World Women's Snooker Championship

Last updated

World Women's Snooker Championship
Tournament information
Established1976
Organisation(s) World Women's Snooker
Total prize fund£33,400
Recent edition 2024
Current championFlag of the People's Republic of China.svg  Bai Yulu  (CHN)

The World Women's Snooker Championship (known as the Women's World Open from 1976 to 1981 and the World Ladies Snooker Championship from 1983 to 2018) is the longest-running and most prestigious tournament on the World Women's Snooker Tour. Staged 41 times since the inaugural edition in 1976, it has produced 15 different champions, six of whom have won the title more than once.

Contents

The most successful player in the tournament's history has been Reanne Evans, who has won 12 titles, followed by Allison Fisher with seven titles and Kelly Fisher with five. The inaugural champion was Vera Selby, who won the title twice. Although the tournament had only one winner from outside the United Kingdom before 2014 (Australia's Lesley McIlrath in 1980) most recent editions have been won by Asian players. Hong Kong's Ng On-yee won three titles, in 2015, 2017 and 2018. Thai players Mink Nutcharut and Baipat Siripaporn won in 2022 and 2023 respectively, and China's Bai Yulu claimed her first title in 2024.

In 2021, the World Women’s Snooker Tour became an official qualification route to the main professional World Snooker Tour. At the end of each season, the reigning World Women's Snooker Champion receives a professional tour card for the following two seasons, as does the highest-ranked player in the women's rankings who is not already on the tour. If the World Champion is already on the tour, that card will be issued to the next highest ranked player who is not on the tour.

History

Founded in 1931, the Women's Billiards Association (WBA) organised an amateur women's snooker championship that took place most years from 1933 until the 1970s. [1] [2] The WBA also held the Women's Professional Snooker Championship annually from 1934 to 1941 and 1947 to 1950, [2] [3] but then discontinued it due to lack of public interest. [3] The standard of amateur women's snooker was generally perceived as poor throughout the 1930s, but women's participation improved in the postwar era, including the formation of women's snooker leagues, producing improvements in the quality of play. [3] The billiard trade company Burroughes and Watts often supported women's competitions, but that support ended after sporting goods firm Riley took over the company in 1967. [3] The number of competitions reduced, and the amateur championship lacked sponsorship and suffered from poor organisation. [3]

In 1976, the Women's Billiards and Snooker Association was established. [3] The Q Promotions company run by Maurice Hayes gained sponsorship from tobacco brand Embassy for a 1976 Women's World Open, as part of Embassy's deal to sponsor the 1976 World Snooker Championship. [3] [4] :50 Over sixty players entered, [5] including former amateur champions Maureen Baynton and Rosemary Davies, who both came out of retirement, [3] and Joyce Gardner, runner-up in the professional championships of 1934, 1935 and 1937. [2] [3] Held at Middlesbrough Town Hall, [6] the 1976 championship is recognised today by World Women's Snooker as the first edition of the World Women's Snooker Championship. [7] [8] [9] Vera Selby, the reigning amateur champion for four seasons before the tournament, defeated Muriel Hazeldene 4–0 in the final and won £500 plus a Jaeger-LeCoultre watch worth another £500. [10] [3]

The next edition took place in 1980, when 46 players entered. [2] Australian player Lesley McIlrath won the final 4–2 over Agnes Davies, who had won the Women's Professional Snooker Championship in 1949. [11] [7] The tournament was staged again the following year, 1981, when Selby regained her title with a 3–0 victory over Mandy Fisher in the final. [2] The first three championships were governed by the Women's Billiards and Snooker Association, but from 1983 the championship was controlled by the World Ladies Billiards and Snooker Association (WLBSA), which was closely associated with Ladies Snooker International, a management and promotions company that had signed many of the leading female players. [2]

In 1984, the WLBSA held an amateur championship, won by 15-year-old Stacey Hillyard, [12] and a five-tournament Grand Prix series, won by Mandy Fisher. [13] [2] The latter is now regarded as an edition of the World Women's Snooker Championship. [14] [15] The 1985 Amateur Championship attracted 78 entries and was won by Allison Fisher, who lost only one frame during the tournament; this is recognised today as the 1985 edition of the tournament. [13] The WLBSA abolished the distinction between amateur and professional status the following year. [13] Fisher went on to win a further six world titles, most recently in 1994. [9]

Barry Hearn's Matchroom company promoted the 1990 World Championship, with sponsorship from Trusthouse Forte and a total prize fund of £30,000, including £10,000 for the champion. [16] The previous record for the tournament prize fund had been £10,000, with £3,500 for the winner. [17] It was the first event in Matchroom's five-year deal with the WLBSA, which guaranteed at least £50,000 in world championship prize money across five years. [18] Karen Corr won the title in 1990, 1995 and 1997; and Kelly Fisher won the title five times in six years from 1998 to 2003. [9] Dissatisfied with her earnings from the game, Allison Fisher left the snooker circuit in 1997 to compete on the WPBA nine-ball pool tour in the United States. [3] Both Corr and Kelly Fisher later followed that route. [4] :160

In 1994, the quarter-finals, semi-finals and final were held in New Delhi, India, the tournament's first staging outside the United Kingdom. [19] The prize money was reduced in 1994, [20] and again in 1995, when the final stages were again held in New Delhi. [21] During the next edition, which extended from 1996 into 1997 due to delays in scheduling the final rounds, Hearn requested the termination of the contract with the WLBSA to promote the event in future. [22]

In 1997, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) took over the WLBSA, pledging to provide additional prize money. [23] From 1998 to 2003, Embassy sponsored the tournament, with the semi-finals and final taking place at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield during the World Snooker Championship. [24] The WPBSA ceased supporting the women's circuit in 2003, following the UK government's restrictions on tobacco sponsorship of sport, [25] and the championship was not held in 2004. [9]

Reanne Evans (left) has won a record twelve World Women's Snooker Championship titles; Ng On-yee (right) has won the title three times. PHWC 2017 Finalists.jpg
Reanne Evans (left) has won a record twelve World Women's Snooker Championship titles; Ng On-yee (right) has won the title three times.

The tournament was revived in 2005. Since then, its most successful competitor has been Reanne Evans, who has won the title a record 12 times, including ten consecutive victories from 2005 to 2014 followed by further titles in 2016 and 2019. [26] [9] Hong Kong's Ng On-yee became the tournament's first Asian winner in 2015, adding further titles in 2017 and 2018. [9] The 2017 event was held in Toa Payoh, Singapore, the first time since 1995 that the tournament was held outside the UK. [27] In 2018, the World Ladies Billiards and Snooker Association was rebranded as World Women's Snooker, and the tournament was renamed the World Women's Snooker Championship. [28]

The tournament was not staged in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [29] In 2021, the tournament's trophy was renamed the Mandy Fisher Trophy. [30] Fisher founded the World Ladies Billiards and Snooker Association in 1981, won the women's world title in 1984, and, as of March 2024, serves as president of World Women's Snooker. [31] [32]

Beginning in 2021, the World Women's Snooker Tour became an official qualification pathway to the World Snooker Tour. The World Women's Champion automatically receives a professional tour card for the following two seasons, although if she already holds a place on the professional tour, the next highest ranked player not on tour will receive a place. [30] The 2022 and 2023 tournaments were won respectively by Thai players Mink Nutcharut and Baipat Siripaporn, ending a 19-year period in which every world title had been won either by Evans or Ng. [9] China hosted the event for the first time in 2024, with the tournament staged in Dongguan. [33] Bai Yulu defeated Nutcharut 6–5 in the final, becoming the first winner from mainland China. [34]

The highest break in the history of the tournament is 127 by Bai in the group stages of the 2023 event. [35]

Ann-Marie Farren, who was aged 16 years and 47 days when she won the title in 1987, is recognised by Guinness World Records as the tournament's youngest winner as of 2024, [36] although Hillyard was only 15 when she won the 1984 amateur championship. [37]

Winners

Kelly Fisher pictured in 2022) won the Championship five times. She has also won world titles in English billiards, Ten-ball pool, and Nine-ball pool. Kelly Fisher 6.jpg
Kelly Fisher pictured in 2022) won the Championship five times. She has also won world titles in English billiards, Ten-ball pool, and Nine-ball pool.
Three-time World Women's Snooker champion Karen Corr pictured in 2009), is another former English billiards world champion. Like Allison Fisher and Kelly Fisher, she moved to the United States to compete on the pool circuit. Karen Corr.jpg
Three-time World Women's Snooker champion Karen Corr pictured in 2009), is another former English billiards world champion. Like Allison Fisher and Kelly Fisher, she moved to the United States to compete on the pool circuit.
Mink Nutcharut was runner-up in 2024, having previously won in 2022 and reached the final in 2019. Nutcharut Wongharuthai at the 2020 Snooker Shoot Out.jpg
Mink Nutcharut was runner-up in 2024, having previously won in 2022 and reached the final in 2019.
World Women's Snooker Championship finals [9]
YearWinnerRunner-upFinal scoreCityRef.
1976 Flag of England.svg  Vera Selby  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Muriel Hazeldene  (ENG)4–0Flag of England.svg  Middlesbrough  (ENG) [6]
1977–1979No tournament held [2]
1980 Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Lesley McIlrath  (AUS)Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  Agnes Davies  (WAL)4–2Flag of England.svg  Hayling Island  (ENG) [2]
1981 Flag of England.svg  Vera Selby  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Mandy Fisher  (ENG)3–0Flag of England.svg  Thorness Bay  (ENG) [40]
1982No tournament held [9]
1983 Flag of England.svg  Sue Foster  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Maureen Baynton  (ENG)8–5Flag of England.svg  Brean  (ENG) [41]
1984 AmFlag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Natalie Stelmach  (CAN)4–1Flag of England.svg  Coventry  (ENG) [2]
1984 ProFlag of England.svg  Mandy Fisher  (ENG)Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Maryann McConnell  (CAN)4–2Flag of England.svg  Birmingham  (ENG) [9] [37]
1985 AmFlag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)5–1Flag of England.svg  Solihull  (ENG) [13]
1986 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Sue LeMaich  (CAN)5–0Flag of England.svg  Solihull  (ENG) [42]
1987 Flag of England.svg  Ann-Marie Farren  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)5–1Flag of England.svg  Puckpool  (ENG) [43]
1988 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Ann-Marie Farren  (ENG)6–1Flag of England.svg  Brixham  (ENG) [24]
1989 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Ann-Marie Farren  (ENG)6–5Flag of England.svg  Brixham  (ENG) [24]
1990 Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)Flag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)7–4Flag of England.svg  London  (ENG) [44]
1991 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)8–2Flag of England.svg  London  (ENG) [45]
1992No tournament held [46]
1993 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)9–3Flag of England.svg  Blackpool  (ENG) [47]
1994 Flag of England.svg  Allison Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Stacey Hillyard  (ENG)7–3Flag of India.svg  New Delhi  (IND) [48]
1995 Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)Flag of England.svg  Kim Shaw  (ENG)6–3Flag of India.svg  New Delhi  (IND) [49]
1996No tournament held [lower-alpha 1] [50]
1997 Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)6–3Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  Llanelli  (WAL) [50]
1998 Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)5–0Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [51]
1999 Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)Ulster Banner.svg  Karen Corr  (NIR)4–2Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [24]
2000 Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Lisa Ingall  (ENG)4–1Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [24]
2001 Flag of England.svg  Lisa Quick  (ENG)Flag of Scotland.svg  Lynette Horsburgh  (SCO)4–2Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [24]
2002 Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Lisa Quick  (ENG)4–1Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [24]
2003 Flag of England.svg  Kelly Fisher  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Lisa Quick  (ENG)4–1Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [24]
2004No tournament held [52]
2005 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of Scotland.svg  Lynette Horsburgh  (SCO)6–4Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [52]
2006 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Emma Bonney  (ENG)5–3Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [53]
2007 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Katie Henrick  (ENG)5–3Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [54]
2008 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  June Banks  (ENG)5–2Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [24]
2009 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Maria Catalano  (ENG)5–2Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [24]
2010 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Maria Catalano  (ENG)5–1Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [24]
2011 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Emma Bonney  (ENG)5–1Flag of England.svg  Bury St Edmunds  (ENG) [24]
2012 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Maria Catalano  (ENG)5–3Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [55]
2013 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of England.svg  Maria Catalano  (ENG)6–3Flag of England.svg  Cambridge  (ENG) [56]
2014 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Ng On-yee  (HKG)6–0Flag of England.svg  Leeds  (ENG) [57]
2015 Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Ng On-yee  (HKG)Flag of England.svg  Emma Bonney  (ENG)6–2Flag of England.svg  Leeds  (ENG) [58]
2016 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Ng On-yee  (HKG)6–4Flag of England.svg  Leeds  (ENG) [59]
2017 Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Ng On-yee  (HKG)Flag of India.svg  Vidya Pillai  (IND)6–5Flag of Singapore.svg  Toa Payoh  (SGP) [60]
2018 Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Ng On-yee  (HKG)Flag of England.svg  Maria Catalano  (ENG)5–0Flag of Malta.svg  St. Paul's Bay  (MLT) [61]
2019 Flag of England.svg  Reanne Evans  (ENG)Flag of Thailand.svg  Mink Nutcharut  (THA)6–3Flag of Thailand.svg  Bangkok  (THA) [62]
2020–2021Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic [29]
2022 Flag of Thailand.svg  Mink Nutcharut  (THA)Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Wendy Jans  (BEL)6–5Flag of England.svg  Sheffield  (ENG) [63]
2023 Flag of Thailand.svg  Baipat Siripaporn  (THA)Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  Bai Yulu  (CHN)6–3Flag of Thailand.svg  Bangkok  (THA) [64]
2024 Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  Bai Yulu  (CHN)Flag of Thailand.svg  Mink Nutcharut  (THA)6–5Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  Dongguan  (CHN) [65]

Statistics by player

Reanne Evans has won all twelve finals that she has contested. Reanne Evans PHC 2017-2.jpg
Reanne Evans has won all twelve finals that she has contested.
RankNameNationalityWinnerRunner-up
1 Reanne Evans Flag of England.svg  England 120
2 Allison Fisher Flag of England.svg  England 70
3 Kelly Fisher Flag of England.svg  England 51
4 Karen Corr Ulster Banner.svg  Northern Ireland 33
5 Ng On Yee Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong 32
6 Vera Selby Flag of England.svg  England 20
7 Stacey Hillyard Flag of England.svg  England 15
8 Ann-Marie Farren Flag of England.svg  England 12
Lisa Quick Flag of England.svg  England 12
Mink Nutcharut Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand 12
11 Mandy Fisher Flag of England.svg  England 11
Bai Yulu Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 11
13 Lesley McIlrath Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 10
Sue Foster Flag of England.svg  England 10
Baipat Siripaporn Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand 10
16 Maria Catalano Flag of England.svg  England 05
17 Emma Bonney Flag of England.svg  England 03
18 Lynette Horsburgh Flag of Scotland.svg  Scotland 02
19 Muriel Hazeldene Flag of England.svg  England 01
Agnes Davies Flag of Wales (1959-present).svg  Wales 01
Maureen Baynton Flag of England.svg  England 01
Natalie Stelmach Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 01
Maryann McConnell Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 01
Sue LeMaich Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 01
Kim Shaw Flag of England.svg  England 01
Lisa Ingall Flag of England.svg  England 01
Katie Henrick Flag of England.svg  England 01
June Banks Flag of England.svg  England 01
Vidya Pillai Flag of India.svg  India 01
Wendy Jans Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium 01

Active players are shown in bold.

Notes

  1. A championship was started in 1996 but did not conclude until 1997 and is recorded as the 1997 Championship. [50]

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