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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.
John Higgins etched his name deeper into Crucible folklore after becoming just the seventh player to strike a maximum 147 break at the World Snooker Championship, writes Will Jennings.
Dott made a maximum break in the qualifying rounds, [147] and Robertson made a maximum in his second-round match against Lisowski, becoming the eighth player to make a 147 at the Crucible. [146] A new record of 109 century breaks was set at the Crucible stage, one more than the 108 made the previous year. [146]
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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.
Four-time world champion Mark Selby is up against the mercurial Belgian Luca Brecel in the 2023 final at the Crucible Theatre World Snooker Championship LIVE: Latest score updates as Mark Selby ...
Wilson won frame 11 with a century break and took the next frame with a break of 60. Jones took the next frame after a miss on a pot from Wilson, but a 122 break from Wilson in frame 14 brought the score to 10–4. [134] Jones won the next frame and made a break in the final frame of the session to force Wilson to lay snookers to win.