Snooker Betting Strategy: Match Formats and Player Styles

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Snooker Betting Strategy: Match Formats and Player Styles
Key Takeaways
  • Match length matters.
    The number of frames played can greatly affect betting strategy and a player’s chance to recover from mistakes.
  • Playing styles can surprise.
    Different styles can unsettle opponents and lead to unexpected results, especially in uneven matchups.
  • Watch for upsets.
    Favorites can lose focus or get caught in mind games, creating opportunities for underdogs to win.

Snooker has enjoyed massive growth as a betting medium. The 1980s— particularly 1985, when 18.5 million watched Dennis Taylor defeat Steve Davis in the World Snooker Championship final—marked a golden era for the game. Today, snooker has become a truly global sport, acquiring a fan base stretching across the planet, with China, with a population of 1.4 billion, being a particular hot spot.

Of course, the world has changed a lot in 40 years. Back in 1985, betting shops were closed on Sundays, there was no internet, and in-play betting was a figment of the imagination. Snooker betting was mainly limited to bets placed before the match began—known as pre-break-off win markets—along with a small selection of correct score options.

Snooker betting is very different in the 21st century; not only can you place a bet 24/7, but you have a plethora of markets available. There is no end to the data readily available to identify bookmakers’ weaknesses.

Note: Odds are shown in fractional format (e.g., 1/40). Your betting site may display decimal (1.03) or American (-4000) odds depending on the region.

Snooker Match Formats

As with any sport, the key to successful snooker betting is information. The first factor to consider is the format of a match or competition.

Bettors should understand that many snooker matches are played in a “best of 7 frames” format, while others can go up to “best of 37 frames.” You shouldn’t assume a short-format snooker result will hold over a longer match.

Single Frame

The length of a snooker match can significantly impact betting odds. In 2017, the one-frame Snooker Shootout was granted ranking status, which attracted a stronger and more competitive field than in previous years.

Nevertheless, with a 10-minute maximum game time, 10- and 15-second shot clocks, a rule that states players must hit a cushion with a ball on every visit to the table, and fouls being penalized with a “ball in hand” (meaning the white ball can be placed anywhere), there is a strong argument for backing underdogs against established higher-ranked rivals.

Match-Play

In longer format matches, the better a player’s proven ability (ranking and form), the more likely he is to prevail against a lower-ranked rival. That is not a theory; it is a proven fact.

Nevertheless, snooker is a mano-a-mano sport, and mindset is a key performance factor. The sport is littered with seemingly inexplicable upsets, but all of them can be attributed to a casual approach by the long odds-on favorite.

Playing Styles that Influence Snooker Betting

There is more than one way to cause an upset. In snooker, risk-taking players can throw off all the usual predictions through different play styles. Some players are aggressive, majoring in long potting and break building. Other significant players in safety win their frames in a low-scoring tactical style. Conversely, there are some fast players

The expected outcomes can be overturned entirely when two very different playing styles clash. On several occasions, long-format matches on snooker’s biggest stages have produced surprising results that defy all predictions.

When placing bets, you must consider factors like the match format, playing styles, and players' approaches to the game. This information may differ from what bookmakers use when setting their odds.

Names to Know when Betting on Snooker

  • Jack Lisowski: six-time ranking final runner-up; typically a fast player
  • Ronnie "The Rocket" O’Sullivan: 5-time World Champion; uses a fast play style
  • Judd Trump: 2019 World Champion and two-time runner-up; tends to use a fast, attacking play style

Significant Moments in Snooker History

  • 1985: Dennis Taylor defeats Steve Davis in the World Snooker Championship final, while 18.5 million viewers tuned in to watch in the early hours of a Monday morning.
  • 2005: O’Sullivan gets an 8-2 lead over Peter Ebdon in the World Championship quarterfinals, but Ebdon comes from behind to win 13-11.
  • 2017: The one-frame Snooker Shootout is granted ranking status.
  • 2019: James Cahill, then 23 and the first amateur player to ever qualify for the World Snooker Championship, eliminates O’Sullivan in the first round.
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