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File:Mink Nutcharut 2024.jpg
Mink Nutcharut is the current women's world number one in snooker

The snooker world rankings are the official system of ranking professional snooker players to determine their qualification and seeding for events on the World Snooker Tour and other tournaments, as well as their future professional status on the tour.

First introduced in the 1976–77 season, world rankings are maintained by the sport's governing body, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA); Each player's world ranking is based on their performances, in terms of cumulative prize money earned in designated ranking tournaments over the preceding two years. Every professional member of the WPBSA is assigned a ranking disregarding their activeness on the circuit.<ref name="calender" /><ref name="Points schedule" /><ref name="world rankings" /> The current number one in world snooker rankings is Judd Trump from England, taken over from Northern Ireland's Mark Allen since 26 August 2024.

Other forms of World Snooker rankings include the one-year list, which only calculates the current season's earnings to date to qualify for the Players Series events; the World Women's Snooker (WWS) has its own women's only rankings; the pre-season qualifying event Q School also produces a Q School Order of Merit rankings after each edition to decide the order of players topping up the main tour events when undersubscription of players occurs.

OverviewEdit

Tournament players are decided by their ranking to determine their stage of entering into different events, with some involving qualification matches; Whilst lower-ranked players have to go through the early and untelevised rounds of the tournament, the top 16 ranked players automatically qualify for the final stages of tournaments such as the World Championship and the Masters. Therefore, there is typically a lot of interest in which players are likely to maintain or acquire "top 16 status", as well as the world number one in snooker. Conversely, players whose rank is below 64 at the end of the season are deemed relegated, being unable to retain professional status in the following year by ranking position.

Seedings and cut-offEdit

Tournament seedings vary from tournament to tournament, but the defending champion is usually allocated the top seed followed by the reigning world champion and the remaining seeds are taken from a "seeding list".<ref name="Seeding List" /><ref name="Snooker.org (Seedings)" /> The introduction of the rolling rankings in 2010 facilitated updates to the seeding list throughout the season. Various "cut-off" points are selected at convenient stages during the season where the rankings are "frozen" and used as seedings for the following tournaments until the next revision.<ref name="world rankings" />

Provisional rankingsEdit

Until the 2009–10 season, rankings were updated once annually, following the World Snooker Championship. The seedings for tournaments—with the exception of the top two seeds—followed the official season rankings.<ref name="Word Snooker (2010, Overhaul)" /><ref name="BBC Sport (2004)" /><ref name="Dee (2002)" /><ref name="Everton (2007)" /> "Provisional rankings", which had no official status in the game, were therefore being utilised to give an indication of a player's form based on the combination of ranking points accumulated in the previous season and the current season thus far.<ref name="Hendon (2012)" />

HistoryEdit

Prior to the introduction of the world rankings, the previous year's winner and runner-up were allocated the top seedings in the World Championship, held annually. As more tournaments were added to the calendar and more players joined the circuit in the 1970s, it became increasingly necessary to seed the tournaments, precipitating the "Order of Merit" for the 1975–76 season. The system was very basic, with seedings based on the results of the last three World Championships, and rankings were formally introduced in 1976 after the World Championship for the 1976–77 season using the same criteria. By the 1982–83 season many more tournaments were being contested, and it seemed reasonable to take those results into consideration too. The Professional Players Tournament and International Open were awarded ranking status, working on the same system; the Classic carried ranking points from the 1983–84 season, the UK Championship and British Open from 1984–85. The revised system was now based on only the two previous seasons, and updated annually after the World Championship.<ref name="Hayton" /><ref name="Turner" /><ref name="Points 2011/2012" /><ref name="Word Snooker (2010, Overhaul)" /> While the ranking point allocations have undergone modifications down the years, up until the 2009–10 season the rankings were still updated only once annually following the World Snooker Championship.

Former points systemEdit

The original "Order of Merit", created for the 1975–76 season and based on just World Championship results, awarded the winner five points, the runner-up four, semi-finalists three, and so on down to one point for players who lost in the last 16. The world rankings, introduced in the following year, used the same allocation. Subsequent tournaments that were assigned ranking status worked on the same system but with the World Championship from 1983 onwards carrying double points. The ranking point allocation was later revised slightly with winners of all bar the World Championship now receiving six points, runners-up five, down to one point for the last 32; the World Championship more or less stayed as it was with ten points for the winner, incrementally reduced by two points for each preceding round, but now awarded one point for the last 32 in line with the other tournaments. In addition to ranking points, merit and frame points were also awarded which were used as a tie-break when players were on equal ranking points.

When the game went open for the 1991–92 season, the ranking point allocations (devised by the WPBSA chairman on the back of a cigarette pack)<ref name="Hendon (2012)" /> were altered by several factors to accommodate the influx of new players. The tie-break system was dropped but players remain awarded incrementally more points for each successive round; should a seeded player lose their first match, they would receive only half the points allocated to the non-seeded losers in that round. The World Championship continued to award more points than the other events, but under the "open era" the points allocation often varied between events; the UK Championship traditionally had the second-highest tariff until the abolishment of the ranking points schedule.<ref name="Hayton" /><ref name="rankings faq" />

Season rankingsEdit

Ranking as of 28th May 2025 after the conclusion of both World Championships.

WPBSA / Johnstone's Paint World rankings by the end of 2024-25 season<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

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No. Player Points Move
1 Template:Flagathlete 1,984,200 Steady
2 Template:Flagathlete 1,304,300 Steady
3 Template:Flagathlete 858,600 Increase 3
4 Template:Flagathlete 781,250 Decrease 1
5 Template:Flagathlete 740,000 Steady
6 Template:Flagathlete 606,000 Increase 4
7 Template:Flagathlete 558,000 Decrease 3
8 Template:Flagathlete 547,050 Increase 1
9 Template:Flagathlete 540,050 Increase 2
10 Template:Flagathlete 522,900 Decrease 2
11 Template:Flagathlete 510,000 NewTemplate:Efn
12 Template:Flagathlete 491,500 Steady
13 Template:Flagathlete 469,000 Increase 1
14 Template:Flagathlete 435,900 Increase 1
15 Template:Flagathlete 420,200 Decrease 2
16 Template:Flagathlete 388,400 Increase 4
World Women's Snooker rankings by the end of 2024-25 season<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

No. Player Points Move
1 Template:Flagathlete 73,375 Steady
2 Template:Flagathlete 67,125 Steady
3 Template:Flagathlete 44,750 Increase 1
4 Template:Flagathlete 41,375 Decrease 1
5 Template:Flagathlete 31,500 Steady
6 Template:Flagathlete 18,625 Increase 1
7 Template:Flagathlete 13,625 Increase 1
8 Template:Flagathlete 13,500 Increase 1
9 Template:Flagathlete 13,250 Decrease 3
10 Template:Flagathlete 12,100 Increase 3
11 Template:Flagathlete 11,050 Steady
12 Template:Flagathlete 8,975 Steady
13 Template:Flagathlete 8,625 Decrease 3
14 Template:Flagathlete 7,125 Steady
15 Template:Flagathlete 6,225 Steady
16 Template:Flagathlete 5,500 Increase 6

Points distributionEdit

Template:ForSince the transition of world rankings from point-based tariffs set by the governing body to a prize money list for the 2014–15 season, different events of the same tournament series usually maintain a similar level of prize money. The Triple Crown and specifically the World Championship earn the player most points for rankings, whilst invitational event gains do not count into the rankings. The follow table shows the prize money from the round of 32 in selected ranking events held during the 2024–25 season.

Category W F SF QF R16 R32
World Championship 500,000 200,000 100,000 50,000 30,000 20,000
Saudi Arabia Masters
UK Championship 250,000 100,000 50,000 25,000 15,000 10,000
Xi'an Grand Prix 177,000 76,000 34,500 20,000 15,000 10,000
International Championship 175,000 75,000 33,000 22,000 14,000 9,000
World Open
British Open 100,000 45,000 20,000 12,000 9,000 6,000
Home Nations Series 21,000 13,200 5,400
German Masters
Shoot Out 50,000 20,000 8,000 4,000 2,000 1,000

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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