Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 18–26 October 1986 |
Venue | Hexagon Theatre |
City | Reading |
Country | England |
Organisation | WPBSA |
Format | Ranking event |
Total prize fund | £275,000 [1] |
Winner's share | £55,000 [1] |
Highest break | ![]() |
Final | |
Champion | ![]() |
Runner-up | ![]() |
Score | 10–6 |
← 1985 1987 → |
The 1986 Rothmans Grand Prix was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place from 18 to 26 October 1986 at the Hexagon Theatre in Reading. [3] [4]
Rex Williams made his first (and only) major final in a professional snooker tournament after being a professional since 1951. He was 53 years and 98 days old, making him the oldest player in a ranking final. He had beaten Jim Bear, Mark Wildman, Alex Higgins, Steve Davis and Neal Foulds before facing Jimmy White in the final. [5] During that match Williams took a 5–2 lead which he had made a break of 125 in the 7th frame and 6–4 before White took the last 6 frames to win 10–6. [6] [7]
Rounds 1 to 3 were played at Redwood Lodge, Bristol, from 17 to 24 September 1986. [8]
Terry Griffiths set a Grand Prix record with a break of 136 against Steve Davis in the fourth round. [9] This was superseded by a break of 137 by Willie Thorne against Neal Foulds in round five. [9] White then made a break of 138 against Silvino Francisco in their semi-final. [9] [10] [6]
The quarter-final between White and 17-year-old Stephen Hendry went to the deciding frame . [9] Hendry missed potting the blue ball in that frame and White went on to win. [9] Williams nearly inflicted the first whitewash of Davis's professional career, taking a four-frame lead but then not potting a black ball that would have meant a 5–0 win. [10] After Davis had won the fifth frame, Williams completed his victory with a break of 74 in frame 6. [10]
In the semi-finals, White defeated Francisco 9–6, and Williams eliminated Foulds 9–8. [11]
Williams led 5–3 at the end of the first session of the final. [9] White took the first frame of the second session, then Williams won the next frame to lead 6–4. [9] White then added six consecutive frames to take the title. [6] [7]
The breakdown of prize money is shown below: [12]
In addition to the prize fund, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association made contributions of £150 to 24 of the players who lost in rounds 1 and 2. [12]
Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: John Williams Hexagon Theatre, Reading, England, 26 October 1986. | ||
Jimmy White ![]() | 10–6 | Rex Williams ![]() |
11–72 (53), 57–47, 130–3 (101), 54–73, 44–84, 44–74, 0–126 (125), 90–4 (73), 83–24, 0–76, 72–16, 79–39 (68), 79–23, 63–61, 88–8 (51), 79–8 (72) | ||
101 | Highest break | 125 |
1 | Century breaks | 1 |
5 | 50+ breaks | 2 |
Results from the first two rounds are below. [13]
Round 4 onwards [14]
Rounds 1 to 3 [15]