THIS PAGE DOES NOT UPDATE AUTOMATICALLY
RESULTS: Roberto Gomez 8-3 Jayson Shaw, Naoyuki Oi 5-8 Charlie Williams, Daryl Peach 0-8 Toru Kuribayashi
QUOTES: Toru Kuribayashi (Japan): "I played really well and am really happy with my performance. If I keep playing like that then i know I can win the tournament.
"But everyone here in this competition is a very good player and everyone has chance a win the tournament."
5.04pm: It's all over. 8-0. Only the third time a whitewash has happened in the 2010 competition. Kuribayashi faced a tough moment in the seventh when he has to jump the six to hit the 2. But he does better than as he sinks the 2-ball, nudges the 9-ball close to the pocket and then makes the resulting 3-9 combination.
5.01pm: Peach has not done much wrong but faces being on the wrong end of a whitewash. Kuribayashi makes it 7-0.
4.58pm: The cue ball is tight to the 4-ball from Kuribayashi but his latest shot leaves a half chance for Peach. He can't take it and Koribayashi is back in action.
4.55pm: Peach finally comes to the table in the seventh. One ball is pocketed, one goes over the headstring but three balls need to go over the headstring or into the pocket. Peach gets no shot on anything. He leaves a tricky 2-ball for Kuribayashi but he is playing with great confidence and smashes it in.
4.53pm: Peach has missed one ball and scratched but hardly had a shot. Kuribayashi has now run out four racks, including three in a row. 6-0 and Peach looks stunned.
4.51pm: With three balls being made off every break, Koribayashi has an extremely effective weapon. The fifth goes the same way as the second and fourth. Another break and run out. 5-0.
4.48pm: If Kuribayashi continues to break like this then he will be a tough man to stop. Breaks and runs out in the fourth. 4-0.
4.44pm: Peach gets to the table in the third but scratches and doesn't get back to the table as Kuribayashi, the last Japanese competitor, makes it 3-0.
4.38pm: Kuribayashi has one of the most fearful breaks in pool and he uses it to good effect as he runs out from the break. 2-0 to Kuribayashi.
4.35pm: It's a poor start for 2007 World Champion Daryl Peach. He leaves the eight ball hanging over the pocket and it is 1-0 to Kuibayashi.
4.34pm: The third match of the day sees the last English competitor left in - Daryl Peach - meets Japan's Toru Kuribayashi.
QUOTES: Charlie Williams (USA): "That was a big win for me and I'm pleased to get in the last eight. Now I'm in the championship ring and it looks a bit easier.
"Oi is a very aggressive player so I knew he would come at me. I thought I had got here early enough to practise but I didn't so I hadn't hit one ball in practise today.
"The first shot I hit was actually in the game and it showed as I made some early mistakes but it's my fault as I should've been here at 2pm.
"At 4-1 Oi was playing good but I didn't give up and just tried to work it back one frame at a time.
"Being 4-1 down it wasn't looking good at all but I figured out the break quicker that he did and that gave me some momentum.
"If you don't put pressure on your opponent then they will roll over you.
"At the end I didn't know it was a race to eight. Nigel looked at me and someone jumped up and I thought I'd commited a foul!"
4.13pm: Williams runs out the last rack and wins 8-5. Not realising it's a race to eight, he starts to collect the balls for the next rack but is then delighted to have found he has won.
4.10pm: Oi gets a shot in the next after spending a couple in his seat. But he returns to his chair quickly after a jumpshot on the 1-ball leaves it on. Williams wins another one, the sixth he has won out of the last seven and is on the hill.
4.03pm: That foul from Oi has proved costly. Williams runs out the 11th rack of the match and leads for the first time in the encounter. He needs two more to claim a place in the quarter-finals.
3.57pm: It's a high-quality match. Williams wins the next and it's all square at 5-5. It in effect now becomes a race to three.
3.52pm: Williams successfully made a 2-9 combination in the second but fails at a similar attempt in the ninth. Oi then tries an unconventioanl use of the bridge to make a jump shot over the 6-ball. But he gets it completely wrong. williams takes advantage of the foul and is within one rack of Oi.
3.47pm: Williams has two good opportunities in the eighth. He misses a shot on the 2 by two inches and then hits the 9-ball before the 2-ball. With ball-in-hand Oi makes it 5-3.
3.43pm: The seventh rack of the match sees the first break and run out. Williams pulls another one back for 4-3.
3.39pm: Oi's good run ends in the next when he scratches on the green 6. It's easy for Williams and it's 4-2.
3.33pm: Oi produces a stunning masse shot in the fifth to gain position on the 6-ball. The cue ball seems to defy the laws of physics to spin round into the perfect spot. Commentator Phil Yates describes it as the shot of the tournament so far. That effort helps Oi into a 4-1 lead.
3.27pm: Naoyuki Oi claims two in a row and now leads 3-1.
3.13pm: The second frame doesn't last long. A loose safety from Oi on the 2-ball after he opts to push out leaves a potential 2-9 combo which Williams takes out to level at 1-1.
3.12pm: A perfectly-judged safety from Oi on the brown 7 draws a mistake from the Korean Dragon and the Japanese man takes the lead in this winner-breaks format.
3.10pm: The opening frame is a tactical battle and may be a taste of things to come.
3.05pm: The second match of the afternoon is between Japan's Naoyuki Oi and American Charlie Williams.
QUOTES: "Roberto Gomez (Philippines): "I played good - maybe I would give myself seven or eight out of ten. My shot (behind the back that caused a ) it happened at exactly the same time as the shot clock warning bell ringing and I just hit it badly.
"But I just forget about everything I had done wrong as it would destroy your game if you are thinking about your mistakes.
"He (Shaw) had a lot of chance but missed them and that gave me courage to grab the chances.
"Playing Ralf Souquet will be a great match and I have to prepare well. I've played him once in Taiwan and I won.
"But everyone is confident of winning this tournament and everyone here is a master."
2.45pm: A perfect break from Gomez comes in when he needs it most. The rest is a formality. He wins 8-3 and now meets Ralf Souquet.
2.42pm: Gomez had mastered the break on his way to the 2007 World Championship final. But he's struggling with it here as he registers his fourth dry break. Shaw should make it 6-4 but the black 8 stays agonisingly on the table hanging over the pocket. Gomez polishes off the rack and that could be Shaw's last match of the competition.
2.37pm: Gomez comes up with a dry break. His third of the match. But it doesn't matter as Shaw leaves the 3-ball on and Gomez moves three racks ahead.
2.31pm: Shaw misses the 4-ball in the eighth and Gomez gets back to the table for 5-3.
2.27pm: Shaw compounds Gomez's mistake by running through the next from the break. 4-3.
2.24pm: An unbelievable error from Gomez. A solid break seems to be a route through to 5-3. But he tries a Francisco Bustamante-style 'behind-the-back shot' and completes miscues. The cue ball only gently taps the 6-ball but nothing then touches a rail and Shaw, with ball-in-hand, does the rest. 4-2.
2.19pm: It becomes 4-1 as Shaw pushes following a dry break from Gomez. But Shaw overcooks it, Gomez can see the 1-ball and the rest is a formality.
2.16pm: Shaw gets a chance in the fourth and makes a fine 4-7 combination. However, his hard work is wasted as his next shot sees the 4-ball drop but then the cue ball draws back into the side pocket. Gomez claims another rack he should not have done.
2.10pm: A perfect break from Shaw should see the Scot go in front. However, he is the master of his own downfall as he loses position going from the 7-ball to the 8-ball. The 9-ball is now in the way and Shaw's aggressive kick shot goes wrong. He leaves a simple 8-ball into the side pocket and Gomez accepts the present. 2-1 to the Filipino.
2.06pm: Gomez wins the first after running it out but Shaw quickly levels.
2.05pm: This will be Shaw's first appearance in front of the Matchroom cameras but Gomez is well experienced having reached the final of the 2007 World Pool Championship.
2.04pm: The first match of the fourth day is between Roberto Gomez of the Philippines and Scotland's Jayson Shaw.
2pm: Good afternoon and welcome to day four of the PartyPoker.net World Pool Masters.