Kelly Teresa Fisher MBE (born 25 August 1978) is an English professional pool, snooker and English billiards player.
Fisher grew up in South Elmsall, near Pontefract, West Yorkshire. She learned to play pool in her parents' pub and took up snooker when she was 13. By the age of 21, she had been ranked No. 1 for two consecutive seasons.[3]
Fisher won three successive Ladies World Snooker Championship between 1998 and 2000,[4] and won the title again in 2002 and 2003.[5][6]
In 2001, she won four successive tournaments in the ladies' divisions – the British Open, Belgian Open, LG Cup titles and the UK Championship,[7] and extended her winning streak to ten successive tournaments when she won the LG Cup in October 2002.[8]
She has reached the final of every European Ladies' Championship, losing just once to former West Yorkshire (Batley) champion Shakeel Kamal. In 2003 Fisher won the first IBSF World Ladies' Championship.
When the sport's governing body withdrew its support for the women's game in 2003, abandoning all major women tournaments, Fisher saw her choices as getting a full-time job or switching to nine-ball pool.[9] She chose to switch to pool and moved to the United States to play on the Women's Professional Billiard Association (WPBA Tour),[10] joining fellow former women's snooker players Allison Fisher and Karen Corr.[citation needed]
After being in the top 10 women players for two years, and winning the San Diego Classic for three years running (2005–2007), Fisher achieved the No. 1 ranking in world women's pool in August 2008, winning the US Open Championship.[2] Since then, she has gone on to win the women's divisions in the 2009 International Tournament of Champions and U.S. Open 9-Ball Championship; the 2011 World Ten-ball Championship; 2012 WPA Nine-ball World Championship (and WPA Player of the Year), among other titles.[2]
Kelly’s Official Instructional Certification: Kelly is a Certified BCA/PBIA Advanced Instructor. Kelly has coached all over the world. She was the nominated coach for the world's largest Amateur Pool league, the APA to teach and improve the players from the State of North Carolina. Her most prestigious coaching accomplishment is that she currently teaches & trains the Hong Kong National Team in Hong Kong at the Hong Kong Sports Institute.
Fisher was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2024 New Year Honours for services to sport.[11]
All are first-place wins, in women's divisions, unless otherwise noted.
Kelly Fisher, the world No 1, took her third successive women's World Championship at the Crucible yesterday, beating Lisa Ingall, a part-time model in her first final, 4-1.
Kelly Fisher claimed her fifth world title in six years with a simple 4-1 victory over Lisa Quick
Kelly Fisher won her fourth successive ranking tournament yesterday. Already holder of the British Open, Belgian Open and LG Cup titles, Fisher beat Lynette Horsburgh 4–1 to collect the UK Championship title in York
Kelly Fisher, the women's world champion, extended her winning sequence to ten tournaments and 48 matches by beating Lynette Horsburgh 4-2 in the Ladies LG Cup final
'I don't understand why they think it's okay to ditch the women,' added Fisher. 'Why not all stick together and go through the bad together. It seems that as long as the men's competition is okay that's what matters to the governing body. My choice now is to get a full-time job or go to America and play nine-ball pool like former world champion Allison Fisher chose to do.'
Explaining why she chose to come to the United States, Fisher said, 'I was playing snooker in the U.K., which prevented me from coming over earlier. I was dominating the ladies' circuit, then it collapsed over there. We were under the governing body of the men's division, and they pulled the plug on the funding'. With the thought of moving to the U.S. in the back of her mind for a while, Fisher saw it was time to seriously consider it, stating 'I thought I would have to get a regular job or make the move to America'.
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