Showing posts with label German snooker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German snooker. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Focus on small Snooker-countries - Part 1: Germany

Hi there, and welcome! 

It's always being said, that Snooker has to become more international, and while the tournaments begin to spread around the world more and more, it will be interesting to see, if the players will too.

But if you look at the status quo, the world elite is dominated by a few countries: UK/Ireland, China, a few from Thailand, Neil Robertson of Australia and Marco Fu of Hong Kong --- maybe you can add Canada and South Africa when you look into the past too, but thats it. My idea is, that it might be interesting to make a series about the top players of the "Rest of the world", and well: here we go. 

Germany

Now that the German Masters has just finished, Germany is a perfect start for this. Moreover its my homecountry so its much easier for me to investigate the world wide web than for any other country. 

So far, there were two players from Germany on the Main Tour:

Lets start with Lasse Münstermann (born 1979), who competed at the Tour in 2000/2001 as the first German. He gained his ticket by winning at Eurotour in 2000. According to cuetracker his performances werent very well, altough he was able to beat veteran Willie Thorne at the Thailand Masters qualifiers at least.

Later he was a World Games 2005 quarterfinalist and german national champion 2006. He also competed at various PTC events in 2010/11 with wins against Adrian Gunnell and Jimmy White as highlights. He failed to requalify for the Tour via Q School in 2011, with only one win in all three events (4:0 over Alex O’Donoghue in Q School event 2).

He owns a snooker club in Ratingen (near Colonge) and can sometimes be heared as co-commentator for Eurosport Germany. According to German Wikipedia his highest tournament-break is 138. More at http://www.lassemuenstermann.de/

The second German former Main-Tour player is Patrick Einsle (born 1987). He played a total of two season in the world elite, both times qualified via Wildcard.

In 2006/07 he replaced Paul Hunter's spot, who suffered from cancer and tragically died in October 2006. His first qualifing match he had to play just three days after the announcement, that he can compete at the main tour. He won only two matches in the whole season, both in the Grand Prix group stages (vs. Joe Jogia and Alfie Burden). In the UK championship qualifiers he was whitewashed by rising star Judd Trump 9-0.

His second Main Tour season was in 2010/11, where he played a little more succesful. In PTC 3 he reached the Last 32 after winning against Jimmy Robertson and Peter Ebdon, before losing to Igor Figueiredo. According to http://patrick-einsle.de he played a 146 in competition and four Maximums in practice.

Beside those two, there is a couple of other solid German players, like Brazil-based Itaro Santos (born 1985), who played at the World Series of Snooker final tournament and is a former national champion, Sascha Lippe (born 1983), who won the European Team Championship 2007 in Belgium together with Santos and Münstermann, played PIOS-Tour for a couple of years and reached the Last 16 of the European championships in 2010 and Stefan Kasper (2010 national champion, Wildcardround German Masters 2011 - 2:5 defeat against Nigel Bond).

You can find pictures of most of the mentioned players here. A list of players, that competed on major Snooker events (PTCs/PIOS/European Championships etc.) can be found on cuetracker.

German national champions:
 
year winner            second place      third places
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2005 Itaro Santos
2006 Lasse Münstermann Itaro Santos      Sascha Lippe / Christian Gabriel
2007 Sascha Lippe      Michael Heeger    Olaf Thode / Patrick Einsle
2008 Itaro Santos      Christian Gabriel Stefan Kasper / Jörn Hannes-Hühn
2009 Patrick Einsle    Itaro Santos      Sascha Lippe / Thomas Hein
2010 Stefan Kasper     Sascha Lippe      Andreas Cieslak / Jakob Stacha
2011 Patrick Einsle    Stefan Kasper     Roman Dietzel / Sascha Lippe



...next episode: Finland, Norway, Iceland

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

the German Masters 2012 - roundup

programme signed by Steve Davis
(copyright World Snooker)
the German Masters 2012 - roundup
(a.k.a. tmv23 strikes again! - Day 2 of my little blog

Ohai, its me again. 14 people found their way to my first blog since yesterday and my fingers felt so itchy, that I made a second one.

In this post I want to collect some information I found in the world wide web about the German Masters 2012. Its a little overview for myself to remember later, but it may be interesting for other people as well, so I share it. If you have any additions, feel free to let me know :)

I also made a scan of the programme, which you can see on the right side. Sadly Chris Turner cant expand his remarkable collection anymore, so I'm not sure if you can find it anywhere else in the web except here.

Photos 

my own photos 
Day 4/5 (31 pictures)

by Monique Limbos

by Maximum Snooker
Day 5 (87 pictures)

Pictures at Wikimedia Commons 
German Masters 2012

German press

Rolf Kalb (30.1.) - Spieler und Fans im Tempodrom gefordert
Tagesspiegel (2.2.) - Ronnie O'Sullivan: Zwischen Genie und Wahnsinn
Eurosport (2.2.) - German Masters - Williams startet Titel-Mission
Eurosport (2.2.) - German Masters - Historisch! Maguire demütigt Higgins
spox.com (4.2.) - O'Sullivan begeistert Fans beim German Masters
Die Zeit (5.2.) - Die Snooker-Elite begeistert ihre Anhänger
Eurosport (6.2.) - German Masters - O'Sullivan der neue "König von Berlin"
Rolf Kalb (6.2.) - Wow und eine Ehrenrunde

English press

BBC (1.2.) - Champion Mark Williams thrashes Ken Doherty in German Masters
Daily Mail (2.2.) - Ronnie O'Sullivan recovers to beat Andrew Higginson in Berlin
BBC (3.2.) - Ronnie O'Sullivan beats Matthew Stevens to reach German Masters semis
BBC (4.2.) - Ronnie O'Sullivan/Stephen Maguire in German Masters final
Daily/Sunday Express (4.2.) - Ronnie O'Sullivan: I'd hate to play me
The Independent (4.2.) - Snooker: O'Sullivan claims he would 'relish' life outside top 16
BBC (5.2) - German Masters: Ronnie O'Sullivan beats Stephen Maguire in final
ESPN (5.2.) - O'Sullivan edges thriller to win German Masters
The Independent (6.2.) - Snooker: O'Sullivan storms back to end barren run
The Daily Mail (6.2.) - O'Sullivan comes back to beat Maguire and land German Masters
Mirror (7.2.) - Ronnie O’Sullivan claims he’s gagged in Twitter war with snooker chiefs
The Times of Malta (7.2.) - Rocket flies again in Germany final

Monday, 6 February 2012

the German Masters 2012 - in rearview mirror

the German Masters 2012 - in rearview mirror
(a.k.a. Hello world, welcome to my first blog ever - yes, really!) 
pre-scriptum: My mother tongue is German. Dont bite me for miss takes mistakes. :)

well done, Ronnie!
I just came home from the German Masters 2012 and thought i would be a nice idea if I write some thoughts about it and throw it in the infernal abyss of data, known as the Internet. It was the second time in my life, that i saw live snooker, after the inaugural tournament in 2011. As I was there for Saturday and Sunday, so I saw both half-finals and both sessions of the final.

outside the venue

you may guessed it... inside the venue
But I dont want to waste much time about the games itself. Yes it was amazing snooker, and everyone who is interested, either saw the games or he/she knows where proper summaries can be found (I highly recommend Pro Snooker Blog, Dave Hendons Snookerscene Blog and Maximum Snooker.com, but Eurosport or British newspapers should do it as well).

What I want to focus is the organisation, the atmosphere, and, of course, showing you some photos I was able to take.

So lets start with the audience. While I can't compare it to other legendary Snooker venues, like Crucible, Wembley Conferecne Centre etc., I do can say that the atmosphere was great. Almost all people I sat near to or talked with while the weekend were not only enthusiastic, but also well-educated about the rules, the players, the tactics etc. People came from far away: e.g. I met people from Bavaria (which is ~600 km away from Berlin), from Austria (even farer), one Englishmen, and according to Rolf Kalb (Master of Ceremony and THE (!) german snooker commentator) there were even people from Chile, South America in the venue. According to the commentary there were 2500 spectators, but I didnt counted to prove. in one word: atmosphere was BRILLIANT.

Trickshots by Steve Davis
The biggest improvement of the tournament in comparison with last year was the appearance of Steve Davis, who played trickshots before both sessions of the final day (around 20 minutes before the afternoon and around 35 minutes before the evening session). While the match-snooker is much about tactics, elegance and psychology (and i really enjoy that!), he added a major entertaining component, which I enjoyed as well. And on top of that he also gave autogpahes after the match, which was a nice bonus as well. Probably we won't see him on a ranking final again, but he is not only a legend, but a PROFESSIONAL (little insider for people who were at the venue ;)

So you can argue that the slightly increased ticket prizes (I think it was ~10 Euros more expensive than last year for a dayticket) were legitimate. I guess next year it will be a little more expensive again, as there were almost no empty places in the arena. Capitalism. Supply and Demand. not hard to figure out...
Steve just signs my father's cuecase.
invisible (because behind the camera): me

I already mentioned the autographs: Ronnie wasnt there (I already kind of expected that to be honest), Stephen Maguire was there even twice (Saturday and Sunday night), moreover I grabbed signatures by Michaela Tabb, Rolf Kalb, and as said above, Steve 'The Nugget' Davis. It was a large queue waiting for them, so it took a while, but the atmosphere was calm and chilled.

What really surpsied me, was Martin Gould, who lost in the earlier rounds of the tournament, but was present almost all the time at the autograph table. Before the sessions, after the sessions, maybe even while, but I was watching snooker in that time, so I cant say.
results.

Well... what else to say? It was damn f**king cold, the Mexican restaurant around the corner was pretty good and we have to state, that Rolf Kalb is an excellent commentator for television, but announcing players like boxers is not his cup of tea. But all in all it was a great weekend, and I hope I will be back next year.

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