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RESULTS - Raj Hundal (India) 1-8 Dennis Orcollo (Philippines) John Morra (Canada) 8-4 John Schmidt (USA), Ricky Yang 6-8 Ralf Souquet
QUOTES - Ralf Souquet (Germany): "It's always good when there's a W next to your name and not the best performance at this event.
"But as long as I reach eight first then I'm happy.
"I started off well but I missed a stupid one ball in the side when it was 4-1 and from that point I let it slip away and made a few more mistakes.
"The shot clock kept bothering me as we hadn't played with it earlier and when you play ten tournaments without it it can be difficult.
"Ricky Yang is a very good player and was expecting a close match and he won the Philippine Open and is well known so I wasn't expecting an easy one."
11.08pm: A fine shot from Souquet to pot the brown 7, which never looked on, and that proves critical. Souquet makes much more hard work than he would have liked but still does enough for the win.
11.04pm: It's a match for the purists. Neither player is giving up and it's tense and tight at the Riviera. Souquet on the hill.
10.57pm: Souquet looks in a tough position but escapes from a snooker and rolls the 1-ball along the side rail and is in a good position in rack 13.
10.56pm: Souquet had led 4-1 and looked on course for an easy win. But Yang hauls himself level. Superb fightback.
10.48pm: It's the rack no one wants to win. The Indonesian number one gets within one rack after Souquet wobbles on an attempt on the 7-ball.
10.47pm: Yang flinches on the green 6 and Souquet has a straight shot on.
10.46pm: Yang leaves the 5-ball on but Souquet makes a rare mistake and leaves it on the table.
10.45pm: Souquet is unlucky as he pots the 4-ball but hooks himself with the 9-ball in the way of the orange 5.
10.44pm: Yang, shooting into a blind pocket, on the pink 4 undercuts it and the ball wobbles but does not fall.
10.37pm: Dry break from Yang at the start of the 11th.
10.33pm: But Yang, eighth in the world, is not going down without a fight and claims another one back. Souquet, the world number four, still leads but now only 6-4.
10.22pm: For the second time in the match Souquet breaks and runs out a rack. This is an impressive statement the Kaiser is firing out to his World Pool Masters rivals.
10.19pm: Yang has won two in a row but can't make it a third as he scratches. Souquet makes a 3-9 combination and he inches closer to the winning line of eight.
10.16pm: Yang wins the next for 5-4.
10.13pm: Souquet rues a miss on a 1-ball into the middle pocket and an 8-9 combination from Yang makes it 2-4.
10.02pm: That mistake helps Souquet as he now takes control. He claims the next three to move into a 4-1 lead. It's a typical Souquet performance - methodical, patient but clinical.
9.43pm: A bizarre error from Yang gives Souquet the initiative in the second. He tries to play a thin safety on the green 6 but completely messes it up and shoots the cue ball straight into the pocket. A hugely embarrasing error from Yang and he looks a bit sheepish as heads back to his seat. Souquet does the rest and makes it 1-1.
9.35pm: This match features two of the best players in the world. and a tough safety exchange shows it is a tough one to call.
9.27pm: Ricky Yang takes on Ralf Souquet in the third match of the day. He wins the lag and The Kaiser is not allowed to play. Yang runs out the first rack and leads 1-0.
QUOTES: John Morra (Canada - who now plays Dennis Orcollo). "I played pretty well for most of the match but was difficult to get used to the tv table as it was very different to the tables we've been playing on.
"But I feel good about my game and got a couple of rolls which helped but John's a great player so that's a great win.
"The shot clock was difficult and I got called up on it and wasn't sure about the rule. I'm going to have to use my extensions better and I have them for a reason.
"Dennis is one of my favourite players. I've played him once in an event in Virginia three years ago and beat him 9-2. He won the tournament but I beat him on the winners side.
"I feel really good but tomorrow is a whole new day and I hope I can play better. I did make mistakes and need to step it up a notch to beat Dennis."
9.15pm: It's all over and Morra wins the match 8-4. His break leaves the 9-ball close to the pocket and a 4-9 combination ends the encounter. It wasn't a classic but Morra won't care. He's through to the quarter-finals.
9.11pm: He misses the 3-ball, Schmidt fails to pot the 6-ball and slams his cue into the floor. But there are more twists as Morra cannot down the 8-ball but neither can Schmidt. The American hands the rack to Morra and he is now on the hill.
9.07pm: Morra is struggling with the shot clock. He calls an extension before reaching for the jump cue. But he takes too much and has to run back to the table before rushing into a jump shot. He gets a massive slice of luck as the 2-ball crashes into the 6-ball and the 7-ball before falling.
9.03pm: Neither man is playing well. Dennis Orcollo is waiting in the wings and won't be trembling at the prospect of playing either of these players. Morra moves two ahead.
8.59pm: No one wants to pot the 4-ball. Schmidt eventually wins the rack. But then slumps back to his chair after another dry break.
8.54pm: Schmidt fails to pot the pink 4 and forces Morra to play safe.
8.52pm: He may have to do more work on his potting as the 2-ball stays out with his next shot.
8.51pm: Morra does the rest for 5-3. He has had break lessons from Alex Pagulayan back in Canada and the tutoring has paid off. A textbook break gives him a chance.
8.46pm: Schmidt has been having problems with the break throughout the tournament and it continues now as he comes up dry.
8.43pm: It should be 5-2 but a foolish, needless mistake from Morra brings Schmidt back to the table. Each shot must be played within 40 seconds, with a warning alarm announced with 10 seconds remaining. But Morra takes too long and concedes a time foul. Schmidt should have been three behind but is now only one behind.
8.41pm: But the Canadian has a chance for 5-1 as he gets ball-in-hand after a kick shot from Schmidt misses everything.
8.39pm: Dry break from Morra.
8.37pm: It's now 4-2. Morra is halfway to his winning total.
8.36pm: Schmidt scratches off the break in the sixth. Morra makes no errors and is on course to resume his two-rack advantage.
8.34pm: Schmidt gets lucky when he is not punished after a poor shot trying to roll the 7-ball down the side rail. But Morra, who should have gone 4-1 ahead, gifts Schmidt the rack by missing an attempt at the same ball.
8.30pm: Morra breaks and runs out the fourth and leads 3-1 but comes up with a dry break at the start of the fifth.
8.24pm: This is both players' debut in the televised stages of the Masters and they look nervous. Morra twice misses the 1-ball with the shot clock close to going against him. However, he gets another chance and then leaves Schmidt wrapped up in a tight safety. Schmidt kicks off two rails but clips the wrong side of the target 3-ball and scratches. With ball in hand Morra moves 2-1 ahead.
8.20pm: The players share the opening two racks. This could be a very close one.
8.10pm: Schmidt has had some tough matches with two hill-hill clashes so far. His next obstacle is 20-year-old Canadian John Morra.
8.03pm: The second match is between Canada's John Morra and America's John Schmidt.
QUOTES - Dennis Orcollo (Philippines) "It was great. I had a bit of luck in the first game and Hundal missed a ball. That was my chance and I took it.
"I'm always thinking I'm going to win the competition but there's a lot of top players here. I'm still preparing for that but I hope I have more luck and will give it my best shot."
7.55pm: The break is nearly a golden one for Orcollo and that would've won him the match. But it doesn't matter as a 2-9 carom finishes off the job. Orcollo wins 8-1.
7.53pm: Orcollo banks the orange 5 on his way to winning another rack. Orcollo is on the hill with the scoreboard showing 7-1.
7.51pm: Hundal can't take advantage. He hits the orange 5 too full and slumps back to his chair knowing that may be his last shot of the competition.
7.49pm: A rare mistake gives Hundal a chance as he has to jump over the 9-ball to hit the pink 4 but rattles it in the jaws of the pocket.
7.47pm: Orcollo has had three break and run outs and this looks like being another one.
7.42pm: Orcollo appears in complete control and Hundal, the 2005 winner, looks to be leaving the competition. Orcollo demolishes the table and it's 6-1.
7.37pm: Hundal is rooted to his seat. 5-1. Things don't look like getting any better for The Hitman as Orcollo produces a perfect rack in the seventh.
7.32pm: Hundal misses a poor 1-ball. Orcollo jumps it and pots it on to his way to a 4-1 lead.
7.28pm: The fourth rack is a comedy of errors. Hundal misses a 2-9 combination before Orcollo misses a 3-9 combination. But Orcollo claims the rack. 1-3.
7.19pm: Hundal gets a chance in the third but hooks himself before a spectacular jump shot gets himself out of jail and it becomes 1-2.
7.16pm: Orcollo quickly doubles his lead. Not the best of starts from Hundal. 2-0.
7.12pm: Hundal wins the lag but misses a green 6 but leaves it tight on the side rail. Orcollo leaves a chance but Hundal parks the ball on the side rail. But he wasn't expecting Orcollo to come up with a fine pot to take the lead.
7.10pm: The last 16 is underway. Raj Hundal takes on Dennis Orcollo.