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2003 Masters (snooker)

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Dates
  
2–9 February 2003

Country
  
England

Format
  
Non-ranking event

City
  
London

Organisation(s)
  
WPBSA

Venue
  
Wembley Conference Centre

The 2003 Benson & Hedges Masters was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 2 and 9 February 2003 at the Wembley Conference Centre in London, England.

Contents

Paul Hunter, who was aiming to complete a hat-trick of Masters titles, lost 3–6 to Mark Williams in the semi-final. Williams then beat Stephen Hendry 10–4 in the final to win his second Masters title. Hendry made the highest break of the championship with a 144 in his semi-final match against Ken Doherty, but missed out on a 147 during his quarter-final match against local favourite Jimmy White when he failed to pot the final pink.

This was the last Masters to be sponsored by Benson & Hedges after the ban on tobacco advertising which came into effect in summer 2003. Regal's sponsorship of the Scottish Masters, the Welsh Open and the Scottish Open also ended during the 2002/2003 season. However, Embassy continued to sponsor the World Championship until 2005.

Field

Defending champion Paul Hunter was the number 1 seed with World Champion Peter Ebdon seeded 2. Places were allocated to the top 16 players in the world rankings. Players seeded 15 and 16 played in the wild-card round against the winner of the qualifying event, Mark Davis (ranked 37), and Steve Davis (ranked 25), who was the wild-card selection. Mark Davis, Quinten Hann and Joe Perry were making their debuts in the Masters.

Prize fund

The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:

  • Winner: £210,000
  • Runner-up: £105,000
  • Highest break: £22,000
  • Maximum break: £100,000
  • Total: £695,000
  • Qualifying

    The 2002 Masters Qualifying Event was held between 21 and 31 November 2002 at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales. The winner of this series of matches, who qualified for the tournament, was Mark Davis. Tony Drago made his first and to date only maximum break against Stuart Bingham.

  • 144, 134, 107, 106, 102, 101, 101 Stephen Hendry
  • 138, 104 Paul Hunter
  • 122 Quinten Hann
  • 121, 115, 103, 102, 100 Mark Williams
  • 117, 101 John Higgins
  • 112, 105 Ronnie O'Sullivan
  • 111 Jimmy White
  • 107, 104 Mark Davis
  • 104 Steve Davis
  • 104 Matthew Stevens
  • 100 Ken Doherty
  • References

    2003 Masters (snooker) Wikipedia