Tournament information | |
---|---|
Dates | 1–15 December 2002 |
Venue | Barbican Centre |
City | York |
Country | England |
Organisation | WPBSA |
Format | Ranking event |
Total prize fund | £746,900 |
Winner's share | £100,000 |
Highest break | Ronnie O'Sullivan (ENG) (142) |
Final | |
Champion | Mark Williams (WAL) |
Runner-up | Ken Doherty (IRL) |
Score | 10–9 |
← 2001 2003 → |
The 2002 UK Championship (officially the 2002 PowerHouse UK Championship) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place at the Barbican Centre in York, England. The event started on 1 December 2002 and the televised stages were shown on BBC between 7 and 15 December 2002. The sponsor for this year's event was Powerhouse.
Ronnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion, but he lost in the quarter-finals to Drew Henry.
Mark Williams won his second UK title in a classic 10–9 victory against Ken Doherty, who had reached his second UK final in a row. The highest break of the tournament was 142 made by Ronnie O'Sullivan.
2001 champion Ronnie O'Sullivan was the number 1 seed with World Champion Peter Ebdon seeded 2. The remaining places were allocated to players based on the world rankings.
The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below: [1]
Winner: £100,000 | Last 80: £2,950 Stage one highest break: £2,000 Stage one maximum break: £5,000 Total: £746,900 |
Final: Best of 19 frames. Referee: Stuart Bennett. Barbican Centre, York, England, 15 December 2002. [2] | ||
Ken Doherty (5) Ireland | 9–10 | Mark Williams (3) Wales |
Afternoon: 41–68 (56), 78–8 (55), 0–86 (86), 87–28 (55), 68–66, 45–70, 9–65 (65), 63–76 Evening:62–15 (56), 69–43 (62), 65–29, 0–128 (119), 43–47, 79–1, 0–74 (74), 0–78 (78), 58–14, 79–0 (79), 35–91 (70) | ||
79 | Highest break | 119 |
0 | Century breaks | 1 |
5 | 50+ breaks | 7 |
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The UK Championship is a professional ranking snooker tournament. It is one of snooker's prestigious Triple Crown events, along with the World Championship and the Masters. It is usually held at the Barbican Centre, York. Ronnie O'Sullivan has won the tournament a record eight times, followed by Steve Davis with six titles and Stephen Hendry with five. O'Sullivan is the reigning champion, winning his eighth title in 2023.
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