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Snooker rankings: update after the 2024 British Open

Another week and another ranking event has taken place with changes aplenty again on the various snooker rankings lists.

Mark Selby beat John Higgins 10-5 on Sunday at the Centaur in Cheltenham to win his 23rd career ranking crown.

It was a first piece of silverware in 18 months for the Englishman, who compiled two century breaks and several more sizable contributions during a high-quality British Open final.

Let’s take a look at how the results impacted the snooker rankings.

Top 16

Judd Trump’s enormous lead at the top of the official two-year standings ensures that it’s unlikely he’ll be caught over the course of the next few months.

At the British Open, the Englishman continued his streak of at least reaching the quarter-final of every ranking event he has participated in during 2024.

Trump remains about half a million pounds clear of the player in second place, world champion Kyren Wilson.

Mark Allen stays in third ahead of Selby, who leapfrogs Ronnie O’Sullivan into fourth position after collecting the £100,000 top prize.

The following spots in the top ten are unchanged from last week with Luca Brecel in sixth ahead of Mark Williams, Shaun Murphy, Ding Junhui, and Gary Wilson.

Zhang Anda switches places with Ali Carter, while Higgins jumps back into the elite bracket of the rankings in 14th behind Si Jiahui.

The Scot began last week outside the top 16 in the snooker rankings for the first time since 1995 but bounced back strongly to quickly regain his coveted status.

Tom Ford and Neil Robertson slip down to 15th and 16th respectively, with World Championship finalist Jak Jones dropping to 17th despite a season-best run to the quarter-finals in Cheltenham.

Who were the other movers?

Oliver Lines, who is in the first year of his two-year card, rose 16 places to number 83 in the world after reaching the semi-finals of a ranking tournament for the first time.

Rory Thor and Stan Moody boosted their chances of tour survival with runs to the last 16, meanwhile.

Thor, who beat last week’s English Open champion Neil Robertson, moves up to number 74 while teenager Moody is ranked at number 82.

But both players are in the top four on the provisional one-year list of players who are ranked outside the top 64 and will receive a fresh two-year card at the end of the season.

The biggest loser for this week was Ryan Day, whose earnings from his 2022 British Open triumph were deducted from his rolling total, meaning the Welshman drops nine places to number 28.


Official 2-Year World RankingsSept 30, 2024
1Judd Trump£1,491,200
2Kyren Wilson£993,500
3Mark Allen£962,200
4Mark Selby£761,700
5Ronnie O’Sullivan£739,500
6Luca Brecel£668,500
7Mark Williams£655,000
8Shaun Murphy£607,300
9Ding Junhui£461,500
10Gary Wilson£451,400
11Zhang Anda£445,750
12Ali Carter£444,900
13Si Jiahui£361,400
14John Higgins£360,850
15Tom Ford£343,850
16Neil Robertson£341,350
17Jak Jones£339,500
18Barry Hawkins£306,050
19David Gilbert£299,250
20Jack Lisowski£287,900
21Robert Milkins£286,000
22Chris Wakelin£275,400
23Hossein Vafaei£274,900
24Stuart Bingham£254,900
25Zhou Yuelong£238,850
Click here for the full updated two-year list (snooker.org)

2024 British Open
Photo credit: WST

1-year snooker rankings

Like in previous years, the single-season snooker rankings will determine qualification spots for several lucrative ranking events.

Last season, the top 32 from this list qualified for the World Grand Prix, the top 16 for the Players Championship, and the top 12 for the Tour Championship.

Mark Selby rises 25 positions on this list to number five, while Higgins jumps 40 places to 13th.

The £500,000 that Judd Trump earned for his success at the Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters ensures that he is way out in front in the one-year rankings.

A run to the British Open semi-finals for Mark Allen – his best performance of the campaign so far – takes the Northern Irishman up to 18th.

Luca Brecel continues to languish down at number 66, but a few victories in Cheltenham have at least helped his cause and got him going in the right direction again.

Ding Junhui is by far and away having the worst season among those officially ranked in the top 16, with the Chinese cueist yet to win a match since the 2024/25 term commenced.


1-Year Snooker RankingsSept 30, 2024
1Judd Trump£601,200
2Kyren Wilson£227,000
3Mark Williams£223,000
4Neil Robertson£163,350
5Mark Selby£127,200
6Si Jiahui£125,400
7Shaun Murphy£122,800
8Ronnie O’Sullivan£85,500
9Wu Yize£74,000
10David Gilbert£70,750
11Jimmy Robertson£67,600
12Xiao Guodong£66,000
13John Higgins£60,350
14Chris Wakelin£54,400
15Stuart Bingham£51,400
16Pang Junxu£50,400
17Elliot Slessor£49,350
18Mark Allen£47,200
19Thepchaiya Un-Nooh£47,000
20Zhang Anda£46,750
21Scott Donaldson£46,350
22Gary Wilson£45,400
23Jack Lisowski£44,400
24Matthew Selt£40,750
25Hossein Vafaei£39,400
26Ali Carter£38,400
27Ben Woollaston£38,000
28Yuan Sijun£37,400
29Daniel Wells£36,500
30Xu Si£35,750
31Barry Hawkins£35,550
32Lyu Haotian£34,800
33Jak Jones£32,000
50Zhou Yuelong£19,350
66Luca Brecel£14,400
N/RDing Junhui£0
Click here for the full list (WST.tv)

What is the next snooker event?

The next ranking event on the calendar is the Wuhan Open, which runs from October 6-12 in China.

Before that, there is a qualifying phase for the International Championship qualifiers currently ongoing at Ponds Forge in Sheffield.

Live coverage of those qualifiers is available on discovery+ and Matchroom Live.


2024/25 WST calendar

Note: Dates are provisional and subject to change

COMPLETED
Championship League Snooker
Champion: Ali Carter

Shanghai Masters
Champion: Judd Trump

Xi’an Grand Prix
Champion: Kyren Wilson

Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters
Champion: Judd Trump

English Open
Champion: Neil Robertson

British Open
Champion: Mark Selby

SEPTEMBER
30th to Oct 2nd
International Championship qualifiers
(Ponds Forge, Sheffield)

OCTOBER
6th to 12th
Wuhan Open
(Wuhan, China)

20th to 27th
Northern Ireland Open
(Waterfront Hall, Belfast)

28th to 30th
Scottish Open qualifiers
(Canon Medical Arena, Sheffield)

NOVEMBER
3rd to 10th
International Championship
(Nanjing, China)

11th to 17th
Champion of Champions
(Toughsheet Community Stadium, Bolton)

16th to 21st
UK Championship qualifiers
(Mattioli Arena, Leicester)

23rd to December 1st
UK Championship
(York Barbican, York)

DECEMBER
4th to 7th
Shoot Out
(Mattioli Arena, Leicester)

9th to 15th
Scottish Open
(Meadowbank Sports Centre, Edinburgh)

16th to 22nd
– German Masters qualifiers
– World Open qualifiers
(Canon Medical Arena, Sheffield)

JANUARY
12th to 19th
The Masters
(Alexandra Palace, London)

27th to February 2nd
German Masters
(Tempodrom, Berlin)

FEBRUARY
10th to 16th
Welsh Open
(Venue Cymru, Llandudno)

MARCH
TBC
World Grand Prix
(TBC)

3rd to 9th
World Open
(Yushan, China)

17th to 23rd
Players Championship
(Telford, England)

31st to April 6th
Tour Championship
(Manchester Central, Manchester)

APRIL
7th to 16th
World Championship qualifiers
(EIS, Sheffield)

19th to May 5th
World Snooker Championship
(Crucible Theatre, Sheffield)


Featured photo credit: WST

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