The Mosconi Cup is an annual nine-ballpool tournament contested since 1994 between teams representing Europe and the United States. Named after American pool player Willie Mosconi, the event is comparable to the Ryder Cup in golf and the Weber Cup in bowling.
Team composition and formats have varied over the years. As of 2024[update], each team has five playing members.[1] Each team also has a captain and vice captain, who may be among the players, or may be non-playing additional members of the team. The teams compete over one team match, several doubles matches and singles matches, with the first team to win 11 matches claiming victory.
On 3 December 2024, Team Europe beat Team USA 11–6, kept the title and took an overall series lead of 17–13, with one tie.
Staged in England for its first nine years, the Mosconi Cup from 2003 to 2024 alternated annually between the US and Europe. Most U.S tournaments taking place in Las Vegas, Nevada other than in 2024 event being held in Orlando, Florida. Most of the European tournaments taking place in England other than 2004 and 2006 which were held in the Netherlands and the 2008 event being held in Malta.
As time progressed, the event evolved from its exhibition nature into a much more serious and professional tournament. Among the snooker players, only Davis continued into the event's more serious era, competing in the first eleven Mosconi Cups and bowing out only when the event began to clash with snooker's UK Championship, at which he appeared as both a player and a BBC commentator. After Davis's withdrawal, all players had to earn an invitation through their performances at other pool events, meaning that no more snooker players appeared until 2007 when Tony Drago earned a place by virtue of his performance on the European Pool Tour.
Team USA initially dominated the tournament, winning 10 of the first 12 tournaments between 1994 and 2005, including 6 consecutive victories from 1996 to 2001. The 2006 tournament was a tie. Since then, Team Europe has dominated the tournament, winning 15 of the 18 events staged between 2007 and 2024, including 8 consecutive victories from 2010 to 2017. The overall series record now stands at 17–13 to Team Europe.
Joshua Filler of Germany became the youngest player to participate in the Mosconi Cup at 20 years old, in 2017. Earl Strickland of the United States became the oldest player to participate in the Mosconi Cup at 61 years old, in 2022.[3]
The record for the most Mosconi Cup appearances is 18, held jointly by USA's Shane Van Boening. The record for the most Mosconi Cup wins is 9, held jointly by both USA's Earl Strickland and Johnny Archer.
Player appearances
The players to have appeared in the Mosconi Cup:[4]
Players from twenty-three states have represented the United States (Fedor Gorst, Charlie Williams and Johan Ruijsink were all born outside of the US). Ordered as above, these are:
There have been rule changes and format changes throughout the tournament's history. These include, but are not limited to: "Non-playing captain" roles were introduced in the 2003 event; however these were removed in the 2004 tournament. In 2004 the doubles matches were re-formatted to be scotch doubles. In 2005, a 30-second shot clock was introduced, and caused controversy due to timing malfunctions. The 2006 tournament started with a team-versus-team match followed by two trebles matches. That year also saw the reintroduction of the non-playing captain role.
The 2009 tournament included several new features:[6]
No pairing in the doubles matches could be repeated.
The event included four blocks of consecutive matches, organized so that five slots were available for each side, in which every player was required to play exactly once.
In two singles matches, each player was selected by the opposing team captain.