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1996 World Cup (snooker)

The 1996 Snooker World Cup was a team snooker tournament which returned after a six-year absence. With the increasing rise of snooker in some countries, This new version has 20 teams in the championship and it was played in Bangkok in Thailand. Scotland's 'Dream Team' with Stephen Hendry, Alan McManus and John Higgins were strong favourites to win from the start and they did so by beating Republic of Ireland with Ken Doherty, Fergal O'Brien and Stephen Murphy to win their only World Cup. Higgins got the highest break of the tournament with a 139 in his semi-final match against Thailand's Tai Pichit. The tournament was a success but hosting the event had become too costly that the event was withdrawn afterward.[1][2][3]

Castrol-Honda World Cup
Tournament information
Dates29 October – 10 November 1996 (1996-10-29 – 1996-11-10)
VenueArmari Watergate Hotel
CityBangkok
CountryThailand
FormatNon-ranking event
Total prize fund£400,000
Winner's share£105,000
Highest breakScotland John Higgins 139
Final
ChampionScotland Scotland
Runner-upRepublic of Ireland Republic of Ireland
Score10–7
1990
2011

Main draw

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Teams

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Country Player 1 (Captain) Player 2 Player 3
  Scotland Stephen Hendry Alan McManus John Higgins
  England Peter Ebdon Ronnie O'Sullivan Nigel Bond
  Wales Darren Morgan Mark Williams Anthony Davies
  Northern Ireland Dennis Taylor Joe Swail Terry Murphy
  Ireland Ken Doherty Fergal O'Brien Stephen Murphy
  Canada Cliff Thorburn Alain Robidoux Jim Wych
  Malta Tony Drago Alex Borg Joe Grech
  Thailand James Wattana Noppadon Noppachorn Tai Pichit
  Australia Robby Foldvari Quinten Hann Stan Gorski
  Pakistan Shokat Ali Farhan Mirza Saleh Mohammad
  South Africa Silvino Francisco Hitesh Naran Munier Cassim
  New Zealand Dene O'Kane Mark Canovan Daniel Haenga
  Belgium Bjorn Haneveer Mario Geudens Patrick Delsemme
Hong Kong  Hong Kong Kong Wahorn Chan Wai Tat Paul Fung
  Singapore Keith Boon Bernard Tey Ang Chiok Hong
  China Guo Hua Pang Weiguo Tao Shan
  United Arab Emirates Masood Akil Mohammed Shehab Mohammed Al Joker
  Iceland Kristján Helgason Johannes Johannesson Edvard Matthiasson
  Malaysia Sam Chong Ng Ann Seng Yong Kien Foot
  Netherlands Raymond Fabrie Mario Wehrmann Johan Oenema

Darren Morgan was later replaced by Mark Bennett after the death of his mother.

The two best teams from each group advanced to the quarter-finals.

Group A

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Team 1 Score Team 2 Date
Belgium  Belgium 6–3 Iceland  Iceland
Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 6–3 New Zealand  New Zealand
Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland 6–3 Iceland  Iceland
Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 7–2 Belgium  Belgium
Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland 4–5 Belgium  Belgium
New Zealand  New Zealand 5–4 Iceland  Iceland
Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 4–5 Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland
New Zealand  New Zealand 5–4 Belgium  Belgium
Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 7–2 Iceland  Iceland
Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland 6–3 New Zealand  New Zealand

Group B

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Team 1 Score Team 2 Date
Hong Kong  Hong Kong 2–7 Singapore  Singapore
Canada  Canada 8–1 South Africa  South Africa
Scotland  Scotland 9–0 Singapore  Singapore
Hong Kong  Hong Kong 7–2 South Africa  South Africa
Scotland  Scotland 6–3 South Africa  South Africa
Canada  Canada 8–1 Singapore  Singapore
Canada  Canada 7–2 Hong Kong  Hong Kong
South Africa  South Africa 5–4 Singapore  Singapore
Scotland  Scotland 6–3 Canada  Canada
Scotland  Scotland 8–1 Hong Kong  Hong Kong

Group C

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Team 1 Score Team 2 Date
Thailand  Thailand 4–5 China  China
England  England 8–1 United Arab Emirates  United Arab Emirates
China  China 4–5 United Arab Emirates  United Arab Emirates
Thailand  Thailand 6–3 Pakistan  Pakistan
England  England 5–4 China  China
England  England 6–3 Thailand  Thailand
Pakistan  Pakistan 8–1 United Arab Emirates  United Arab Emirates
Pakistan  Pakistan 7–2 China  China
Thailand  Thailand 9–0 United Arab Emirates  United Arab Emirates
England  England 6–3 Pakistan  Pakistan

Group D

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Team 1 Score Team 2 Date
Australia  Australia 6–3 Netherlands  Netherlands
Malta  Malta 6–3 Malaysia  Malaysia
Wales  Wales 6–3 Netherlands  Netherlands
Australia  Australia 5–4 Malta  Malta
Wales  Wales 8–1 Malaysia  Malaysia
Malta  Malta 4–5 Netherlands  Netherlands
Wales  Wales 7–2 Australia  Australia
Netherlands  Netherlands 6–3 Malaysia  Malaysia
Wales  Wales 5–4 Malta  Malta
Australia  Australia 6–3 Malaysia  Malaysia
Quarter-finals
Best of 19 Frames
Semi-finals
Best of 19 Frames
Final
Best of 19 Frames
Scotland  Scotland 10
Northern Ireland  Northern Ireland 6 Scotland  Scotland 10
Thailand  Thailand 10 Thailand  Thailand 5
Wales  Wales 9 Scotland  Scotland 10
England  England 10 Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 7
Australia  Australia 5 England  England 9
Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 10 Republic of Ireland  Republic of Ireland 10
Canada  Canada 6

Final

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Final: Best of 19 frames. Referees:
Amari Watergate Hotel, Bangkok, Thailand. 10 November 1996.
  Scotland
Stephen Hendry, Alan McManus, John Higgins
10–7   Ireland
Ken Doherty, Fergal O'Brien, Stephen Murphy
Hendry v O'Brien: 84–4
McManus v Murphy: 93–0
Higgins v Doherty: 68–30
Hendry v Murphy: 74–25
McManus v Doherty: 59–63
Higgins v O'Brien: 21–70
Hendry v Doherty: 69–70
McManus v O'Brien: 71–24
Higgins v Murphy: 59–70
Hendry v O'Brien: 77–46
McManus v Murphy: 66–60
Higgins v Doherty: 63–20
McManus v O'Brien: 8–75
Higgins v Murphy: 44–66
Hendry v Doherty: 0–102 (68)
Higgins v O'Brien: 86–26
Hendry v Murphy: 73–34
Highest break
Century breaks
50+ breaks

References

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  1. ^ "Fin's Fables: The 1996 Snooker World Cup". Snooker HQ. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  2. ^ Whebell, Charles (11 November 1996). "Scotland let off by edgy Irish". The Daily Telegraph. p. 43.
  3. ^ "Castrol-Honda World Cup 1996". Snooker.org. Retrieved 3 August 2018.