The China Open was a professional snooker tournament. It was one of a number of ranking tournaments and began in 1997. The final champion is Neil Robertson , who won the event in 2019.
5-474: China Open may refer to: China Open (snooker) , a professional snooker tournament China Open (tennis) , a professional tennis tournament on the ATP World Tour and WTA Tour China Open (badminton) , an annual badminton tournament China Open (squash) China Open (table tennis) , an ITTF table tennis tournament Volvo China Open , a golf tournament on
10-609: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages China Open (snooker) The first international snooker tournament in China was the China International in September 1997, a non-ranking tournament for the top 16 players and local players. The following season the tournament became ranking and was held in March. Then the name of the event
15-720: The European Tour China Open (boxing) China Open (curling) , a curling tournament on the World Curling Tour China Open (pool) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title China Open . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=China_Open&oldid=1244735737 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
20-603: The tournament, but as he entered as a wild-card, he received no prize money nor ranking points. The last edition of the tournament in 2019 took place at the Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium , Chaoyang District , Beijing in early April, and it was usually the last ranking event before the World Championship . The 2020 edition was scheduled to take place, but the COVID-19 pandemic caused it to be cancelled:
25-460: Was changed to China Open and was held in December, so there were two events in 1999. After the 2002 tournament the event was abandoned. The event was revived for the 2004/05 season . Local wild-card players were invited to play against the qualifiers. The three Chinese players on the tour were invited to play as wild-cards, rather than qualify the usual way. Ding Junhui was one of them, and he won
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