The World Seniors Championship brings together players whose best years on the main tour may be behind them, but who still carry the competitive instinct that made them professionals in the first place. Igor Figueiredo and Mohamed Elkhayat meet in what the market has already delivered a very clear verdict on, with the odds telling a stark story before a ball has been potted.
Igor Figueiredo
Figueiredo is the Brazilian cueman who has long flown the flag for South American snooker, a sport where his country has precious little representation at the top level. Detailed ranking and career statistics are not available here, but the betting market has installed him as an overwhelming favourite at 1.03, which speaks volumes about how the wider snooker community views this contest. At those odds the market is essentially calling this a formality. Whether that confidence is justified against an unfamiliar opponent is the only real question worth asking.
Mohamed Elkhayat
Elkhayat represents Egyptian snooker, another nation working to build a foothold in a sport dominated by players from Britain, China, and a handful of other countries. Specific career data is limited, but his presence at the World Seniors Championship means he has qualified through whatever pathway brought him here. The market has him at 10.0, which is a significant price and reflects a genuine gulf in perceived quality. Whether that gulf is as wide in practice as the odds suggest is where the value conversation gets interesting.
Betting Verdict
The Figueiredo price of 1.03 is not a betting opportunity, it is a near-certainty priced like one. You would need to stake a hundred pounds to return three. That is money at serious risk for almost no reward. The real question is whether Elkhayat at 10.0 represents any genuine value. Without form data, head-to-head history, or confirmed rankings to work with, backing the outsider at that price is a leap into the unknown. The market clearly knows something about the gap between these two players. Figueiredo is priced as though he cannot lose, and in senior events containing players from snooker’s periphery nations, that kind of market confidence usually has a basis. The sensible play, if you are going to play at all, is to treat this as a match to skip rather than force a position. However, if you must have skin in the game, Elkhayat at 10.0 carries enough return to justify a small each-way interest in an upset.
Mohamed Elkhayat to Win
10.0
The 10.0 is the only price in this match worth touching. Figueiredo at 1.03 returns almost nothing for the risk involved. Elkhayat is a massive outsider, but senior snooker outside the elite bracket can produce surprises, and at this price a small stake makes mathematical sense if you believe the market has overcorrected.
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