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2002 PowerHouse UK Championship
Tournament information
Dates1–15 December 2002 (2002-12-01 – 2002-12-15)
Venue Barbican Centre
City York
CountryEngland
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)
Score10–9
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.

Tournament summary

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.

Prize fund

The breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below: [1]

Main draw

[2] [3]

Last 48
Best of 17 frames
Last 32
Best of 17 frames
Last 16
Best of 17 frames
Quarter-finals
Best of 17 frames
Semi-finals
Best of 17 frames
Final
Best of 19 frames
1 England Ronnie O'Sullivan9
18 England John Parrott570 England Adrian Gunnell2
1 England Ronnie O'Sullivan9
70 England Adrian Gunnell9
27 Hong Kong Marco Fu7
14 Australia Quinten Hann7
27 Hong Kong Marco Fu927 Hong Kong Marco Fu9
1 England Ronnie O'Sullivan6
63 Northern Ireland Gerard Greene7
22 Scotland Drew Henry9
10 England Jimmy White4
22 Scotland Drew Henry922 Scotland Drew Henry9
22 Scotland Drew Henry9
57 England Stuart Bingham7
7 England Stephen Lee8
7 England Stephen Lee9
17 England Anthony Hamilton853 England Mark Selby6
22 Scotland Drew Henry5
53 England Mark Selby9
5 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty9
5 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty9
23 Republic of Ireland Fergal O'Brien452 Scotland Stephen Maguire7
5 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty9
52 Scotland Stephen Maguire9
9 England Paul Hunter4
9 England Paul Hunter9
19 England David Gray919 England David Gray1
5 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty9
37 England Mark Davis7
4 Scotland John Higgins6
11 England Mark King7
25 England Steve Davis925 England Steve Davis9
25 England Steve Davis7
69 England Paul Wykes2
4 Scotland John Higgins9
4 Scotland John Higgins9
31 England Ali Carter931 England Ali Carter5
5 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty9
64 England Nick Walker4
3 Wales Mark Williams10
3 Wales Mark Williams9
26 Wales Anthony Davies926 Wales Anthony Davies2
3 Wales Mark Williams9
62 England Nick Dyson3
29 Scotland Chris Small3
13 England Joe Perry7
29 Scotland Chris Small929 Scotland Chris Small9
3 Wales Mark Williams9
Republic of Ireland Leo Fernandez8
6 Scotland Stephen Hendry2
12 Scotland Graeme Dott9
32 Thailand James Wattana3114 Thailand Kwan Poomjang8
12 Scotland Graeme Dott6
114 Thailand Kwan Poomjang9
6 Scotland Stephen Hendry9
6 Scotland Stephen Hendry9
20 Wales Dominic Dale920 Wales Dominic Dale4
3 Wales Mark Williams9
67 Scotland Euan Henderson6
2 England Peter Ebdon3
8 Wales Matthew Stevens9
24 Republic of Ireland Michael Judge556 England Barry Pinches4
8 Wales Matthew Stevens8
56 England Barry Pinches9
33 England Robert Milkins9
16 Northern Ireland Joe Swail1
30 England Nigel Bond833 England Robert Milkins9
33 England Robert Milkins4
33 England Robert Milkins9
2 England Peter Ebdon9
15 Scotland Alan McManus9
28 Malta Tony Drago928 Malta Tony Drago7
15 Scotland Alan McManus2
48 England David Roe8
2 England Peter Ebdon9
2 England Peter Ebdon9
21 England Dave Harold921 England Dave Harold7
43 England Ian McCulloch6

Final

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

Century breaks

References

  1. ^ "Prize Money (Main Tour 2002/2003)". wpbsa.com. World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association. Archived from the original on 10 September 2002. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b "PowerHouse UK Championship 2002". Snooker.org. Retrieved 10 March 2011.
  3. ^ "UK Championship full results". BBC Sport. 11 December 2002. Retrieved 10 March 2011.