Zhao Xintong
Amateur Snooker, Snooker Headlines

Zhao Xintong compiles 147 break and wins Q Tour Event 3

Zhao Xintong is well and truly back on the snooker map after emerging triumphantly from Q Tour Event 3 in Sweden on Sunday.

Competing in just his second snooker event after returning from a 20-month ban from the sport, Zhao produced a series of strong displays to prevail in Stockholm.

Zhao scored heavily throughout the weekend’s play, the highlight being a magnificent 147 break in the last frame of his 4-1 victory over teenager Shaun Liu in the last 64.

It represented the first maximum break ever recorded on the Q Tour, an amateur feeder circuit that provides an avenue for players to graduate onto the World Snooker Tour.

Zhao proved that his immense pedigree didn’t diminish during the ban by compiling eight tons in the tournament overall.

On Sunday, he beat veteran Peter Lines 4-1 in the last 16 before orchestrating back-to-back whitewash successes over Nicolas Morteaux and Mateusz Baranowski.

Zhao faced Craig Steadman in the final, the same player who knocked him out of his comeback tournament at Q Tour Event 2 in Bulgaria a month ago.

While the 4-3 scoreline was the same, the outcome on this occasion was different with the young Chinese star edging a close title-deciding battle in a decider.

Zhao will be hoping to use the Q Tour to regain his place on the main tour having surrendered his elite status on the back of last year’s match-fixing scandal.

Why was Zhao Xintong banned?

Ten Chinese players were judged to have been involved in a widespread match-fixing operation that sent shockwaves through the sport.

Zhao was deemed to bear knowledge of others fixing matches and was also guilty of betting on snooker matches, but he was acquitted of fixing matches himself – hence a lighter sentence compared to his countrymen.

Liang Wenbo and Li Hang were handed the heaviest sentences – lifetime snooker bans – for their respective roles at the front of the betting ring.

Former Masters champion Yan Bingtao was also given a multi-year ban, the 24 year-old unable to return to competitive action until December in 2027 at the earliest.

Zhao, however, was free to return to the sport and begin his comeback after his shorter ban ended at the start of September.

The 27 year-old first participated in Q Tour Event 2 in Bulgaria last month, but despite winning a couple of early-round fixtures he bowed out in the last 64 with defeat to Steadman.

It was in the same round this weekend in Stockholm where Zhao produced the 147 that reminded everyone in the game of the tremendous talent that he possesses.

What did Zhao achieve before the ban?

Before his ban, the former IBSF World Amateur Championship runner-up had been breaking through as one of the new stars of the game.

Success at the 2021 UK Championship in York was quickly followed by a second ranking title at the German Masters in Berlin.

He was ranked as high as number six in the world, so it will be fascinating to see if he can return to those heights again in the future.

Chinese snooker players
Zhao Xintong beat Yan Bingtao 9-0 in the 2022 German Masters final. Photo credit: WST

The Q Tour will offer Zhao one of the best opportunities to make it back before the 2025/26 snooker season commences next summer.

The top-ranked player on the European Q Tour rankings will receive an automatic two-year card to compete on the professional circuit.

Three additional spots will be up for grabs through a play-off tournament involving high-ranked players on the European Q Tour and others from the Global Q Tour series of events held around the world.

Following Q Tour Event 3, Zhao has risen to second in the rankings on the back of pocketing the ยฃ3,000 champion’s cheque.

He is level in the standings with Dylan Emery, who won Q Tour Event 2 in Sofia, and just ยฃ300 behind Q Tour Event 1 champion Andres Petrov.

Q Tour Event 4 is scheduled to take place in Manchester from November 8-10.

Featured photo credit: WPBSA

6 Comments

  1. Jay brannon

    Hus scoring has been heavy throughout this event.

    • Yes, but let’s not forget the Snookerhallen is a regular club with 9 snooker tables and a similar number of pool tables, side-by-side. Obviously, the pockets wouldn’t be professional spec and a player such as Zhao Xintong would find them very easy.

      I’m still undecided what to do with his Elo rating. If I simply unblock him, he’d be back at No.10 in the world on my list, even though not on tour.

  2. Jay Brannon

    What’s the Elo?

    He’s made seven centuries across this event.

    • Elo Ratings are a statistical ranking system. It attempts to measure a player’s strength based on results of all matches. I have a database with 20000 players and results from tournaments at all levels. When Zhao Xintong was suspended, he was in the top-8, but it doesn’t seem right to simply reinstate that now, after nearly 2 years of inactivity. Probably I will just have to remove him from the 2023 list, in which case his new rating level will be calculated from his results so far on Q Tour 2024-25. It’s a bit of an anomaly.

  3. Never says where we can watch

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