'uri' ); ?> THE GANG OF FOUR GOES FOR GLORY

THE GANG OF FOUR GOES FOR GLORY

A Pro9 - Europe's No.1 Pool Player Resource Article

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Date: Friday, June 29 2012 @ 07:24:11 UTC
Topic: 9 Ball



2012 WPA World 9-Ball Championships
Qatar Billiards & Snooker Federation
Al Sadd Sports Club
Al Sadd Street
Sport Roundabout
Doha
Qatar
www.qbsf.net - group brackets - livescore
www.olympic.qa
www.wpa-pool.com
www.al-saddclub.com
www.alkass.net/live_plus.aspx - Live video streaming - NOW!

18 - 29 June 2012



APPLETON, OHI, LEE AND SOUQUET REACH THE SEMI-FINALS OF THE 2012 WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIP IN DOHA

After a brutally taxing day of championship pool at the highest levels, England’s Darren Appleton, Japan’s Nayoki Ohi, Germany’s Ralf Souquet and China’s Lee He Wen all made it into the semi-finals of the 2012 World 9-ball Championship in Doha, Qatar.

Both semi-finals carry the classic story line of east vs. west. In one semi-final, Appleton will face off with Ohi. In the other semi-final, Souquet will be take on Li.

The semi-finals will be a race to 11, alternate break and will be played concurrently at the Al Sadd Sports Club in Doha, beginning at 2pm local time(GMT +3). The final will be a race to 13, alternate break and will begin at 6pm.

The Al Sadd heaved with drama and emotion throughout the long day of play today as the field was cut from 32 players down to four. It was a marathon of hard core pool that when combined with the gravity of the circumstances, seemed to tax each and every player to the core. At times the winners of matches came down to a matter of who had the stamina and will power to withstand the constant pressure. Nobody who was there would argue that the last four men standing earned their spots the hard way and are battle hardened and ready for trench warfare.

Photos by Michael Neumann

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Perhaps the most impressive player in the field today, and also the one who seemed to best be able to let the pressure effortlessly slide off him was Japan’s Ohi. The 29 year old from Osaka is known amongst fellow players as an affable free spirit and he played like it throughout the day. Ohi came out and completely steamrolled Taiwan’s Chang Jung Lin in the round of 32, 11-3. He then met up with Germany’s Thorsten Hohmann in the round of 16 where he came back from an early deficit and glided to the finish line for a well earned 11-9 victory.

A similar scenario happened in Ohi’s quarterfinal matchup against England’s Karl Boyes. Boyes had been developing a head of steam as he had just beaten Taiwan’s Fong Pang Chao 11-8, and then barely squeaked by young German talent Dominique Jentsch, 11-10.

But while the match was close throughout, Ohi seemed impervious to any of Boyes’ pressure and fought off the Englishman the whole way. Ohi never trailed and advanced with a well earned 11-9 victory.

China’s Lee is perhaps the most unassuming top tier player in the world today. With his bespectacled, urchin-like appearance, he could easily be mistaken for the class nerd. But any attempt to prejudge Li based on looks is done at one’s severe peril. This guy can flat out play.

Lee first took down Canada’s John Morra, 11-8. He then met up with one of the tournament’s surprises, Kuwait’s Omar Al Shaheen. The Kuwaiti’s have made serious advances in pool and the 19 year old Al Shaheen is clearly the face of the new and hungry generation.

Al Shaheen played a fantastic match and had the score even after ten racks. But like all great players, once Lee got the lead, he managed to hold on to it by hook or by crook.
Al Shaheen fought furiously and had the backing of the boisterous crowd. But despite some late errors, the Chinese held on for a tight 11-9 win.

Lee then met up with the Philippines Antonio Gabica in the quarterfinal. Amazingly, Gabica, who is a coach for the Qatar national team, was the last Filipino left in a field that started with 17 on day 1. Four Pinoys had already been shown the exits by the time Gabica met Li; Dennis Orcullo, Efren Reyes, Lee Van Corteza, and Jundel Mazon.

Gabica had just come off a thriller with Mika Immonen, barely beating the Finn, 11-9. Lee, though, looked like a machine in the first half of the match, streaking out to an 8-4, then 9-5 lead. But Gabica used his superbly fluid stroke to crawl back in the match. Lee started to wilt under the pressure. Gabica closed the gap to 10-9 but Lee broke and ran to book his place in the semis.


Another quarterfinal featured two of the games superb talents in Appleton and Taiwan’s Ko Pin Yi. Appleton has been playing well which seems to bring out the best in his opponents. Appleton barely got by one of the tournament’s upstarts, New Zealand’s Matthew Edwards, 11-10. Appleton then put in another fine performance against talented Greek, Nick Ekonomopoulos winning 11-8.

Ko had looked positively brilliant all week and he continued his fine run today. In the round of 32, Ko and Japan’s Lo Li Wen engaged in what was arguably the highest quality match of the day, with Ko winning by a hair, 11-10. Ko then put a muzzle on the Philippines' Mazon, who had looked strong and steady up to that point.

Against Ko Appleton displayed championship form early and went up 8-3. But Ko took advantage of two flukes and closed the gap to 10-9. With the pressure and drama thick and heavy, Ko, tried to jump and pot a basic two in the jaws, when the cue ball flew off the table. Game, set, match for Appleton.

“I played perfect to go up 7-2,” Appleton said. “I feel good overall because he was the man to beat. He was playing better than anyone.”

Although it is surely anyone’s game on Friday, Appleton’s hunger to create history could spell the difference.

“To hold the US Open and World 9-ball at the same time would be nice. It would be unbelievable.”

In the other quarterfinal, Hall of Famer Ralf Souquet went up against the Netherland’s Nick van den Berg. Steady and reliable Souquet had quietly worked his way through the field, first squashing Venezuela’s Jonny Martinez, 11- 7, then Italy’s Bruno Muratore, 11-4.

Van den Berg was playing the Dutch version of steady and solid, first beating China’s Han Hao Xiang, then out maneuvering Orcullo, 11-6.

As expected this match became a total grind. The contest was close throughout, but both players, apparently exhausted, had difficulty deciding on how to proceed on ordinary shots. Over three hours after it began, van den Berg scratched with just the 9-ball left on the table, handing the match to Souquet, 11-9.

“I was drawing a blank,” a clearly relieved Souquet said afterward. “My mind was completely gone. I had eaten after the last match and that drained my energy.”

Souquet last won the World 9-ball in 1996. Since then he’s reached two finals and lost. But when the German legend puts his mind to something, he can never be counted out.

“Yes that’s my goal, to win the World 9-ball Championship again.”

The WPA will be providing full up to the minute coverage of the semi-finals and finals of 2012 World 9-ball Championship via its website at www.wpapool.com. There you can follow the action through our live scoring platform, articles with insights and analysis, and updated brackets. Fans can also get updates via the WPA Twitter page, @poolwpa.com.

Fans can also access live scoring through the official website of the Qatar Billiards and Snooker Federation at: http://www.qbsf.net/en/live_score.php.

*The World Pool And Billiard Association(WPA) is the international governing of the sport of pocket billiards.

Semi-finals, 2PM(GMT +3, June 29th, 2012)
Race to 11, Alternate Break
Ralf Souquet(GER) vs. Li He Wen(CHN)
Darren Appleton(GBR) vs. Naoyuki Ohi(JPN)

Finals, 6pm
Race to 13, Alternate Break




Click the image to view the larger photo (courtesy of Thorsten Hohmann)



2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 64 DRAW
Ralf Souquet
11 : 4
Nikolaos Malaj
Jonny Martinez
11 : 8
Takashi Uraoka
Fu Che Wei
11 : 4
Andrea Klasovic
Bruno Muratore
11 : 6
Jayson Shaw
Hsu Kai Lun
11 : 5
Aki Heiskanen
Dennis Orcollo
11 : 8
Andrew Kong
Nick van den Berg
11 : 6
Marlon Caneda
Han Hao Xiang
11 : 8
Israel Rota
Lee Van Corteza
11 : 4
Serge Das
Mika Immonen
11 : 10
Tony Drago
Antonio Gabica
11 : 7
Mario He
Yang Ching Shun
11 : 4
Vincent Facquet
Khaled Al Mutairi
11 : 8
Majed Alazmi
Omar Al Shahen
11 : 10
Chang Yu Lun
John Morra
11 : 7
Elvis Calasang
Lee He Wen
11 : 9
Jason Klatt
Naoyuki Ohi
11 : 10
Carlo Biado
Chang Jun Lin
11 : 2
Joven Alba
Thorsten Hohmann
11 : 4
Badr Al Awadi
Yukio Akagariyama
11 : 9
Thomas Engert
Karl Boyes
11 : 9
Do The Kien
Chao Fong Pang
11 : 6
Francisco Bustamante
Dominic Jentsch
11 : 6
Manuel Gama
Efren Reyes
11 : 6
Toh Lian Han
Liu Haitao
11 : 4
Roberto Gomez
Nick Ekonomopoulos
11 : 5
Ryu Seung Woo
Matthew Edwards
11 : 8
Tohru Kuribayashi
Darren Appleton
11 : 6
Mateusz Sniegocki
Konstantin Stepanov
11 : 6
Ryoji Hori
Jundel Mazon
11 : 9
Ronnie Alcano
Lo Li Wen
11 : 9
Daryl Peach
Ko Pin Yi
11 : 6
Huidji See


2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 32
Ralf Souquet
11 : 7
Jonny Martinez
Bruno Muratore
11 : 9
Fu Che Wei
Dennis Orcollo
11 : 8
Hsu Kai Lun
Nick van den Berg
11 : 9
Han Hao Xiang
Mika Immonen
11 : 5
Lee Van Corteza
Antonio Gabica
11 : 9
Yang Ching Shun
Omar Al Shahen
11 : 6
Khaled Al Mutairi
Lee He Wen
11 : 8
John Morra
Naoyuki Ohi
11 : 3
Chang Jung Lin
Thorsten Hohmann
11 : 9
Yukio Akagariyama
Karl Boyes
11 : 8
Chao Fong Pang
Dominic Jentsch
11 : 10
Efren Reyes
Nick Ekonomopoulos
11 : 8
Liu Haitao
Darren Appleton
11 : 10
Matthew Edwards
Jundel Mazon
11 : 3
Konstantin Stepanov
Ko Pin Yi
11 : 10
Lo Li Wen


2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 16
Ralf Souquet
11 : 4
Bruno Muratore
Nick van den Berg
11 : 6
Dennis Orcollo
Antonio Gabica
11 : 9
Mika Immonen
Lee He Wen
11 : 9
Omar Al Shahen
Naoyuki Ohi
11 : 9
Thorsten Hohmann
Karl Boyes
11 : 10
Dominik Jentsch
Darren Appleton
11 : 8
Nick Ekonomopoulos
Ko Pin Yi
11 : 8
Jundel Mazon


2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE QUARTER-FINALS
Ralf Souquet
11 : 9
Nick van den Berg
Lee He Wen
11 : 10
Antonio Gabica
Naoyuki Ohi
11 : 9
Karl Boyes
Darren Appleton
11 : 9
Ko Pin Yi


Semi-finals, 2PM(GMT +3, June 29th, 2012)
2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE SEMI-FINALS
Lee He Wen
11 : 6
Ralf Souquet
Darren Appleton
11 : 7
Naoyuki Ohi


The Final, Qatar 6PM(GMT +3, June 29th, 2012 - London 4PM)
2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE FINAL
Lee He Wen
-vs-
Darren Appleton




2012 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE PRIZE FUND
1st
$ 40,000
2nd
$ 20,000
3rd ~ 4th
$ 12,000
5th ~ 8th
$ 8,000
9th ~ 16th
$ 5,000
17th ~ 32nd
$ 3,000
33rd ~ 64th
$ 2,000
65th ~ 96th
$ 1,000
97th ~ 128th
$ 0
TOTAL PRIZE FUND = US $300,000




WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
THE WINNER'S LIST
1990 - 2011
1990
Earl Strickland
USA
1991
Earl Strickland
USA
1992
Johnny Archer
USA
1993
Fong-Pang Chao
TPE
1994
Takeshi Okumura
JPN
1995
Oliver Ortmann
GER
1996
Ralf Souquet
GER
1997
Johnny Archer
USA
1998
Kunihiko Takahashi
JPN
1999
Nick Varner
USA
1999
Efren Reyes
PHI
2000
Fong-Pang Chao
TPE
2001
Mika Immonen
FIN
2002
Earl Strickland
USA
2003
Thorsten Hohmann
GER
2004
Alex Pagulayan
CAN
2005
Chia-Ching Wu
TPE
2006
Ronnie Alcano
PHI
2007
Daryl Peach
GBR
2008
*Not held
---
2009
*Not held
---
2010
Francisco Bustamante
PHI
2011
Yukio Akakariyama
JPN














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After clocking in workmanlike performances, England’s Darren Appleton and