Date | R | Home vs Away | - |
---|---|---|---|
09/17 06:00 | 1 | Ronnie O'Sullivan vs Luca Brecel | 11-9 |
09/16 06:00 | 2 | Neil Robertson vs Luca Brecel | 7-10 |
09/15 06:00 | 2 | Ronnie O'Sullivan vs Mark Selby | 10-7 |
09/14 11:30 | 3 | Robert Milkins vs Luca Brecel | 3-6 |
09/14 11:30 | 3 | Fan Zhengyi vs Neil Robertson | 1-6 |
09/14 06:00 | 3 | Mark Selby vs Judd Trump | 6-1 |
09/14 06:00 | 3 | Ronnie O'Sullivan vs John Higgins | 6-5 |
09/13 11:30 | 4 | Shaun Murphy vs Robert Milkins | 5-6 |
09/13 11:30 | 4 | Neil Robertson vs Ding Junhui | 6-5 |
09/13 06:00 | 4 | Luca Brecel vs Mark Williams | 6-4 |
09/13 06:00 | 4 | Mark Allen vs Fan Zhengyi | 3-6 |
09/12 11:30 | 4 | Ronnie O'Sullivan vs Ali Carter | 6-3 |
The 2023 Shanghai Masters was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place from 11 to 17 September 2023 at the Shanghai Grand Stage in Shanghai, China. Part of the 2023–24 snooker season, it was the 14th edition of the Shanghai Masters since the tournament was first held in 2007 and the third edition since the tournament became an invitational event in 2018. It was the first professional snooker tournament played in mainland China since the 2019 World Open, due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 24 players—comprising the top 16 players in the world rankings, the four highest-ranked Chinese players outside the top 16, and four Chinese wildcard players—were invited to participate. The tournament was broadcast by local channels in China, Thailand, and Hong Kong, by Eurosport and Discovery+ in Europe, and by Matchroom Sport in all other territories. The winner received £210,000 from a total prize fund of £825,000.
Ronnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion, having defeated Shaun Murphy 11–9 in the 2019 final. He retained the title, beating the reigning World Champion Luca Brecel 11–9 in the final to win his fifth Shanghai Masters title and his fourth consecutively. The final was the 18th consecutive match he had won at the tournament since 2017. The tournament produced a total of 35 century breaks, of which the highest was a 143 by O'Sullivan in the 16th frame of the final.