once, having done it for the first time in 1995.
- Neil Robertson beat Stephen Maguire- who had eliminated him in the second round the year before- 13–8. He became only the second player from Australia in 27 years to play a semi-final at the Crucible.
- John Higgins advanced to the semi-finals against Mark Selby by winning his second consecutive match of the tournament in the final frame, again coming from behind before the last frames, this time 11–12. The final frame required two re-racks.
- Mark Allen and Neil Robertson both reached the first world championship semi-finals of their careers.
Semi-finals
Final
- Michaela Tabb made history by becoming the first woman to referee a World Snooker Championship final.
- This was the first final contested by two former world champions since 2003, when Mark Williams defeated Ken Doherty 18–16.
- After the first session ended all-square at 4–4, John Higgins opened up an 11–5 lead over Shaun Murphy, winning the second session 7–1. After the third session, Higgins led 16–8, having won that session 5–3.
- The second frame of the fourth session was Higgins's 1000th frame in the Crucible Theatre.
- The fourth and final session lasted only three frames before John Higgins defeated Shaun Murphy 18–9. In doing so, Higgins became only the ninth player to lift the trophy more than twice, and only the sixth player to have won more than two titles in the modern era.
- By winning the title two weeks before his 34th birthday, Higgins became the oldest World Snooker Champion since 36-year-old Dennis Taylor in 1985.
Prize fund
- Winner: £250,000
- Runner-up: £125,000
- Semi-final: £52,000
- Quarter-final: £24,050
- Last 16: £16,000
- Last 32: £12,000
- Last 48: £8,200
- Last 64: £4,600
- Stage one highest break: £1,000
- Stage two highest break: £10,000
- Stage one maximum break: £5,000
- Stage two maximum break: £147,000
- Total: £1,111,000
Main draw
Preliminary qualifying
The preliminary qualifying rounds for the tournament took place on 25 February 2009 at the English Institute of Sport in Sheffield.Round 1
Round 2
Qualifying
The qualifying rounds 1–4 for the tournament took place between 26 February and 4 March 2009 at the English Institute of Sport in Sheffield. The final round of qualifying took place between 8 and 10 March 2009 at the same venue.Round 1
Rounds 2–5
Century breaks
This is complete list of century breaks scored in both the qualifying and the televised stages.Televised stage centuries
There were 83 century breaks in the televised stage of the World Championship, a new record beating 2002's and 2007's 68; this record was surpassed in 2015.- 147, 140, 117, 114 Stephen Hendry
- 141, 131, 129, 128, 128, 128, 116, 114, 113, 107, 104 John Higgins
- 140, 107, 105, 104, 103 Ronnie O'Sullivan
- 137, 123, 115, 110, 109, 106, 104, 102, 101, 101 Shaun Murphy
- 134, 120, 106 Ryan Day
- 133, 127, 122, 115, 101 Stephen Maguire
- 130, 121, 112, 111 Ding Junhui
- 129, 124, 122, 111 Marco Fu
- 129, 119, 119, 115, 108, 108, 106, 103, 103, 103 Mark Allen
- 129, 105 Barry Hawkins
- 127, 124, 119, 118, 117, 117, 114, 104, 101, 101 Mark Selby
- 125, 124, 112, 105, 101 Neil Robertson
- 118, 103, 102 Jamie Cope
- 117 Graeme Dott
- 114 Mark King
- 113 Peter Ebdon
- 110 Joe Perry
- 102 Michael Holt
- 100 Stuart Bingham
- 100 Ricky Walden
Qualifying stage centuries
- 145 Mark Williams
- 137, 100 Judd Trump
- 135, 102 Andy Hicks
- 134, 124, 120, 104 Jimmy White
- 134, 120, 100 Liang Wenbo
- 134, 103 Matthew Selt
- 131 John Parrott
- 129, 127, 106, 100 Daniel Wells
- 129 Matthew Couch
- 128, 103 Ricky Walden
- 128, 103 Barry Hawkins
- 127 Michael Holt
- 127 Rory McLeod
- 126 David Morris
- 125, 122, 103 Ian McCulloch
- 121, 105, 104 Tom Ford
- 119 Dave Gilbert
- 117 Mark Davis
- 117 Jamie Burnett
- 116 Stefan Mazrocis
- 116 Ken Doherty
- 115 Anthony Hamilton
- 114 Nigel Bond
- 113, 108, 105, 100 Martin Gould
- 112, 109 Li Hang
- 111 Wayne Cooper
- 110 Stuart Pettman
- 110 Dominic Dale
- 109, 101 Lee Spick
- 109 Aditya Mehta
- 105, 105 Jin Long
- 104 Gerard Greene
- 103 Jamie Cope
- 102 Scott MacKenzie
- 102 Jamie Jones
- 102 Paul Davison
- 100 Liu Song