Etisalat
WPA World 8-Ball Pool Championship 2010
Fujairah,
United Arab Emirates
04-10 April 2010
Championship Reports
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Day two complete at World 8Ball Championship
Credit: Jerry Forsyth
Our
second day of competition at the Etisalat World 8-Ball Championships in
Fujairah, UAE, began with a round of winner’s side match-ups. The
Russian powerhouse, Ruslan Chinakhov, got his day underway with a
satisfying 8-6 victory over David Alcaide after Alcaide had led the
match early at 3-0. Ronnie Alcano also trailed early in his match
against Mohammed Hosani and at one point trailed 5-1 only to dig down
deep and rally to an 8-6 win.
Ricky Yang made t
look easy as he trampled one of the strongest players in the world,
Pei-Wei Chang, 8-2 and in a match that saw a lot of its time consumed
with racking issues Karl Boyes ate up Won Sik Ham 8-3. Yukio Akakariyama
easily handled Mehdi Rasheki 8-4 and Joven Alba never
broke
a sweat as he dominated Scott Higgins 8-3. Raymond Faraon then beat
Vincent Facquet 8-3 and Lee van Corteza finished the round by defeating
Dennis Orcullo 8-5.
The second round,
also winner’s side, had some great match-ups. Pin-Yi Ko vs. Shane van
Boening, Thorsten Hohmann, vs. Andreas Roschkowksi, and Huijdi See vs.
Antonio Gabica among them. Van Boening was the first to finish, cruising
past Ko 8-4 in a marvelous display of position play. Shortly later
Jalal Sarkesi booked his seat into the final 32 with an 8-5 win over
Mustafa Hassan in a match that was tied at 5 games apiece before Sarkesi
found his high gear.
Ralf
Souquet continued his winning ways with an 8-1 victory over Reuben
Batista while Antonio Gabica kept it a bit closer in his 8-5 win over
Huidji See. Niels Feijen bested Shaker Wahdan 8-5 while Stephan Cohen
ended his match with an 8-4 win over Basher Hussein. Andreas
Roschkowski came back from a 6-5 deficit against Thorsten Hohmann to win
his match 8-6. Darren Appleton closed the round out with an 8-2 victory
over Kenny Kwok.
This brought us to
the do or die rounds on the one-loss side. Any loss here means your
efforts are over and you can only look forward to being a spectator for
the remainder of the event. The nerves begin to cook your arm. Marcus
Chamat
seemed impervious to the heat. He destroyed Ali Nashi 8-0 to begin the
round. Neither did Mika Immonen break a sweat as he easily got past Lee
Chen Man 8-2. Oliver Medenilla had more of a struggle then the score
shows but took advantage of the opportunities when they came and won 8-3
over Majid Sultan.
Other matches were
closer. Ismail Yaqob defeated Moein Khefri 8-5 and Saeed Al Mutawe beat
Mohamed Al Assel by the same margin. Vincenancio Tanio slid by Khaled
Sebata 8-6 while John Morra escaped a match that had seen many ties to
win 8-5. Finally, Sandile Madlala lived for at least one more round when
he inched past Hussin Sayeem 8-7.
The last group of
the evening found Matteuz Sniegnocki defeating Sumit Talwar 8-4, Magid
Al Azmi over Kang Lee 8-2, Kim Aquino beating Abdulatif Fawal 8-4,
Francis Crevier over Abdullah Yousef 8-2 and Jeff de Luna besting Lu Hui
Chan 8-6. Finally, Takhti Zarekani defeated Amin Fekry 8-6 while our
last two matches went hill-hill. Marlon Manalo took Salah Al Remwy 8-7
and then Masaaki Tanaki defeated Omran Salem, also 8-7.
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