Here’s the latest I can share on Snooker 900 up to mid-2026, based on public reporting.
What Snooker 900 is
- Snooker 900 is a fast-paced variation of snooker inspired by the Snooker Shoot Out, with extended frame time and a TV-friendly format. It aims to deliver quick, high-energy matches and is designed to draw televised coverage.[5]
- The format features 15-minute frames and a 20-second shot clock, with fouls giving ball-in-hand, and ties resolved by a sudden-death blue-ball shootout in many reports. The final structure has been described as best-of-11 for early rounds and best-of-13 for the championship in some iterations.[1][2]
Key players and events
- The event has attracted multiple world champions across its editions, with participants including Neil Robertson, John Higgins, Mark Williams, Mark Selby, and Ronnie O’Sullivan making appearances or expressing interest at various times.[2][3][1]
- The inaugural Crucible Cup/Crucible-focused Snooker 900 events were reported in late 2024 through 2025, with coverage noting a lineup that included several former world champions and a prize fund in the region of tens of thousands of pounds, plus individual performance bonuses (e.g., a maximum-break bonus).[1][2]
Where to watch
- Pluto TV has been a common broadcaster for Snooker 900 events, with live streams and potential in-person attendance options reported for several editions.[3][1]
Recent status and outlook
- As of early-to-mid 2025, Snooker 900 was actively promoted with live coverage and ongoing discussions about formats, schedules, and participant lists; reports from major outlets highlighted ongoing interest from top players and viewers seeking fast-paced, televised snooker formats.[2][3][1]
- A 2026 Wikipedia summary describes Snooker 900 as a fast-paced variant continuing to exist as a televised format, reinforcing the 15-minute-frame, 20-second-shot-clock concept and the shootout-style tiebreaker, though event calendars can vary by year.[5]
Illustrative example
- Example: In the earliest coverage, four world champions competed in a Snooker 900–style event with 15-minute frames and a 20-second shot clock, culminating in a knockout-style tournament with a best-of-11/13 frame structure and a blue-ball tiebreaker.[1]
Notes
- Snooker 900’s format and participant pool have evolved across editions, and media coverage has sometimes framed variations (Crucible Cup, Crucible Social Club in Reading, etc.) with minor rule tweaks or schedule changes; check the latest broadcasts or the event’s official channels for current details.[3][2][1]
If you’d like, I can pull the very latest headlines from a live sports-news feed or compile a short table of recent Snooker 900 results and top players from the most recent events. Also tell me if you want sources cited inline after each fact.