IBSF World Snooker Championship

Summary

The IBSF World Snooker Championship (also known as the World Amateur Snooker Championship) is the premier non-professional snooker tournament in the world. The event series is sanctioned by the International Billiards and Snooker Federation. A number of IBSF champions have gone on to successful careers in the professional ranks, notably Jimmy White (1980), James Wattana (1988), Ken Doherty (1989), Stuart Bingham (1996), Marco Fu (1997), Stephen Maguire (2000) and Mark Allen (2004). Both Doherty (in 1997) and Bingham (in 2015) have gone on to win the professional World Snooker Championship.

IBSF World Snooker Championship
StatusActive
GenreSports Event
Date(s)Midyear
FrequencyAnnual
Inaugurated1963 (M) / 2003 (W)
Most recent2023
Organised byIBSF

History edit

The IBSF World Snooker Championship tournament was first held in 1963. In the first two tournaments, the title was decided alone on group stages. From 1968 until now, the group stage was followed by a knock-out stage. The tournament has been held annually since 1984.[1]

However, 2005 IBSF World Snooker Championship was cancelled, due to an earthquake in Pakistan where the event was due to be held. Instead in February/March 2006, a new tournament with the name IBSF World Grand Prix was held in Prestatyn, Wales as the qualification for a place on 2006/2007 World Snooker Main Tour, although the winner wasn't called World Champion.[1]

In 2007 an all-Thailand final saw Atthasit Mahitthi defeat Passakorn Suwannawat 11–7. At the 2008 championship in Wels, Austria, Thepchaiya Un-Nooh of Thailand defeated Ireland's Colm Gilcreest 11–7. The 2009 event was held in Hyderabad, India, and won by Alfie Burden of England, 10–8 against Igor Figueiredo of Brazil. The 2010 event was held in Damascus, Syria, and won by Dechawat Poomjaeng of Thailand, defeating India's Pankaj Advani. The 2011 Championship was held from November 28 to December 3 in Bangalore, India. The final was won by 17-year-old Iranian Hossein Vafaei, defeating Lee Walker of Wales 10–9.[2] In 2014, fourteen-year-old Yan Bingtao beat Pakistan's Muhammad Sajjad 8–7 to become the youngest ever world champion in snooker.[3]

Results edit

Men edit

Source:[1][2][4][5]

# Year Venue Winner Runner-up Score Ref.
1 1963 Kolkata, India   Gary Owen   Frank Harris [n 1]
2 1966 Karachi, Pakistan   Gary Owen   John Spencer [n 1]
3 1968 Sydney, Australia   David Taylor   Max Williams 8–7
4 1970 Edinburgh, Scotland   Jonathan Barron   Sid Hood 11–7
5 1972 Cardiff, Wales   Ray Edmonds   Manuel Francisco 11–10
6 1974 Dublin, Ireland   Ray Edmonds   Geoff Thomas 11–9
7 1976 Johannesburg, South Africa   Doug Mountjoy   Paul Mifsud 11–1
8 1978 Rabat, Malta   Cliff Wilson   Joe Johnson 11–5
9 1980 Launceston, Australia   Jimmy White   Ron Atkins 11–2
10 1982 Calgary, Canada   Terry Parsons   Jim Bear 11–8
11 1984 Dublin, Ireland   Omprakesh Agrawal   Terry Parsons 11–7
12 1985 Blackpool, England   Paul Mifsud   Dilwyn John 11–6
13 1986 Invercargill, New Zealand   Paul Mifsud   Kerry Jones 11–9
14 1987 Bangalore, India   Darren Morgan   Joe Grech 11–4
15 1988 Sydney, Australia   James Wattana   Barry Pinches 11–8
16 1989 Singapore   Ken Doherty   Jon Birch 11–2
17 1990 Colombo, Sri Lanka   Stephen O'Connor   Steve Lemmens 11–8
18 1991 Bangkok, Thailand   Noppadon Noppachorn   Dominic Dale 11–8
19 1992 Malta   Neil Mosley   Leonardo Andam 11–2
20 1993 Karachi, Pakistan   Chuchart Triritanapradit   Praput Chaithanasakun 11–6
21 1994[6] Johannesburg, South Africa   Mohammed Yousuf   Johannes R. Johannesson 11–9
22 1995[7] Bristol, England   Sakchai Sim-Ngam   David Lilley 11–7
23 1996[8] New Plymouth, New Zealand   Stuart Bingham   Stan Gorski 11–5
24 1997 Bulawayo, Zimbabwe   Marco Fu   Stuart Bingham 11–10
25 1998[9] Guangzhou, China   Luke Simmonds   Ryan Day 11–10
26 1999 Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea   Ian Preece   David Lilley 11–8
27 2000[10] Changchun, China   Stephen Maguire   Luke Fisher 11–5
28 2002[11] Cairo, Egypt   Steve Mifsud   Tim English 11–6
29 2003[12] Jiangmen, China   Pankaj Advani   Saleh Mohammad 11–5
30 2004[13] Veldhoven, Netherlands   Mark Allen   Steve Mifsud 11–6
- 2006[14] Prestatyn, Wales   Michael White   Mark Boyle 11–5
31 2006[15] Amman, Jordan   Kurt Maflin   Daniel Ward 11–8
32 2007[16] Korat, Thailand   Atthasit Mahitthi   Passakorn Suwannawat 11–7
33 2008[17] Wels, Austria   Thepchaiya Un-Nooh   Colm Gilcreest 11–7
34 2009[18] Hyderabad, India   Alfie Burden   Igor Figueiredo 10–8
35 2010[19] Damascus, Syria   Dechawat Poomjaeng   Pankaj Advani 10–7
36 2011[20] Bangalore, India   Hossein Vafaei   Lee Walker 10–9
37 2012[21] Sofia, Bulgaria   Muhammad Asif   Gary Wilson 10–8
38 2013[22] Daugavpils, Latvia   Zhou Yuelong   Zhao Xintong 8–4
39 2014[23] Bangalore, India   Yan Bingtao   Muhammad Sajjad 8–7
40 2015[24] Hurghada, Egypt   Pankaj Advani   Zhao Xintong 8–6
41 2016[25] Doha, Qatar   Soheil Vahedi   Andrew Pagett 8–1
42 2017[26] Doha, Qatar   Pankaj Advani   Amir Sarkhosh 8–2
43 2018[27] Yangon, Myanmar   Chang Bingyu   He Guoqiang 8–3
44 2019[28] Antalya, Turkey   Muhammad Asif   Jefrey Roda 8–5
45 2021[29] Doha, Qatar   Ahsan Ramzan   Amir Sarkhosh 6–5
46 2022[30] Antalya, Turkey   Lim Kok Leong   Amir Sarkhosh 5–0
47 2023[31] Doha, Qatar   Ali Alobaidli   Cheung Ka Wai 6–1

Women edit

Source:[32]

# Year Venue Winner Runner-up Score Ref.
1 2003 Jiangmen, China   Kelly Fisher   Wendy Jans 5–2
2 2004 Veldhoven, Netherlands   Reanne Evans   Wendy Jans 5–1
3 2006 Amman, Jordan   Wendy Jans   Jaique Ip 5–0
4 2007 Korat, Thailand   Reanne Evans   Wendy Jans 5–0
5 2008 Wels, Austria   Reanne Evans   Wendy Jans 5–3
6 2009 Hyderabad, India   Ng On-yee   Kathy Parashis 5–1 [33]
7 2010 Damascus, Syria   Ng On-yee   Jaique Ip 5–0
8 2012 Sofia, Bulgaria   Wendy Jans   Ng On-yee 5–1
9 2013 Daugavpils, Latvia   Wendy Jans   Shi Chunxia 5–3
10 2014 Bangalore, India   Wendy Jans   Anastasia Nechaeva 5–2
11 2015 Hurghada, Egypt   Wendy Jans   Anastasia Nechaeva 5–1 [34]
12 2016 Doha, Qatar   Wendy Jans   Amee Kamani 5–0 [35]
13 2017 Doha, Qatar   Wendy Jans   Waratthanun Sukritthanes 5–2 [26]
14 2018 Yangon, Myanmar   Waratthanun Sukritthanes   Wendy Jans 5–2 [27]
15 2019 Antalya, Turkey   Ng On-yee   Nutcharut Wongharuthai 5–2 [28]
16 2021 Doha, Qatar   Wendy Jans   Nutcharut Wongharuthai 4–1 [36]
17 2022 Antalya, Turkey   Wendy Jans   Vidya Pillai 4–3 [30]
18 2023 Doha, Qatar   Bai Yulu   Ng On-yee 4–0 [37]

Medals edit

Men (1963-2023) edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  England (ENG)9111030
2  Wales (WAL)79521
3  Thailand (THA)72817
4  Pakistan (PAK)42511
5  India (IND)41813
6  China (CHN)33713
7  Iran (IRI)2327
8  Malta (MLT)22711
9  Ireland (IRL)2169
10  Australia (AUS)15410
11  Hong Kong (HKG)1124
12  Northern Ireland (NIR)1056
  Scotland (SCO)1056
14  Norway (NOR)1012
15  Malaysia (MAS)1001
  Qatar (QAT)1001
17  Philippines (PHI)0202
18  Belgium (BEL)0145
19  Canada (CAN)0134
  South Africa (RSA)0134
21  Brazil (BRA)0101
  Iceland (ISL)0101
23  Finland (FIN)0022
  Sri Lanka (SRI)0022
25  Austria (AUT)0011
  Bahrain (BHR)0011
  Cyprus (CYP)0011
  Germany (GER)0011
  United Arab Emirates (UAE)0011
Totals (29 entries)474794188

Women (2003-2023) edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Belgium (BEL)95115
2  England (ENG)4026
3  Hong Kong (HKG)34512
4  Thailand (THA)131014
5  China (CHN)1124
6  India (IND)021113
7  Russia (RUS)0213
8  Australia (AUS)0101
9  New Zealand (NZL)0022
10  Ireland (IRL)0011
  Scotland (SCO)0011
Totals (11 entries)18183672

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Title decided alone on group stage

References edit

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  2. ^ a b "Past Champions". IBSF.info. Reims: International Billiards and Snooker Federation. Archived from the original on 20 January 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2009.
  3. ^ Pathak, Vivek (29 November 2014). "Yan Bingtao becomes youngest ever World Champion". International Billiards and Snooker Federation. Archived from the original on 5 December 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  4. ^ "IBSF Roll of Honour". Global Snooker Centre. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  5. ^ "Tournament Results Archive". Archived from the original on 19 June 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
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