'uri' ); ?> ​A FOUR WAY SHOWDOWN FOR POOL HISTORY - Day 6 Report

​A FOUR WAY SHOWDOWN FOR POOL HISTORY - Day 6 Report

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

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Date: Thursday, September 17 2015 @ 16:52:00 UTC
Topic: 9 Ball



2015 WPA World 9-Ball Championships
Qatar Billiards & Snooker Federation
Al Sadd Sports Club
Al Sadd Street
Sport Roundabout
Doha
Qatar
www.qbsf.qa - facebook - live stream - brackets
www.wpa-pool.com - Twitter - facebook
www.kozoom.com

Monday - Friday 7 - 18 September 2015


All photography courtesy of ©Richard Walker - used by Pro9 with express permission
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Ko Ping Chung, Ko Pin Yi, Shane Van Boening and Wu Jia Qing reach the final four at the 2015 World 9-ball Championship.

If you like your pool served up on a golden platter, with the very best in the sport battling it out for the ultimate prize, count yourself lucky because the 2015 World 9-ball Championship just delivered the goods.

With literally everything riding on the line at the Al Arabi Sports Club in Doha, four of the sport’s premiere players braved a marathon day of pool, fought their way through a minefield, and emerged into a final four on Friday that is about as rock solid as it gets in pool.

In one semi-final Ko Pin Yi of Taiwan will take on former World 9-ball champion Wu Jia Qing of China. In the other semi-final, Ko’s younger brother Ping Chung will match wits with the USA’s Shane Van Boening.

Both race to 11 semi-finals will be played simultaneously beginning at 1:30pm in Doha(GMT +3). The race to 13 final will begin at 5pm.

The story lines and possibilities of these two matchups, and the possible finals pairings,--especially with the very real chance of having two brothers face each other for the world crown-- have fans around the world lighting up social media with excitement. Wu, who was born and raised in Taiwan before moving to China in his early 20’s is the ex- wonder boy who, ten years ago, won the World 9-ball Championship at the age of just 16 years old. Ko, also 26 years old, was a child pool prodigy himself who finally captured his first world crown in February in the Philippines when he won the World 10-ball Championship. This is a matchup that fans have waited years to see.



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As prodigious as Ko is, his younger brother Pin Chung is said by some to be even better, if that were even possible. The 19 year old Pin Chung, who will be celebrating his 20th birthday on Friday, has played brilliantly all week, and is seemingly impervious to pressure. For his part Van Boening comes in playing the best pool of his career, and the man who carries the hopes of the USA firmly on his shoulders has an air of destiny swirling all around him. The American versus the young Taiwanese is a true clash of titans.

With their stellar play today, and throughout the tournament, it’s nearly impossible to choose among the four who would be a favorite to lift the trophy on Friday evening. But based on his level of competition today, and his overall rock solid play and demeanor, Ko Pin Yi, the older brother, might just get a slight nod from the bookmakers.

As the round of 32 began today at the Al Arabi, Ko first squared off in a true marquee match with the Philippines’ Carlo Biado. These two met in the finals of the World 10-ball seven months earlier with Ko squeaking past the Filipino at the wire. Biado was a serioius top ten favorite here in Doha but against Ko the match wasn’t even close. Ko was up 7-0 before Biado could get his cue unpacked and won in a rout, 11-4.

In his round of 16 match against the Philippines Warren Kiamco, Ko allowed the Filipino to get close late, but crossed the line when it counted, 11-9. In the semi-finals Ko was paired with rising Canadian John Morra. Morra had been playing marvelous pool all week and with some recent high finishes around the world, the Toronto native had the look of a man who could take his first title. Proof of this came in the round of 32 when Morra came back from 10-8 down against England’s Mark Gray to win 11-10. Then in the final 16 Morra stormed back from 8-4 down to bury Mika Immonen, 11-8.

Ko and Morra stayed even in the first half of the match, which looked like it was going to the wire. But Ko again turned on the afterburners and won seemingly with ease, 11-6, to grab his semis spot.

As usual Wu put in a brilliantly steady and workman like performance on his road to the final four. Employing his solid left handed stroke and masterful cue ball control, the Taiwan native first shut down last year’s runner up Albin Ouschan, 11-6. In the final 16 Wu battled back and forth with up and coming Chinese player Wang Can, before winning 11-9.

In the quarter finals Wu matched up with Singapore’s 19 year old Aloisius Yapp, who had played his way into being one of the surprises of the tournament. In the round of 32 Yapp, the current World Junior champion, had no issues with the Philippines’ Jeffrey Ingacio, winning 11-6. Yapp then barely got by another great young player, Greece’s Alexander Kazakis, 11-10.

Yapp admitted before his match with Wu that the Taiwanese was his pool idol. And the two had played numerous times over the years but Yapp had never won. And today was not the day that streak would change. The two stayed even in the first half of the match before Wu proved he had too much class, winning 11-7.

With his baby face and rail thin figure, the younger Ko could easily be mistaken for a shy school boy who couldn’t hurt a fly. On the pool table, however, Ko displays a fierceness that is practically unshakeable. Japan’s Yukio Akagariyama learned this as he went out to Ko in the round of 32, 11-9.

Shane Van BoeningIn the round of 16 the USA’s Mike Dechaine gave Ko a handful and very nearly took the match to a one rack decider. But when Dechaine missed a straight in 9-ball down 10-9, Ko had a spot in the quarterfinals. There he met up with surprise entry Wojciech Szewczyk of Poland. Szewczyk seemed exhausted from his previous two grinds and couldn’t keep up with the more talented Ko. The Taiwanese won easily, 11-5.

Ko’s semi-final against Van Boening has the makings of a classic. For while Ko offers a solid and steady immovable object, the American is clearly playing the best pool of his career. Van Boeing’s three matches today were veritable clinics in 9-ball pool as he dismantled a solid wall of talent, breaking perfectly and clearing tables with ease.

In the round of 32, the American first buried Spain’s Francisco Diaz Pizarro, 11-5. In the round of 16, Van Boening made short work of Taiwan’s Chang Yu Lung, beating the recently former world number 1, 11-4. Van Boening then headed to the TV table for what fans thought would be a showdown with the Philippines Dennis Orcollo. But Shane kept breaking and running, while Orcollo couldn’t find an opening. Van Boening thumped the Filipino, 11-1.

The win over Orcollo capped a breathtaking day for Van Boening, who’s looking to restore American pride to pool by becoming the first American player since Earl Strickland 13 years ago to win the World 9-ball Championship. A buoyant Van Boening is sure he has just the right formula to pull off his greatest ever triumph on Friday.

“I have a lot of confidence in myself right now,” Van Boening said. “I’ve really been working on my stroke and the break is working pretty well and that’s the key. I’ve been watching a lot of these guys and they are not really breaking well. They are making balls but they aren’t getting a shot on the 1-ball. I’m getting a shot on the 1-ball 80 to 90% of the time and I’m running out. That’s important.Hopefully some day I can win the world championship. This is my chance tomorrow.”

SEMI-FINALS @ 1:30PM (GMT+3)

Ko Pin Yi(TPE) vs. Wu Jia Qing(CHN
Ko Pin Chung(TPE) vs. Shane Van Boening(USA)

FINAL @ 5PM (GMT+3)


All photography courtesy of ©Richard Walker - used by Pro9 with express permission
Click the image to view the full size photograph (use "back" to return here)



Click the image to view the full size photograph (use "back" to return here)



Click the image to view the full size photograph (use "back" to return here)



Click the image to view the full size photograph (use "back" to return here)




2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 64 DRAW
Raymund FARAON
9 : 11
Warren KIAMCO
Jalal YOUSEF
11 : 10
Zhou LONG
Carlo BIADO
11 : 5
Lee VAN CORTEZA
Ko PIN YI
11 : 7
Justin CAMPBELL
Mika IMMONEN
11 : 3
Goh CHIN TECK
Wu KUN LIN
11 : 9
Ryu SEANG WOO
John MORRA
11 : 2
Omran SALEM
Mark GRAY
11 : 10
Ralf SOUQUET
Oi NAOYUKI
9 : 11
Aloysius YAPP
Jeffrey IGNACIO
11 : 5
Jason KLATT
Imran MAJID
10 : 11
Liu HAITAO
Alexander KAZAKIS
11 : 10
Chao FONG
Antponio GABICA
5 : 11
Ruslan CHINAKHOV
Wang CAN
11 : 7
Kuribayashi TOHRU
Satoshi KAWABATA
7 : 11
Albin OUSCHAN
Wu JIA QING
11 : 3
Muhammad BEWI
Ko PIN CHUNG
11 : 5
Mario HE
Akagariyama YUKIO
11 : 5
Johann GONZALES CHUA
Li HEWEN
7 : 11
Denis GRABE
Mike DECHAINE
11 : 10
Cheng YU HSUAN
David ALCAIDE
11 : 8
Yang CHING SHUN
Abdulrahman AL AMAR
8 : 11
Toh LIAN HAN
Liu CHING CHIEH
11 : 5
Adreas GERWIN
Wojciech SZEWCZYK
11 : 8
Marco TEUTSCHER
Chang YU LUNG
11 : 4
Marc BIJSTERBOSCH
Karol SKOWERSKI
4 : 11
Oliver MEDENILLA
Shane VAN BOENING
11 : 3
Tomasz KAPLAN
Dan JIN HU
10 : 11
Francisco DIAZ PIZARRO
Mateusz SNIEGOCKI
10 : 11
Hunter LOMBARDO
Dennis ORCOLLO
11 : 1
Mishel TURKEY
Reuben BAUTISTA
3 : 11
Darren APPLETON
Nikos EKONOMOPOULOS
11 : 7
Matey ULLAH


2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 32
Warren KIAMCO
11 : 7
Jalal YOUSEF
Carlo BIADO
4 : 11
Ko PIN YI
Mika IMMONEN
11 : 9
Wu KUN LIN
John MORRA
11 : 10
Mark GRAY
Aloysius YAPP
11 : 6
Jeffrey IGNACIO
Liu HAITAO
9 : 11
Alexander KAZAKIS
Ruslan CHINAKHOV
7 : 11
Wang CAN
Albin OUSCHAN
6 : 11
Wu JIA QING
Ko PIN CHUNG
11 : 9
Akagariyama YUKIO
Denis GRABE
10 : 11
Mike DECHAINE
David ALCAIDE
11 : 7
Toh LIAN HAN
Liu CHING CHIEH
8 : 11
Wojciech SZEWCZYK
Chang YU LUNG
11 : 4
Oliver MEDENILLA
Shane VAN BOENING
11 : 5
Francisco DIAZ-PIZARRO
Hunter LOMBARDO
7 : 11
Dennis ORCOLLO
Darren APPLETON
11 : 7
Nikos EKONOMOPOULOS


2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE LAST 16
Warren KIAMCO
9 : 11
Ko PIN YI
Mika IMMONEN
8 : 11
John MORRA
Aloysius YAPP
11 : 10
Alexander KAZAKIS
Wang CAN
9 : 11
Wu JIA QING
Ko PIN CHING
11 : 9
Mike DECHAINE
David ALCAIDE
10 : 11
Wojciech SZEWCZYK
Chang YU LUNG
5 : 11
Shane VAN BOENING
Dennis ORCOLLO
11 : 2
Darren APPLETON


2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE QUARTERFINALS
Ko PIN YI
11 : 6
John MORRA
Aloysius YAPP
7 : 11
Wu JIA QING
Ko PIN CHING
11 : 5
Wojciech SZEWCZYK
Shane VAN BOENING
11 : 1
Dennis ORCOLLO


2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE SEMIFINALS
Ko PIN YI
0 : 0
Wu JIA QING
Ko PIN CHUNG
0 : 0
Shane VAN BOENING


2015 WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
DOHA - QATAR
THE FINAL
---
0 : 0
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WPA WORLD 9-BALL CHAMPIONSHIPS
THE WINNER'S LIST
1990 - 2015
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
2012
Darren Appleton
GBR
2013
Thorsten Hohmann
GER
2014
Niels Feijen
NED
2015
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