Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 9 June 1979 |
Venue | Queen's Hall |
City | Newtownards |
Country | Northern Ireland |
Organisation | WPBSA |
Format | Non-ranking event |
Total prize fund | £2,000 [1] |
Winner's share | £750 [2] |
Final | |
Champion | Ray Reardon |
Runner-up | Graham Miles |
Score | 4–2 |
← 1978 |
The 1979 McEwans Golden Masters was an invitational snooker tournament which took place on 9 June 1979 at the Queen's Hall in Newtownards, Northern Ireland. [1] Similar to the previous year, the tournament featured four professional players - Ray Reardon, Dennis Taylor, Doug Mountjoy and Graham Miles. [3]
Reardon won the title beating Miles 4–2 in the final. [4]
Semi-finals Best of 5 frames | Final Best of 7 frames | ||||||||
Ray Reardon | 3 | ||||||||
Doug Mountjoy | 1 | ||||||||
Ray Reardon | 4 | ||||||||
Graham Miles | 2 | ||||||||
Graham Miles | 3 | ||||||||
Dennis Taylor | 2 |
Graham Miles was an English snooker player.
Raymond Reardon is a Welsh retired professional snooker player. He turned professional in 1967 aged 35 and dominated the sport in the 1970s, winning the World Snooker Championship six times and more than a dozen other tournaments. Reardon was World Champion in 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1978, and runner-up in 1982. He won the inaugural Pot Black tournament in 1969, the 1976 Masters and the 1982 Professional Players Tournament.
John Spencer was an English professional snooker player and a three-time World Snooker Champion. Born in Radcliffe, Lancashire, he started playing snooker on a full-sized table at age 14, and made his first century break at age 15. After starting National Service at age 18, he did not play snooker again until he was 29. He won the English Amateur Championship in 1966 and turned professional in February 1967, aged 31.
Clifford Charles Devlin Thorburn is a Canadian retired professional snooker player. Nicknamed "The Grinder" because of his slow, determined style of play, he won the World Snooker Championship in 1980, defeating Alex Higgins 18–16 in the final. He is generally recognised as the sport's first world champion from outside the United Kingdom—since Australian Horace Lindrum's 1952 title is usually disregarded—and he remains the only world champion from the Americas. He was runner-up in two other world championships, losing 21–25 to John Spencer in the 1977 final and 6–18 to Steve Davis in the 1983 final. At the 1983 tournament, Thorburn became the first player to make a maximum break in a World Championship match, achieving the feat in his second-round encounter with Terry Griffiths.
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