![]() | |
| Tournament information | |
|---|---|
| Dates | 16β22 August 2021 |
| Venue | Morningside Arena |
| City | Leicester |
| Country | England |
| Organisation | World Snooker Tour |
| Format | Ranking event |
| Total prize fund | Β£470,000 |
| Winner's share | Β£100,000 |
| Highest break | |
| Final | |
| Champion | |
| Runner-up | |
| Score | 6β4 |
β 2004 2022 β | |
The 2021 British Open (officially the 2021 Matchroom.live British Open) was a professional snooker event played from 16 to 22 August 2021 at the Morningside Arena, Leicester, England. It was the 2021 edition of the British Open event, and the first since the 2004 British Open. It was the second ranking event of the 2021β22 snooker season, following the 2021 Championship League and preceding the 2021 Northern Ireland Open. It was broadcast by ITV Sport in the UK, and sponsored by Matchroom Sport. The winner received Β£100,000 from a total prize pool of Β£470,000.
All rounds in the tournament were played after a random draw made under a single-elimination tournament format with no seeded players. The first four rounds, from the last 128 to the last 16, were played as best-of-five frame matches, the quarter-finals and semi-finals as best-of-seven-frame matches, and the final played as the best-of-eleven frames. John Higgins, the defending champion from 2004, lost 1β3 to Ricky Walden in the third round. Mark Williams defeated Gary Wilson 6β4 in the final to win the 24th ranking title of his career. The event featured 32 century breaks, including two maximum breaks. Higgins made his 12th maximum break in professional competition in the first frame of his first-round win over Alexander Ursenbacher, and Ali Carter made his third maximum break in the second frame of his fourth-round match against Elliot Slessor.
Format
The British Open is a snooker event first held in 1980 as the British Gold Cup. The event changed names to the British Open for the 1985 event won by Silvino Francisco. The 2021 tournament was held from 16 to 22 August 2021 at the Morningside Arena in Leicester, England. It was the first British Open event in 17 years, the last being played in 2004. It was the second ranking event of the 2021β22 snooker season, following the 2021 Championship League, and preceding the Northern Ireland Open. John Higgins was the defending champion, having defeated Stephen Maguire 9β6 in the 2004 final, to win his 16th ranking title. The event was broadcast by ITV4 in the United Kingdom, Eurosport in Europe; Liaoning TV, Superstar online, Kuaishou, Migu, Youku, Zhibo.tv and Huya Live in China; Now TV in Hong Kong; Sports cast in Taiwan; True Sports in Thailand; DAZN in Canada, Astrosport in Australia and by Matchroom Sport in all other territories. Matchroom also sponsored the event.
The event featured all 128 participants from the World Snooker Tour, no seedings, and a random draw after each round. Matches were played as the best-of-five frames, until the quarter-finals and semi-finals, which were played as best-of-seven-frame matches. The final was a best-of-eleven.
Prize fund
The tournament had a total prize fund of Β£470,000, the winner receiving Β£100,000. A breakdown of prize money for this event is shown below:
- Winner: Β£100,000
- Runner-up: Β£45,000
- Semi-final: Β£20,000
- Quarter-final: Β£12,000
- Last 16: Β£7,000
- Last 32: Β£5,000
- Last 64: Β£3,000
- Highest break: Β£5,000
- Total: Β£470,000
Summary
Round 1

The first round was played from 16 to 18 August, as the best of five frames. On the first day, defending champion Higgins made his 12th competitive maximum break, in the first frame of his 3β1 win against Alexander Ursenbacher. At 46 years and 90 days, Higgins broke his own record as the oldest man to make a maximum break in competition. He had previously been the oldest player to make one after completing a maximum at the Championship League in October 2020. Higgins became the player with the second most maximum breaks, behind Ronnie O'Sullivan with 15, and now ahead of Stephen Hendry.
World number one Judd Trump trailed 1β2 to Mitchell Mann, but won 3β2. Despite making two century breaks, Kyren Wilson was defeated by Ashley Hugill 2β3. Mark Allen and Reanne Evans, who had been in a relationship between 2005 and 2008, met in the first round. The players, who had been in legal battles over child maintenance, had their first professional meeting at the event. Evans refused to shake hands with Allen before the match, and led 2β1, but missed the match ball and Allen completed a clearance to win the contest. The finalists of the 2021 World Snooker Championship, Shaun Murphy and Mark Selby met in the first round. World champion Selby won the match 3β2. Four-time winner Hendry met Chris Wakelin in the first round. Hendry won the match 3β2, his first main tournament win since rejoining the tour in 2020 after retiring in 2012. Lukas Kleckers won the final two frames against Masters champion Yan Bingtao to win 3β2.
Round 2
The second round was played on 18 and 19 August as the best of five frames. The 1997 winner Mark Williams recovered from 0β2 behind to Dominic Dale in a 3β2 victory. Iranian player Hossein Vafaei defeated Allen 3β2, despite having never beaten him in four prior meetings. Stephen Maguire defeated Martin O'Donnell 3β2, but complained about O'Donnell's slow play, who had averaged more than 30 seconds per shot. Ali Carter described playing reigning world champion Selby as a "dream draw", and won the match 3β0. Higgins trailed Cao Yupeng 1β2, but made breaks of 95 and 96 to win the match. Higgins lost the third frame of the match after missing a shot, blaming the red ball having a stray hair on it. Hendry played Gary Wilson and lost 0β3. Neither player made a break above 50. Wilson called the performance "an embarrassment".
Rounds 3 and 4
The third and fourth rounds were played on 20 August also as the best of five frames. Trump played Elliot Slessor losing 2β3. The loss meant that Selby would now be ranked as the world number one after the event. Slessor went on to face Carter in the fourth round. Carter made the second maximum break of the event in the second round, but only won that frame, losing 1β3. Ricky Walden completed a 3β1 win over Higgins, and then defeated Ross Muir by the same scoreline. Williams made breaks of 71 and 70 as he defeated Liam Highfield 3β0. Williams played Zhang Jiankang in the fourth round, where he was the sole player from the top 16 remaining. Zhang led 2β1 and was within four pots of winning the match, but missed a routine black ball, and eventually lost 2β3. David Gilbert, who had won his first ranking event at the preceding Championship League event, reached the quarter-finals where he drew Wilson, who had defeated Vafaei.
Quarter-finals

The quarter-finals were played on 21 August as the best of seven frames. Gilbert played Wilson, and led both 2β0 and 3β2, but lost the match after missing a pot using a long rest. Slessor met Zhou Yuelong and won 4β3 to reach his second ranking event semi-final. Williams played Ricky Walden in the quarter-finals. Williams won 4β3 on the final black, despite Walden making four breaks over 50. Williams commented that despite the win, he "couldn't string three pots together", and that the players he had faced in the tournament had lost matches, rather than him winning them. Robertson played Lu Ning in the final quarter-final match, winning 4β2.
Semi-finals
The semi-finals were contested on 21 August as the best of seven frames. Wilson played Slessor, but trailed 0β2. He won the next three frames with breaks of 67, 68 and 100 to lead 3β2, before Slessor made a 125 break to force a deciding frame. Wilson won the frame to reach his second ranking final. Williams completed breaks of 60, 73 and 58 in a 4β1 win over Robertson.
Final
The final was played between Williams and Wilson on 22 August as the best of eleven frames. Williams won the opening frame, before Wilson tied the match in frame two. A break of 111 in frame three for Williams was his first century break of the event, before Wilson won frame four. Wilson won frame five with a break of 101 to lead the match for the first time, Williams winning back-to-back frames to lead 4β3. Wilson won frame eight to tie the match, but Williams won the next two frames to complete a 6β4 victory. This was Williams's 24th ranking event title, and his second British Open title, 24 years since he last won the event in 1997. Aged 46, Williams was the third oldest person to win a ranking event, only behind Ray Reardon in 1982 (50) and Doug Mountjoy in 1989 (46). Williams commented that he had been lucky to progress to the final, but that his performance in the final was the best he had played in the tournament. Wilson said he was "bitterly disappointed" not to win.
Tournament draw
The results from the event are shown below. Players in bold denote match winners.
Note: w/d=withdrawn; w/o=walk-over
Round 1
Round 1 matches were played as the best of five frames.
16 August morning session
Rory McLeod (JAM) w/oβw/d
Kurt Maflin (NOR)
Robbie Williams (ENG) 3β1
Sunny Akani (THA)
Zhang Anda (CHN) 1β3
John Astley (ENG)
Steven Hallworth (ENG) 2β3
Joe O'Connor (ENG)
Xu Si (CHN) 3β2
Fan Zhengyi (CHN)
Andrew Higginson (ENG) 2β3
Jordan Brown (NIR)
Liang Wenbo (CHN) 3β1
Simon Lichtenberg (GER)
Jak Jones (WAL) 3β2
Lyu Haotian (CHN)
Dylan Emery (WAL) 3β2
Gao Yang (CHN)
16 August afternoon session
Alexander Ursenbacher (SUI) 1β3
John Higgins (SCO)
Yuan Sijun (CHN) 2β3
Louis Heathcote (ENG)
Ben Woollaston (ENG) 2β3
Hammad Miah (ENG)
Chen Zifan (CHN) 3β0
Farakh Ajaib (PAK)
Mark Williams (WAL) 3β0
Tian Pengfei (CHN)
Zak Surety (ENG) 0β3
Ken Doherty (IRL)
Aaron Hill (IRL) 0β3
Jimmy White (ENG)
Gerard Greene (NIR) 2β3
Martin O'Donnell (ENG)
16 August evening session
Ashley Carty (ENG) 0β3
Bai Langning (CHN)
David Lilley (ENG) 3β1
Craig Steadman (ENG)
Matthew Selt (ENG) 3β2
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh (THA)
Mitchell Mann (ENG) 2β3
Judd Trump (ENG)
Ian Burns (ENG) 3β1
Michael White (WAL)
Stuart Carrington (ENG) 0β3
Liam Highfield (ENG)
Zhou Yuelong (CHN) 3β2
Tom Ford (ENG)
Mark Allen (NIR) 3β2
Reanne Evans (ENG)
17 August morning session
Dominic Dale (WAL) 3β0
Xiao Guodong (CHN)
Wu Yize (CHN) 3β0
Fraser Patrick (SCO)
Lu Ning (CHN) 3β1
Igor Figueiredo (BRA)
Lee Walker (WAL) 3β1
Sanderson Lam (ENG)
Anthony McGill (SCO) 1β3
Zhao Jianbo (CHN)
Zhang Jiankang (CHN) 3β1
Peter Lines (ENG)
Andy Hicks (ENG) 3β1
Chang Bingyu (CHN)
David Grace (ENG) 3β2
Mark Lloyd (ENG)
17 August afternoon session
Ashley Hugill (ENG) 3β2
Kyren Wilson (ENG)
Elliot Slessor (ENG) 3β1
Peter Devlin (ENG)
Jimmy Robertson (ENG) 3β0
Mark Joyce (ENG)
Stephen Maguire (SCO) 3β0
Jackson Page (WAL)
Dean Young (SCO) 0β3
Scott Donaldson (SCO)
Joe Perry (ENG) 2β3
Ben Hancorn (ENG)
Iulian Boiko (UKR) 2β3
Anthony Hamilton (ENG)
Jack Lisowski (ENG) 2β3
Barry Pinches (ENG)
17 August evening session
Michael Judge (IRL) 1β3
Andrew Pagett (WAL)
James Cahill (ENG) 2β3
Ricky Walden (ENG)
Michael Holt (ENG) 2β3
Mark Davis (ENG)
Mark Selby (ENG) 3β2
Shaun Murphy (ENG)
David Gilbert (ENG) 3β0
Matthew Stevens (WAL)
Jamie Jones (WAL) 1β3
Hossein Vafaei (IRN)
Chris Wakelin (ENG) 2β3
Stephen Hendry (SCO)
Ross Muir (SCO) 3β2
Ryan Day (WAL)
18 August morning session
Si Jiahui (CHN) 0β3
Oliver Lines (ENG)
Zhao Xintong (CHN) 2β3
Cao Yupeng (CHN)
Michael Georgiou (CYP) 3β0
Soheil Vahedi (IRN)
Jamie Clarke (WAL) 0β3
Pang Junxu (CHN)
Li Hang (CHN) 3β0
Sam Craigie (ENG)
Ali Carter (ENG) 3β2
Lei Peifan (CHN)
Duane Jones (WAL) 3β1
Nigel Bond (ENG)
18 August afternoon session
Jamie Wilson (ENG) 1β3
Mark King (ENG)
Sean Maddocks (ENG) 0β3
Noppon Saengkham (THA)
Barry Hawkins (ENG) 2β3
Luca Brecel (BEL)
Lukas Kleckers (GER) 3β2
Yan Bingtao (CHN)
Fergal O'Brien (IRL) 0β3
Gary Wilson (ENG)
Stuart Bingham (ENG) 3β2
Robert Milkins (ENG)
Alfie Burden (ENG) 1β3
Allan Taylor (ENG)
Graeme Dott (SCO) 1β3
Martin Gould (ENG)
Round 2
Round 2 matches were played as the best of five frames.
18 August evening session
Mark Williams (WAL) 3β2
Dominic Dale (WAL)
Liam Highfield (ENG) 3β2
Chen Zifan (CHN)
Martin O'Donnell (ENG) 2β3
Stephen Maguire (SCO)
Ben Hancorn (ENG) 3β2
Scott Donaldson (SCO)
Zhou Yuelong (CHN) 3β0
Andy Hicks (ENG)
Hossein Vafaei (IRN) 3β2
Mark Allen (NIR)
David Lilley (ENG) 0β3
Jordan Brown (NIR)
Ashley Hugill (ENG) 2β3
Anthony Hamilton (ENG)
19 August morning session
Liang Wenbo (CHN) 1β3
Hammad Miah (ENG)
Xu Si (CHN) 3β0
Barry Pinches (ENG)
Ian Burns (ENG) 0β3
Duane Jones (WAL)
Noppon Saengkham (THA) 2β3
Jimmy Robertson (ENG)
Luca Brecel (BEL) 3β1
Zhao Jianbo (CHN)
Ricky Walden (ENG) 3β1
Robbie Williams (ENG)
Mark Davis (ENG) 1β3
Jak Jones (WAL)
Rory McLeod (JAM) 0β3
Ross Muir (SCO)
19 August afternoon session
Elliot Slessor (ENG) 3β1
Wu Yize (CHN)
Matthew Selt (ENG) 3β0
Michael Georgiou (CYP)
David Gilbert (ENG) 3β1
John Astley (ENG)
Cao Yupeng (CHN) 2β3
John Higgins (SCO)
Oliver Lines (ENG) 3β0
David Grace (ENG)
Gary Wilson (ENG) 3β0
Stephen Hendry (SCO)
Allan Taylor (ENG) 3β0
Jimmy White (ENG)
Lee Walker (WAL) 3β2
Mark King (ENG)
19 August evening session
Li Hang (CHN) 0β3
Zhang Jiankang (CHN)
Mark Selby (ENG) 0β3
Ali Carter (ENG)
Martin Gould (ENG) 1β3
Lu Ning (CHN)
Stuart Bingham (ENG) 1β3
Judd Trump (ENG)
Lukas Kleckers (GER) 3β2
Louis Heathcote (ENG)
Pang Junxu (CHN) 3β1
Bai Langning (CHN)
Joe O'Connor (ENG) 3β1
Ken Doherty (IRL)
Dylan Emery (WAL) 2β3
Andrew Pagett (WAL)
Round 3
Round 3 matches were played as the best of five frames.
20 August morning session
Liam Highfield (ENG) 0β3
Mark Williams (WAL)
Matthew Selt (ENG) 1β3
Zhou Yuelong (CHN)
Allan Taylor (ENG) 1β3
Ross Muir (SCO)
Andrew Pagett (WAL) 0β3
David Gilbert (ENG)
Jak Jones (WAL) 2β3
Hossein Vafaei (IRN)
Xu Si (CHN) 0β3
Gary Wilson (ENG)
Duane Jones (WAL) 2β3
Jimmy Robertson (ENG)
Joe O'Connor (ENG) 3β2
Anthony Hamilton (ENG)
20 August afternoon session
Ben Hancorn (ENG) 1β3
Lu Ning (CHN)
Ricky Walden (ENG) 3β1
John Higgins (SCO)
Ali Carter (ENG) 3β1
Oliver Lines (ENG)
Lukas Kleckers (GER) 3β0
Lee Walker (WAL)
Hammad Miah (ENG) 3β1
Luca Brecel (BEL)
Stephen Maguire (SCO) 3β0
Jordan Brown (NIR)
Judd Trump (ENG) 2β3
Elliot Slessor (ENG)
Zhang Jiankang (CHN) 3β1
Pang Junxu (CHN)
Round 4
Round 4 matches were played as the best of five frames.
20 August evening session
Jimmy Robertson (ENG) 3β0
Stephen Maguire (SCO)
Ricky Walden (ENG) 3β1
Ross Muir (SCO)
Ali Carter (ENG) 1β3
Elliot Slessor (ENG)
David Gilbert (ENG) 3β0
Hammad Miah (ENG)
Joe O'Connor (ENG) 2β3
Zhou Yuelong (CHN)
Lu Ning (CHN) 3β0
Lukas Kleckers (GER)
Zhang Jiankang (CHN) 2β3
Mark Williams (WAL)
Hossein Vafaei (IRN) 2β3
Gary Wilson (ENG)
Quarter-finals
The quarter final matches were played as the best of seven frames.
21 August afternoon session
David Gilbert (ENG) 3β4
Gary Wilson (ENG)
Zhou Yuelong (CHN) 3β4
Elliot Slessor (ENG)
Mark Williams (WAL) 4β3
Ricky Walden (ENG)
Lu Ning (CHN) 2β4
Jimmy Robertson (ENG)
Semi-finals
The semi final matches were played as the best of seven frames.
21 August evening session
Gary Wilson (ENG) 4β3
Elliot Slessor (ENG)
Mark Williams (WAL) 4β1
Jimmy Robertson (ENG)
Final
The frame scores for the final are shown below. Numbers in brackets show breaks made during that frame.
| Final: Best of 11 frames. Referee: Leo Scullion Morningside Arena, Leicester, England, 22 August 2021. | ||
| Gary Wilson |
4β6 | Mark Williams |
| Frame Scores: 8β82, 72β0, 1β133 (111), 73β18, 101β0 (101), 24β85, 0β81, 73β42, 0β140 (115), 15β62 | ||
| 101 | Highest break | 115 |
| 1 | Century breaks | 2 |
Century breaks
There were 32 century breaks made during the event. Both Higgins and Carter compiled maximum breaks of 147 during the event. Higgins made one in the first frame of his first-round win over Ursenbacher, while Carter's maximum was completed during the second frame of his fourth-round loss to Slessor.
- 147, 107 β Ali Carter
- 147 β John Higgins
- 135, 112 β David Gilbert
- 134 β Zhang Anda
- 133 β Yuan Sijun
- 129, 125 β Elliot Slessor
- 126 β Jimmy Robertson
- 124, 109 β Zhou Yuelong
- 121 β Hossein Vafaei
- 118, 117 β Luca Brecel
- 118 β Barry Hawkins
- 117 β Michael Holt
- 117 β Michael White
- 115, 111 β Mark Williams
- 115, 101 β Kyren Wilson
- 114, 106, 101, 100 β Gary Wilson
- 111 β Lu Ning
- 110 β Anthony McGill
- 108 β Wu Yize
- 107 β Jordan Brown
- 104 β Ian Burns
- 104 β Anthony Hamilton
Notes
- ^ Kurt Maflin was due to play Rory McLeod, but withdrew from the event. He was not replaced so McLeod received a walkover.
- ^ Dylan Emery replaced Jamie O'Neill who was suspended from the event because of digressing from Covid policies.
- ^ John Higgins made a 147 in the first frame.
- ^ Ali Carter made a 147 in the second frame.
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