• Source: 2017 World Cup (snooker)
    • The 2017 Little Swan World Cup was a professional non-ranking team snooker tournament that took place from 3 to 9 July 2017 at the Wuxi City Sports Park Stadium in Wuxi, China. It was the 15th edition of the event, and was televised live by Eurosport Player and repeated on Eurosport 1.
      The China A pair of Ding Junhui and Liang Wenbo won the event, beating the English pair of Judd Trump and Barry Hawkins 4–3 in the final, winning the last three frames. Ding Junhui made a break of 59 in the deciding frame against Judd Trump.


      Teams and players




      Prize fund


      Winner: $200,000
      Runner-Up: $100,000
      Semi-final: $60,000
      Quarter-final: $40,000
      Third in group: $22,500
      Fourth in group: $15,000
      Fifth in group: $10,000
      Sixth in group: $7,500
      Total: $800,000


      Format


      The 2017 World Cup used the same format as that used in 2015. There were 24 national teams, with two players competing for each side, and the initial round divided the entrants into four groups of six. During the Group Stage, every national team played a best-of-five frame match against each of the other sides in their pool. All matches consisted of five frames, two singles, a doubles frame, and two reverse singles. The top two teams from each group advanced to the Knockout Stages, the order being determined by total frames won. If there is a tie in either of the first two places the following rules determine the positions. If two teams are equal, the winner of the match between the two teams will be ranked higher. If three or more teams are tied, a sudden-death blue ball shoot-out will be played. Teams tied for positions 3 to 6 would remain tied and share the prize money for those positions.
      During the quarter-finals, semi-finals, and championship final, the eight qualifying team were paired off in a head-to-head knockout. The format for these matches was a best-of-seven frame competition with the contest coming to an end as soon as one team had won four frames. These encounters were scheduled as two singles, a doubles frame, two reverse singles, another doubles frame, and a winner-take-all singles if necessary.


      Group stage




      = Group A

      =

      China B finished above Brazil because they won the match between the two teams.


      = Group B

      =

      Belgium finished above China A because they won the match between the two teams.


      = Group C

      =


      = Group D

      =


      Knock-out stage




      = Final

      =


      Century breaks


      There were 14 century breaks made in the tournament.

      Wales – 140 Ryan Day, 109 Mark Williams
      Thailand – 133, 116 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, 101 Noppon Saengkham
      Northern Ireland – 133, 104 Mark Allen
      Scotland – 130 John Higgins
      Belgium – 121 Luca Brecel
      England – 112 Judd Trump
      China B – 112 Zhou Yuelong
      Australia – 105 Neil Robertson
      Malta – 105 Duncan Bezzina
      Hong Kong – 103 Marco Fu


      References




      External links


      Official website

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