Shoot Out 2013: Tournament Preview

While the invitational Shoot Out tournament may not be to everybody’s taste, tomorrow sees the start of the 2013 edition of the event on Sky Sports, as Barry Hawkins returns to defend the title that he won a year ago in Blackpool.

Click below for a summary of the rules (amended for this year), as well as a form guide as to the players, based on previous Shoot Out performances…

  • Click here to view the last 64 draw
  • Click here to view the match schedule
  • Click here to view the TV schedule

Following its successful début staging in 2011, the Shoot Out  took a bit of a battering in 2012, as the vast majority of matches proved to be relatively uneventful, no doubt due to the players having learned lessons from the previous year and how to use the format to their advantage.

In an effort therefore to change that and spice the tournament up, World Snooker have decided to reduce the shot clock to 15 seconds, coming down to just 10 after five minutes of play. A summary of the rules is as follows:

All matches up to and including the final will be one frame. All matches will be a maximum of 10 minutes in duration with a shot clock; the first 5 minutes at 15 seconds, and the remaining 5 minutes at 10 seconds. The other rules are:

• All fouls to result in opposing player having the ball in hand. Clock starts when player takes cueball.

• Players must hit a cushion or pot a ball on every shot

• Players ‘lag’ for who breaks (winner decides)

• Blue ball shoot out in event that points are tied in frame (winner of lag decides who goes first). Cueball placed in D.

Will it have the desired effect? I can see why the organisers have taken the decision to change the format, certainly after last year, there had to be some sort of change in an attempt to make the event more exciting.

Ultimately whether this is the right one will depend on how seriously one takes the tournament in the first place. Regular readers will know that I am very much ‘anti-shot clocks’ generally and if such a format were ever to be awarded ranking points, then the tone of this post would be very different. But the event is an invitational one and from my point of view, watching it as a chance to see a few different faces on television, in a less pressurised situation, I do not particularly see the harm in it.

That said, how entertaining is seeing the world’s best players sprint around the table to play shots in ten seconds going to be? From a snooker point of view, I suspect not very and it is not going to be one for the purists, but it certainly promises to be different.

So who is going to win? It could almost be anybody and certainly current form goes straight out of the window, given the unique format of the tournament.

Still, as a point of interest, see below for the respective records of everyone involved this year, based on their performances in 2011 and 2012…

Joe Perry

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Michael White

  • 2012 – R64

Mark Williams

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R32

Mike Dunn

  • 2011 – QF
  • 2012 – R32

Adam Duffy

  • Début

Jack Lisowski

  • 2012 – R64

Tom Ford

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – SF

Mark Allen

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R16

Dave Gilbert

  • Début

Ricky Walden

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R32

Mark Davis

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – QF

Yu Delu

  • Début

Aditya Mehta

  • Début

Mark Joyce

  • 2012 – R32

Marcus Campbell

  • 2011 – SF
  • 2012 – R32

Matthew Stevens

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R32

Stuart Bingham

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R32

Anthony Hamilton

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R32

Jamie Jones

  • 2012 – R16

Mark King

  • 2011 – QF
  • 2012 – R64

Alan McManus

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Fergal O’Brien

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R32

Robert Milkins

  • 2011 – Finalist
  • 2012 – R16

Ali Carter

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Steve Davis

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Barry Hawkins

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – Winner

Peter Ebdon

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Dominic Dale

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – QF

Jamie Burnett

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Michael Holt

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Mark Selby

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R32

Ken Doherty

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R32

Paul Davison

  • Début

Ben Woollaston

  • 2012 – R64

Tian Pengfei

  • Début

Jimmy Robertson

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Kurt Maflin

  • Début

Jamie Cope

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Martin Gould

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – QF

Rory McLeod

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R64

Graeme Dott

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – Finalist

Matt Selt

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R32

Dave Harold

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – SF

Rod Lawler

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Gerard Greene

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R16

Alfie Burden

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R32

Peter Lines

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R64

John Higgins

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R32

Shaun Murphy

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Liu Chuang

  • 2012 – R64

Liang Wenbo

  • 2012 – R16

Stephen Maguire

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R16

Andy Hicks

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Andrew Higginson

  • 2011 – R32
  • 2012 – R64

Jimmy White

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Thepchaiya Un-Nooh

  • Début

Anthony McGill

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Barry Pinches

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – QF

Nigel Bond

  • 2011 – Winner
  • 2012 – R64

Cao Yupeng

  • Début

Xiao Guodong

  • 2012 – R64

Ryan Day

  • 2011 – R16
  • 2012 – R16

Ding Junhui

  • 2011 – R64
  • 2012 – R64

Robbie Williams

  • Début