Tournament information | |
---|---|
Venue | Minkler Auditorium |
Location | Toronto |
Country | Canada |
Established | 1974 |
Organisation(s) | World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association |
Format | Ranking event |
Final year | 1989 |
Final champion | Jimmy White |
The Canadian Masters was a professional snooker tournament.
History
The tournament was first held in 1974 and was named Canadian Open in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was part of Canadian National Exhibition Week. It was however discontinued after it clashed with the early start of the Main Tour. The event was revived in 1985, and was retitled as Canadian Masters. It was an eight-man invitation event held at the CBC Television Studios. The tournament was sponsored by BCE in 1985 and 1986.[1]
In 1987 the tournament became part of the World Series and Labatt's overtook sponsorship of the event. In 1989 it became the first ranking event held overseas, although only the stages from the last 32 were held in Canada. BCE sponsored the tournament, which was won by Jimmy White, who defeated Steve Davis 9–4 to win £40,000.[1]
It was held in the Minkler Auditorium, with the crowd filling the 1000 seats (Seneca Village, 1750 Finch Ave E, Toronto M2H)
Winners
Year | Winner | Runner-up | Final score | Season |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canadian Open (non-ranking) | ||||
1974 | Cliff Thorburn | Dennis Taylor | 8–6 | 1974/75 |
1975 | Alex Higgins | John Pulman | 15–7 | 1975/76 |
1976 | John Spencer | Alex Higgins | 17–9 | 1976/77 |
1977 | Alex Higgins | John Spencer | 17–14 | 1977/78 |
1978 | Cliff Thorburn | Tony Meo | 17–15 | 1978/79 |
1979 | Cliff Thorburn | Terry Griffiths | 17–16 | 1979/80 |
1980 | Cliff Thorburn | Terry Griffiths | 17–10 | 1980/81 |
Canadian Masters (non-ranking) | ||||
1985 | Dennis Taylor | Steve Davis | 9–5 | 1985/86 |
1986[2] | Steve Davis | Willie Thorne | 9–3 | 1986/87 |
1987 | Dennis Taylor | Jimmy White | 9–7 | 1987/88 |
Canadian Masters (ranking) | ||||
1988 | Jimmy White | Steve Davis | 9–4 | 1988/89 |
References
- 1 2 3 Turner, Chris. "Canadian Masters". cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk. Chris Turner's Snooker Archive. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2012.
- ↑ "Brit Davis pockets Canadian snooker". The Montreal Gazette. 3 November 1986. Retrieved 17 October 2012.