The tournament began under the format on 7 February, with matches being played as a race to 9 racks. The event featured a field of 170 players playing in a double elimination tournament until the final 32 players, who then compete in a single elimination bracket. The event featured all of the top 16 Euro Tour players, with the exception of Mario He, who was serving a suspension for a drugs violation in 2018. Matches were live streamed via the Euro Tour website, with specific matches broadcast on Facebook. The event also saw guest commentary for matches by players such as Joshua Filler. The previous year's winner, Shane Van Boening did not take part in the event.
Double elimination rounds
played in his first Euro Tour event, since the 2012 Bosnia & Herzegovina Open; although being tied 8–8 with Michal Turkowski, Hohmann won his first round match 9–8. Hohmann would not advance to the knockout round, following a 4–9 loser's round loss to Croatia's Philipp Stojanovic. In the first round, Imran Majid defeated WPA World number 2 Alexander Kazakis 9–6. Kazakis would reach the knockout rounds, thanks to a 9–6 victory over David Alcaide. WPA world number 10Chris Melling would also lose his first round match, losing to local player Joey Haegmans 9–8. During the deciding rack, Haegmans was, but d the shot, before running the remaining balls. Melling would not qualify for the knockout round, as he would lose to Greece's Dimitris Loukatos in the loser's bracket 9–8, having already been behind in his match with Christian Brehme. Euro Tour's number one ranked player Eklent Kaçi also did not reach the last 32 stage, losing to Ukraine's Vitaliy Patsura in the loser's 4th round.
Knockout rounds
With the field reduced to the final 32 players, the finals were played as a single elimination tournament, held between 9–10 February 2019. Of the highest ranked players, only Oliver Ortmann failed to progress to the last 16 stage, as he was defeated 7–9 to Greece's Damianos Giallourakis. Niels Feijen also defeated 2017 junior world championSanjin Pehlivanovic 9–1 in the last 32 stage. At the last 16 stage, several matches saw two former winners of Euro Tour events face off. Ralf Souquet defeated Fedor Gorst in the first of these 9–7 to set up a match with Wiktor ZieliÅ„ski. Ruslan Chinachov would also defeat Niels Feijen 9–8 in a deciding rack. Former Euro Tour runner-up Francisco Sánchez RuÃz also defeated former winner Imran Majid on a decider. The quarter-finals of the event saw Ralf Souquet defeat the youngest ever winner of a Euro Tour event, Wiktor ZieliÅ„ski 9–6, which would be the only match not to go to a deciding rack. Ruslan Chinachov, Joshua Filler, and Maximilian Lechner all won their quarter-final matches 9–8, defeating Francisco Sánchez RuÃz, Mark Gray and Albin Ouschan respectively. In the semifinals, Maximilian Lechner took a 7–3 lead over Joshua Filler, before losing 5 straight racks, to go behind 7–8. Lechner would win the next rack, however Filler would win the final rack, to reach the final 9–8. In the other semifinal, the most successful Euro Tour player in history, Ralf Souquet played Russian Ruslan Chinachov. Chinachov would take a 7–2 lead, before eventually winning 9–5. Joshua Filler met Ruslan Chinachov in the final, which featured guest commentary by Mark Gray and Imran Majid. The match would remain even with the difference in scores only being more than one at 6–4 to Chinachov, before being levelled at 7–7. Filler would to take an 8–7 lead; before Chinachov on his break, and Filler cleared the table to win the event 9–7. Filler won his first Euro Tour title, despite being the reigning World Nine-ball Champion. After the final, Filler stated that now he had won events at the World and Euro Tours, that his next goal was to win the U.S. Open Championship. The win moved Filler to second in the Euro Tour rankings, only behind Eklent Kaçi. Despite making the final, Chinachov would only advance to 41st in the Tour rankings.