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Australian Goldfields Open
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==History== Australia had previously hosted the [[1971 World Snooker Championship|1971]] and [[1975 World Snooker Championship|1975]] [[World Snooker Championship]]s, as well as several other high-profile snooker tournaments and in 1979 the ''Australian Masters'' was established. There was an attempt to turn the event into a ranking tournament in 1989 but the sponsorship fell through so it was staged in Hong Kong instead, as the ''Hong Kong Open'', which incidentally became the first ranking tournament to be staged in Asia. The Hong Kong event was discontinued after just one year, but returned to Australia in 1994 as the ''Australian Open''. The tournament reverted to being called the ''Australian Masters'' for the following season, but was dropped from the calendar after the 1995 event. In addition, the tournament was also held in 1995 as the ''Australian Open'' immediately following the Australian Masters, featuring mostly the same players and the same two players in the final.<ref name="Cuesport">{{cite book|last=Hayton|first=Eric|title=Cuesport Book of Professional Snooker|page=167}}</ref> In 2011 the [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]] resurrected the event under the ''Australian Goldfields Open'' name and added it to the [[Snooker season 2011/2012|2011/2012 calendar]]. The tournament's later incarnation providing the first ranking tournament victories for future World Champion [[Stuart Bingham]] and future world finalist [[Barry Hawkins]] and arguably resurrected the careers of these two players who had previously been considered journeyman professionals, who had previously hovered between the fringes of the top 16 and top 32. In 2016, the event was quietly dropped from the calendar.
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