Careful analysis of the results in the initial world championships has brought to my notice that one of them does not fit with the general pattern.
This is in the Semi-final of 1929 where T.Dennis is reported to have beaten K.Prince by a margin of 14-6. This is strange because from 1929-1935, all the other matches (apart from the finals)either have the winner successful in 13 frames, like the modern-day format, or have a total of 25 frames between the players, (eg.16-9) where the dead frames were played out.
So I checked the framescores for the match in question. Here I have listed them alongside the running matchscores (Dennis first):
40-67 0-1
41-58 0-2
52-56 0-3
60-52 1-3
55-30 2-3
75-12 3-3
54-40 4-3
55-88 4-4
60-31 5-4
67-12 6-4
50-62 6-5
42-55 6-6
66-21 7-6
56-14 8-6
69-14 9-6
58-63 9-7
60-19 10-7
59-22 11-7
53-26 12-7
54-52 13-7!
(Source: globalsnookercentre.co.uk)
So according to these framescores, the match actually resulted 13-7 not 14-6 as seems to be recorded just about everywhere. Is anyone able to verify this claim? It seems quite possible that originally one newspaper/magazine of the time recorded the result incorrectly and everything published subsequently has repeated the mistake, similiar to what happened with the 1972 world final.
So does anyone know if am I correct and if so where this error began?
I will be very interested to hear other people's comments on this topic.
This is in the Semi-final of 1929 where T.Dennis is reported to have beaten K.Prince by a margin of 14-6. This is strange because from 1929-1935, all the other matches (apart from the finals)either have the winner successful in 13 frames, like the modern-day format, or have a total of 25 frames between the players, (eg.16-9) where the dead frames were played out.
So I checked the framescores for the match in question. Here I have listed them alongside the running matchscores (Dennis first):
40-67 0-1
41-58 0-2
52-56 0-3
60-52 1-3
55-30 2-3
75-12 3-3
54-40 4-3
55-88 4-4
60-31 5-4
67-12 6-4
50-62 6-5
42-55 6-6
66-21 7-6
56-14 8-6
69-14 9-6
58-63 9-7
60-19 10-7
59-22 11-7
53-26 12-7
54-52 13-7!
(Source: globalsnookercentre.co.uk)
So according to these framescores, the match actually resulted 13-7 not 14-6 as seems to be recorded just about everywhere. Is anyone able to verify this claim? It seems quite possible that originally one newspaper/magazine of the time recorded the result incorrectly and everything published subsequently has repeated the mistake, similiar to what happened with the 1972 world final.
So does anyone know if am I correct and if so where this error began?
I will be very interested to hear other people's comments on this topic.
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