Scottish snooker player
Billy Snaddon Born (1969-07-07 ) 7 July 1969 (age 55) Sport country Scotland Professional 1991–2004 Highest ranking 24 (2000/01 ) Best ranking finish Runner-up (x1)
Billy Snaddon (born 7 July 1969) is a Scottish former professional snooker player. He reached the World Snooker Championship first round five times, but never progressed past this stage. He spent 5 seasons ranked among the game's top 32, peaking at No. 24 in 2000.[ 1]
Career
Snaddon began life as a footballer, but turned to snooker after a hip disease ended his football career, turning professional in 1991.[ 2] He reached the last sixteen of seven ranking events before finally reaching a quarter-final, in the 1998 Irish Open.[ 3]
He reached one ranking final in his thirteen-year career, in the 1999 Regal China International . A rank outsider in this tournament, he took out the top 16 players James Wattana , Ronnie O'Sullivan , Stephen Lee and Stephen Hendry en route to the final before losing 3–9 to World Champion John Higgins . Snaddon also reached the quarter-final of the Thailand Masters a year later.[ 1]
In 2016, he won in both the team, and seniors individual, categories at the Blackball (pool) International World Championship.[ 4] [ 5]
Performance Table Legend
LQ
lost in the qualifying draw
#R
lost in the early rounds of the tournament (WR = Wildcard round, RR = Round robin)
QF
lost in the quarter-finals
SF
lost in the semi-finals
F
lost in the final
W
won the tournament
DNQ
did not qualify for the tournament
A
did not participate in the tournament
WD
withdrew from the tournament
NH / Not Held
means an event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Event
means an event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Event
means an event is/was a ranking event.
^ New players on the Main Tour do not have a ranking.
^ The event was also called the Grand Prix (1991/1992–2000/2001)
^ The event was also called the Irish Open (1998/1999)
^ The event was also called the International Open (1992/1993–1996/1997) and the Scottish Open (1997/1998–2002/2003)
^ The event was also called the Benson and Hedges Satellite Championship (1991/1992) and the Benson and Hedges Championship (1992/1993–2002/2003)
^ The event was also called the Dubai Classic (1991/92–1994/1995) and Thailand Classic (1995/1996)
^ The event was also called the China International (1997/1998–1998/1999)
^ The event was also called the Asian Open (1991/1992–1992/1993) and the Thailand Open (1993/1994–1996/1997)
Career finals
Ranking finals: 1
Non-ranking finals: 1 (1 title)
References
External links