1990 World Cup (snooker): Difference between revisions
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|Total prize fund=£135,000 |
|Total prize fund=£135,000 |
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|winners_share=£48,000 |
|winners_share=£48,000 |
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|highest_break= |
|highest_break={{flagicon|CAN}} [[Alain Robidoux]] (124) |
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|winner={{flagicon|CAN}} [[Canada]] |
|winner={{flagicon|CAN}} [[Canada]] |
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|runner_up={{flagicon|NIR}} [[Northern Ireland]] |
|runner_up={{flagicon|NIR}} [[Northern Ireland]] |
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The '''1990 Snooker World Cup''' was a team [[snooker]] tournament played at the [[Bournemouth International Centre]]. [[British Car Rental]] sponsored this last one in its original form. |
The '''1990 Snooker World Cup''' was a team [[snooker]] tournament played at the [[Bournemouth International Centre]]. [[British Car Rental]] sponsored this last one in its original form. |
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[[England]] with [[Steve Davis]], [[Jimmy White]] and [[John Parrott]] lost their first round match to the [[Republic of Ireland]], who then lost to [[Northern Ireland]] in the semi-finals. The Northern Ireland team of captain [[Dennis Taylor]], [[Alex Higgins]] and [[Tommy Murphy (snooker player)|Tommy Murphy]] became more remembered behind the scenes, with infighting between Higgins and Taylor fighting over the captaincy that erupted into a number of arguments, culminating in Higgins infamously threatening to have Taylor shot; this incident, along with a number of offences at the World Championship a month later, resulted in Higgins being banned from the game for the rest of 1990 and all of 1991. They went on to lose to [[Canada]] in the final 5–9 in which [[Cliff Thorburn]] lead a new look team with [[Bob Chaperon]] and [[Alain Robidoux]]. |
[[England]] with [[Steve Davis]], [[Jimmy White]] and [[John Parrott]] lost their first round match to the [[Republic of Ireland]], who then lost to [[Northern Ireland]] in the semi-finals. The Northern Ireland team of captain [[Dennis Taylor]], [[Alex Higgins]] and [[Tommy Murphy (snooker player)|Tommy Murphy]] became more remembered behind the scenes, with infighting between Higgins and Taylor fighting over the captaincy that erupted into a number of arguments, culminating in Higgins infamously threatening to have Taylor shot; this incident, along with a number of offences at the World Championship a month later, resulted in Higgins being banned from the game for the rest of 1990 and all of 1991. They went on to lose to [[Canada]] in the final 5–9 in which [[Cliff Thorburn]] lead a new look team with [[Bob Chaperon]] and [[Alain Robidoux]] in which the latter player won the match with a 124 break, the highest of the championship. |
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Revision as of 01:16, 16 March 2022
Tournament information | |
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Dates | 21–24 March 1990 |
Venue | Bournemouth International Centre |
City | Bournemouth |
Country | England |
Format | Non-ranking event |
Total prize fund | £135,000 |
Winner's share | £48,000 |
Highest break | Alain Robidoux (124) |
Final | |
Champion | Canada |
Runner-up | Northern Ireland |
Score | 9–5 |
← 1989 1996 → |
The 1990 Snooker World Cup was a team snooker tournament played at the Bournemouth International Centre. British Car Rental sponsored this last one in its original form.
England with Steve Davis, Jimmy White and John Parrott lost their first round match to the Republic of Ireland, who then lost to Northern Ireland in the semi-finals. The Northern Ireland team of captain Dennis Taylor, Alex Higgins and Tommy Murphy became more remembered behind the scenes, with infighting between Higgins and Taylor fighting over the captaincy that erupted into a number of arguments, culminating in Higgins infamously threatening to have Taylor shot; this incident, along with a number of offences at the World Championship a month later, resulted in Higgins being banned from the game for the rest of 1990 and all of 1991. They went on to lose to Canada in the final 5–9 in which Cliff Thorburn lead a new look team with Bob Chaperon and Alain Robidoux in which the latter player won the match with a 124 break, the highest of the championship.
Main draw
Teams
Country | Player 1 (Captain) | Player 2 | Player 3 |
---|---|---|---|
England | Steve Davis | Jimmy White | John Parrott |
Wales | Terry Griffiths | Doug Mountjoy | Cliff Wilson |
Canada | Cliff Thorburn | Bob Chaperon | Alain Robidoux |
Rest of the World | Silvino Francisco | Tony Drago | Dene O'Kane |
Northern Ireland | Dennis Taylor | Alex Higgins | Tommy Murphy |
Scotland | Stephen Hendry | Murdo MacLeod | John Rea |
Australia | Eddie Charlton | John Campbell | Warren King |
Ireland | Eugene Hughes | Paddy Browne | Anthony Kearney |
Quarter-finals Best of 9 Frames | Semi-finals Best of 9 Frames | Final Best of 17 Frames | ||||||||||||
England | 4 | |||||||||||||
Republic of Ireland | 5 | Republic of Ireland | ? | |||||||||||
Northern Ireland | 5 | Northern Ireland | 5 | |||||||||||
Rest of the World | 2 | Northern Ireland | 5 | |||||||||||
Wales | 3 | Canada | 9 | |||||||||||
Australia | 5 | Australia | ? | |||||||||||
Canada | 5 | Canada | 5 | |||||||||||
Scotland | 3 |
Final
Final: Best of 17 frames. Referees: Bournemouth International Centre, Bournemouth, England. 24 March 1990. | ||
Canada Cliff Thorburn, Bob Chaperon, Alain Robidoux |
9–5 | Northern Ireland Dennis Taylor, Alex Higgins, Tommy Murphy |
Chaperon v Taylor: 1–1 Thorburn v Murphy: 2–0 Robidoux v Higgins: 3–1 Chaperon v Taylor: 1–1 Thorburn v Higgins: 0–2 Robidoux v Murphy: 2–0 | ||
Highest break | ||
Century breaks | ||
50+ breaks |