2016 World Grand Prix

The 2016 Ladbrokes World Grand Prix was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 8 and 13 March 2016 at the Venue Cymru in Llandudno, Wales. It was the seventh ranking event of the 2015/2016 season.

World Grand Prix
Tournament information
Dates8–13 March 2016
VenueVenue Cymru
CityLlandudno
CountryWales
Organisation(s)WPBSA
FormatRanking event
Total prize fund£300,000
Winner's share£100,000
Highest break Joe Perry (133)
Final
Champion Shaun Murphy
Runner-up Stuart Bingham
Score10–9
2015
2017

The defending champion Judd Trump lost 2–4 against Stuart Bingham in the last 16. Shaun Murphy beat Stuart Bingham 10–9 in the final to win the £100,000 first prize. The tournament was broadcast in the UK on ITV4.

Prize fund

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

The "rolling 147 prize" for a maximum break was won at the previous ranking event, the Welsh Open, and so stood at £5,000. The sponsor pledged to double the prize for a 147 break and so the prize was £10,000.[1]

Seeding list

The top 32 players on a one-year ranking system running from the 2015 Australian Goldfields Open until the 2016 Gdynia Open qualified for the tournament.[2]

Source:[3]

Rank Player Total Points
01 John Higgins 201,975
02 Neil Robertson 197,500
03 Martin Gould 127,425
04 Kyren Wilson 126,900
05 Mark Selby 106,375
06 Liang Wenbo 98,850
07 Mark Allen 91,200
08 David Gilbert 85,350
09 Judd Trump 73,250
10 Marco Fu 69,975
11 Ronnie O'Sullivan 61,500
12 Luca Brecel 59,925
13 Joe Perry 55,250
14 Shaun Murphy 53,975
15 Ben Woollaston 50,750
16 Matthew Selt 49,500
17 Ryan Day 48,975
18 Ding Junhui 45,425
19 Michael White 45,200
20 Barry Hawkins 45,025
21 Ali Carter 44,550
22 Michael Holt 44,450
23 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 43,275
24 Mark Williams 43,225
25 Stuart Bingham 42,175
26 David Grace 41,250
27 Graeme Dott 40,450
28 Tom Ford 37,850
29 Jamie Jones 37,400
30 Tian Pengfei 37,000
31 Peter Ebdon 34,425
32 Stephen Maguire 33,250

Main draw

Last 32
Best of 7 frames
Last 16
Best of 7 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 7 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 11 frames
Final
Best of 19 frames
               
1 John Higgins 4
32 Stephen Maguire 0
1 John Higgins 3
17 Ryan Day 4
16 Matthew Selt 1
17 Ryan Day 4
17 Ryan Day 2
25 Stuart Bingham 4
9 Judd Trump 4
24 Mark Williams 1
9 Judd Trump 2
25 Stuart Bingham 4
8 David Gilbert 1
25 Stuart Bingham 4
25 Stuart Bingham 6
13 Joe Perry 5
5 Mark Selby 2
28 Tom Ford 4
28 Tom Ford 0
21 Ali Carter 4
12 Luca Brecel 1
21 Ali Carter 4
21 Ali Carter 1
13 Joe Perry 4
13 Joe Perry 4
20 Barry Hawkins 0
13 Joe Perry 4
4 Kyren Wilson 1
4 Kyren Wilson 4
29 Jamie Jones 2
25 Stuart Bingham 9
14 Shaun Murphy 10
3 Martin Gould 4
30 Tian Pengfei 0
3 Martin Gould 1
14 Shaun Murphy 4
14 Shaun Murphy 4
19 Michael White 0
14 Shaun Murphy 4
6 Liang Wenbo 0
11 Ronnie O'Sullivan 3
22 Michael Holt 4
22 Michael Holt 2
6 Liang Wenbo 4
6 Liang Wenbo 4
27 Graeme Dott 1
14 Shaun Murphy 6
18 Ding Junhui 3
7 Mark Allen 4
26 David Grace 2
7 Mark Allen 2
23 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 4
10 Marco Fu 3
23 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 4
23 Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 3
18 Ding Junhui 4
15 Ben Woollaston 3
18 Ding Junhui 4
18 Ding Junhui 4
31 Peter Ebdon 0
2 Neil Robertson 3
31 Peter Ebdon 4

Final

Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Greg Coniglio.
Venue Cymru, Llandudno, Wales, 13 March 2016.
Stuart Bingham (25)
 England
9–10 Shaun Murphy (14)
 England
Afternoon: 13–76, 50–66, 96–20 (68), 26–74, 4–93 (58), 77–62, 61–29 (55), 101–5 (93), 80–56 (74)
Evening: 69–6 (68), 40–62 (52), 19–72, 85–2, 0–94 (94), 23–79, 65–54, 0–120 (120), 84–2, 0–72
93 Highest break 120
0 Century breaks 1
5 50+ breaks 4

Century breaks

Total: 15[4]

References

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