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A maximum break (also known as a maximum, a 147, or orally, a one‑four‑seven) is the highest possible break in snooker in normal circumstances [a] and is a special type of total clearance. A player compiles a maximum break by potting all 15 reds with 15 blacks for 120 points, followed by all six colours for a further 27 points.
By the start of the 2007–08 snooker season, O'Sullivan had made 479 century breaks. [28] He then made one century in the 2007 Euro-Asia Masters Challenge, seven in the 2007 Grand Prix, six in the 2007 Premier League Snooker before the 2007 Northern Ireland Trophy, and six more in the Northern Ireland Trophy, bringing his total to 499.
Ding and Mark Allen both made 147 breaks in 2024 - only the fourth and fifth Masters maximums since the first tournament in 1975. The World Championship is the third Triple Crown event and starts ...
Mark Selby hits first ever 147 in World Snooker Championship final. ... Stephen Hendry and Ronnie O’Sullivan. A fifth crown would cement Selby as one of the greats of the game, but standing in ...
2009 World Snooker Championship: 2: Ranking: Qualifying 2009 Championship League: 5: Non-ranking: 2009 China Open: 2: Ranking: 1 in qualifying Career total, end of 2008–09 season 51 R: 38 NR: 13 2009 Shanghai Masters: 1: Ranking: Qualifying 2009 Premier League Snooker: 4: Non-ranking: 2009 Masters Qualifying Event: 1: Non-ranking: 2009/2010 ...
Mark Selby became the first player in history to compile a maximum break in a World Championship final but still trails the entertaining Luca Brecel 9-8 overnight
In 2011 he returned to the Crucible Theatre for the first time since 1988 to play in a "Snooker Legends" exhibition event. [5] On September 23, 2019, Jimmy White published an apology to Stevens on White's official Facebook page stating that in his autobiography Second Wind he misremembered a few stories as occurring with Stevens that in fact ...
FRAME! Ronnie O’Sullivan 4-2 DING JUNHUI. 14:58, Harry Latham-Coyle. Well well well. Fabulous snooker from Ding Junhui, falling eight short of a century but back in the match with a second ...