Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 10–21 October 1983 |
Venue | Redwood Lodge |
City | Bristol |
Country | England |
Organisation | WPBSA |
Format | Ranking event |
Total prize fund | £60,000 |
Winner's share | £12,500 |
Highest break | Joe Johnson (ENG) (135) |
Final | |
Champion | Tony Knowles (ENG) |
Runner-up | Joe Johnson (ENG) |
Score | 9–8 |
← 1982 1984 → |
The 1983 Professional Players Tournament was a professional ranking snooker tournament which took place between 3 September and 21 October 1983.
In a change from the previous year, the event was hosted at one venue, the 600-seater Redwood Lodge in Bristol. The following year, it would be renamed as the Grand Prix. [1]
The event started on 10 October, the day after the finish of the International Open at Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Cliff Thorburn, a finalist in the International Open, had to travel overnight to Bristol for his first match the following morning, but won against Vic Harris 5–1. [2] World number one Steve Davis was beaten 5–2 at the last-32 stage by Mike Hallett. [3]
Willie Thorne reached his first major semi-final after beating Eugene Hughes 5–2 in the quarter-finals. [4] Hughes had reached the quarter-finals after beating Bill Werbeniuk 5–0 and then Terry Griffiths 5–2 at the last-16 stage. [5] [6]
Joe Johnson reached the first ranking final of his four-year professional career, defeating Pascal Burke, Jimmy White, Eddie Charlton, Cliff Thorburn and Tony Meo. His opponent Tony Knowles reached his second ranking final, overcoming Paul Medati, Rex Williams, Silvino Francisco, John Campbell and Willie Thorne. [7]
In the final, Knowles dominated most of the match, building a 6–1 lead. Johnson then made the highest break of the tournament, a 135, in recovering to a score of 5–7 and eventually levelled the match at 8–8. Knowles won the deciding frame on the colours, to prevail 9–8, winning the first prize of £12,500. Johnson won £7,500 as runner-up and £1,000 for the high break prize. [8]
Final: Best of 17 frames. Redwood Lodge, Bristol, England, 21 October 1983. | ||
Tony Knowles England | 9–8 | Joe Johnson England |
92–22 (59), 80–16 (75), 67–41, 26–81, 84–17 (56), 82–18 (67), 62–17, 0–135 (135), 58–61, 28–63, 78–32, 17–100 (61), 76–0, 39–90, 9–76 (54), 14–93, 73–33 | ||
75 | Highest break | 135 |
0 | Century breaks | 1 |
4 | 50+ breaks | 3 |
Joe Johnson is an English former professional snooker player and commentator. He won the 1986 World Championship after starting the tournament as a 150–1 outsider, and was runner-up in 1987. In 1987 he reached the final of the English Amateur Championship, where he was defeated 6–13 by Terry Griffiths, and the final of the 1978 World Amateur Championship, which he lost 5–11 to Cliff Wilson. Johnson turned professional in 1979 and later reached the final of the 1983 Professional Players Tournament, where he lost 8–9 to Tony Knowles. In 1986 he defeated Steve Davis 18–12 to win the 1986 World Championship. Following a string of poor results after winning the title, he reached the final again in 1987, this time losing 14–18 to Davis.
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