Terence Martin GriffithsOBE (16October 1947 – 1December 2024) was a Welsh professional snooker player, coach and pundit. After winning several amateur titles, including the Welsh Amateur Championship in 1975 and back-to-back English Amateur Championships in 1977 and 1978, Griffiths turned professional in June 1978 at the age of 30.
Although he also won several other tournaments, Griffiths's determination to match his rival Davis led to changes in technique which commentators said cost him his natural flair for playing. He retired from the professional tour in 1996 to become the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association's director of coaching. During his coaching career, he worked with leading players including Stephen Hendry, Mark Williams and Ding Junhui. Griffiths died in December 2024, aged 77.
Early years
Griffiths was born in Llanelli on 16 October 1947.[2][3] He was admitted to a grammar school but was expelled for truancy and became a student at a secondary modern school, where he played rugby union with future Welsh national-team members Phil Bennett and Derek Quinnell.[4] Griffiths began playing snooker when he was 14. After leaving school, he worked in a coal mine and became the youngest winner of the Llanelli and District snooker championship at age 16.[3][4] Griffiths subsequently began working as a bus conductor, a job which gave him more time to practise.[4] He later worked as a postman[5] and as an insurance salesman.[4]
At age 17, Griffiths won the West Wales snooker championship.[6] When he was 18 and working as a bus conductor, he met Annette, and the couple married in 1969.[7][8] They had their first son, Wayne, a year-and-a-half after their wedding, and their other son, Darren, two years later.[7] Griffiths compiled his first century break at age 24, the first year he entered the Welsh Amateur Championship (where he was runner-up).[6] Griffiths played in the amateur home internationals fourteen times, winning twelve of his matches; after winning the Welsh Amateur Championship in 1975, he reached the quarter-finals of the 1976 World Amateur Snooker Championship.[6][9] He won the English Amateur Championship in 1977 by defeating Sid Hood 13–3 in the final, and retained the title in 1978 by winning 13–6 against Joe Johnson.[10][11]
Professional career
1978–1982
Griffiths became a professional player on 1 June 1978 after he was accepted as a member by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) at its meeting during the 1978 World Snooker Championship.[10] Anticipating his acceptance as a professional, Snooker Scene said in May 1978 that "his power screws and long potting are second to no one's ... it will not be in the least surprising, if very soon he becomes a serious challenger for snooker's top professional titles."[12]
In his first professional match, qualifying for the 1978 UK Championship, Griffiths lost 8–9 to Rex Williams after leading 8–2. Williams took a 2–1 lead; Griffiths won the next seven frames, and Williams took the following seven. In the deciding frame, Griffiths rushed when potting the pink ball and went in-off, a foul shot. Williams later potted the pink for the victory.[13] After qualifying for the 1979 World Championship by eliminating Bernard Bennett 9–2 (from 0–2 behind) and Jim Meadowcroft 9–6 (from 6–6),[14] Griffiths defeated the previous year's runner-up Perrie Mans 13–8 in the first round and Alex Higgins 13–12 in the quarter-finals.[15] After beating Eddie Charlton 19–17 in a long semi-final which finished at 1:40 am,[16] Griffiths told interviewer David Vine: "I'm in the final now, you know."[17] In the final, he faced Dennis Taylor, who had been a professional since 1973 and was also playing in his first World Championship final.[16] The match was close for the first four of the six sessions and level at 15–15 before Griffiths took a 17–16 lead and won 24–16,[16] becoming world champion at his first attempt[16][4] in his second tournament as a professional.[18] The result saw him placed eighth in the Snooker world rankings 1979/1980.[19] He was the second player to win the championship after playing in qualifying competition (after Higgins in 1972), and the first to win it at the Crucible in Sheffield, the venue for the championship since 1977, as a qualifier. By 2021, the only other player to achieve this was Shaun Murphy in 2005.[20][21][22]
Griffiths reached the final of the 1979 Canadian Open the following season, losing 16–17 to Cliff Thorburn,[23] and was part of the Welsh team that won the inaugural World Cup of snooker; Ray Reardon, Doug Mountjoy and Griffiths defeated England 14–3 in the final.[24][25] At the end of 1979, Griffiths faced John Virgo in the UK Championship final. Virgo had been penalised two frames for arriving late to a session (not realising that the start time had been moved up as requested by the television broadcasters), which reduced his lead to 9–11. When the scores were 11–11, Griffiths offered to split the prize money. Virgo declined and went on to win the match, 14–13.[26][27]
Griffiths was named the BBC Cymru Wales Sports Personality of the Year for 1979,[28] and was the subject for a This Is Your Life episode the following year.[29] He won the 1980 Masters, defeating Alex Higgins 9–5 in front of 2,323 spectators (a record crowd for a UK snooker event) at the Wembley Conference Centre after compiling a break of 131 to win the decisive frame.[30] It was his first Masters appearance and his only Masters title, although he was runner-up at the event three times in the subsequent four years.[30][23] He also won the 1980 Irish Masters, defeating Mountjoy 10–9 in the final.[31]
Defending champion at the 1980 World Championship, Griffiths lost the first seven frames against Davis in his first match and ended the first session trailing 1–7.[32] Davis won the opening frame of the second session to extend his lead to 8–1, and had a seven-frame lead again at 10–3 before Griffiths won three frames to end the session 6–10 behind.[33] In the third session, Griffiths won the first four frames to level at 10–10; Davis won the next three for a 13–10 victory, which included a 116 break in the 22nd frame.[34] With this first-round defeat, Griffiths became the first victim of the so-called "Crucible curse", a term later adopted to describe the failure of any first-time champion to defend their title at the venue.[35] He moved up three places in the annual rankings, to fifth for 1980/1981.[19]
Griffiths and his Wales teammates retained the 1980 World Challenge Cup,[36] and he again won the Irish Masters in 1981 before losing to eventual winner Davis in the quarter-finals of the 1981 World Snooker Championship.[23] Griffiths lost 3–16 to Davis in the 1981 UK Championship final, the first of five finals in consecutive events contested by the pair.[37] Griffiths won two of the five, winning 9–8 on the final black in the deciding frame of the 1982 Classic after Davis had recovered from 3–8 to 8–8.[38] He also won the 1982 Irish Masters, his third consecutive title at the event, defeating Davis 9–5 in the final.[23] After Tony Knowles's surprise 10–1 win over Davis in the first round of the 1982 World Championship, Griffiths became the bookmakers' favourite for the title. However, Griffiths also exited in the first round, losing 6–10 to Willie Thorne.[37] Despite this, he advanced again in the rankings, achieving third place, which would be his highest-ever ranking, in 1981/1982.[39] He won the 1982 UK Championship at the end of the year, defeating Alex Higgins 16–15 in the final.[23]
His ranking had dropped to fourteenth in 1982/1983 when his 1979 points were no longer counted towards his total, which at the time was calculated purely on the basis of results of the preceding three world championships.[43] He improved to ninth rank in 1983/1984, and was eighth for both 1984/1985 and 1985/1986 before falling to tenth for 1986/1987.[39]
Two months before the 1986 World Snooker Championship, Griffiths began working with coach Frank Callan.[42] After eliminating Higgins 13–12 in the last 16, he praised Callan for helping his game: "I tried to do the right things myself for three years... Frank has knitted it all together for me. I didn't think anyone knew that much about snooker."[42] He led eventual winner Johnson 12–9 in their quarter-final match, but Johnson won four consecutive frames, two with century breaks, for a 13–12 victory.[42][44][45] He ended the season by winning the 1986 Pontins Professional, defeating Willie Thorne in the final.[42]
At the 1988 World Snooker Championship, Griffiths defeated Steve Longworth, Willie Thorne, Neal Foulds and Jimmy White to reach his second world final, but lost 11–18 to defending champion Davis.[47][48] The players had been level at 8–8 after the first of two days' play in the final, and Terry Smith of The Daily Telegraph said after the match: "Griffiths knows he produced his best snooker since he became world champion in 1979, and still lost."[49] The 1989 European Open was his only final the following season.[50] Although Griffiths won four of the first five frames, John Parrott tied the scores at 4–4 after the first session. Griffiths later led 8–7, but Parrott won the match (and his first major title) 9–8.[51]
Griffiths moved back into sixth place after the 1991–92 season, during which he reached three ranking semi-finals, including that of the 1992 World Championship, where he scored victories over Bob Chaperon, Neal Foulds and Peter Ebdon before losing to Stephen Hendry.[23][54] His best performance at a ranking tournament the following season was the semi-final of the 1992 Grand Prix, which he lost 6–9 to Ken Doherty; his best showings at ranking tournaments over the next three seasons were a single quarter-final appearance in each.[23]
At the 1996 World Snooker Championship, Griffiths eliminated Jamie Burnett 10–9 in a first-round final-frame decider after trailing 0–6 and 5–9. In the second round, he lost to old rival Steve Davis (whom he never defeated at the Crucible in six attempts) and announced his retirement from the game to become the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association's Director of Coaching.[47] Griffiths retired at 23rd in the rankings (the first year since his debut season that he had not been in the top 16).[47][55]Clive Everton wrote that Griffiths was "the only player to retire when his standard was still in touch with the circuit's top players."[56]
At the 1997 World Championship, Griffiths came out of retirement, and won his qualifying match against Alfie Burden 10–4, to play in the main tournament at the Crucible one last time.[57][58][59] He led fellow countryman Mark Williams 9–8, but lost the next two frames, each on the final black ball, and was eliminated 9–10.[60] During his professional career, he played a total of 999 frames at the Crucible.[61]
In their book, Masters of the Baize, Luke Williams and Paul Gadsby wrote that Griffiths may have won more tournaments if he had not adjusted his playing technique to challenge Davis.[4]Gordon Burn reported in his 1986 book, Pocket Money, that Ray Reardon felt that Griffiths began to decline as a player after he signed a management contract with Barry Hearn (Davis's manager) at the end of the 1981–82 season and changes Griffiths made to his stance and cueing cost him his "natural flair".[62] Burn wrote that after Hearn became Griffiths's manager, "In the first year, Hearn tripled Griffiths's income and halved his work."[62] He quotes Griffiths: "I just found it difficult to accept that there was a better player than me in the world", but "I wasn't even getting at Steve Davis, because other players were beating me first."[63] Everton wrote about Griffiths's change of technique, "While he acquired an encyclopaedic technical knowledge in the process and maintained an admirable consistency, he could never quite recapture the flair and inspiration that had brought him the world title."[47] As winner of the World Championship, UK Championship and Masters during his career, Griffiths achieved the snooker Triple Crown.[64][65]
Later career, retirement and death
Griffiths resigned as the WPBSA director of coaching in 1998, describing the association as "a hopeless set-up with no one giving the staff any direction at all."[66] He coached a number of top players, including Mark Allen, Ali Carter, Ding Junhui, Marco Fu, Barry Hawkins, Stephen Hendry, Stephen Maguire, Joe Perry and Mark Williams.[67][68] Griffiths said about his coaching that "it used to be a lot of technical stuff years ago – probably 90% on the technical side. Now it's the other way about, perhaps 80–20% on the mental side."[68] He was the director of coaching at the South West Snooker Academy,[69] and a snooker commentator for the BBC.[18]
Griffiths received an OBE appointment in 2007 for his "services to snooker".[70] He launched "SQ", a handicapping system for snooker, in 2021.[71] His son, Wayne Griffiths, is head snooker coach at the Hong Kong Sports Institute and has coached three-time women's world champion Ng On-yee.[71] During his career, Griffiths won over a million pounds in prize money.[72]
In 2024, his family announced that he had dementia.[73] He died in his hometown of Llanelli, on 1 December 2024, at the age of 77.[74][75]
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