| Player Profile |
Neal Foulds |

| Born: |
13 July 1963. Perival, Middlesex, England |
| Professional Career: |
1983 - 2003 |
| Highest Break: |
142 (1992 Matchroom League) |
| Career Centuries |
76 |
| Highest Ranking |
3rd (1987/8; 1988/9) |
When
Neal Foulds arrived on the professional scene he was tipped by many as the man
to succeed Steve Davis as World Champion and indeed his progress in his first
four seasons, rising to third in the rankings, justified this optimism taking
him to the very pinnacle of the game..
Son of former professional Geoff Foulds, Neal started playing at age 11 and
when he swapped his spectacles for contact lenses the improvement was
immediate. By the early 1980s he was one of the best young players in the London area and appeared
in Junior Pot Black in 1981. He beat John Parrott to win the National Under-19
title in 1982 and, after representing his country, applied for professional
status in 1983 which was granted.
His first season did not start spectacularly but he won two qualifying rounds
of the UK Championship to reach the first round proper. He rounded off the
season by qualifying to play at the Crucible, and on his debut beat Alex
Higgins 10-9. Doug Mountjoy beat him in the next round, but people were
beginning to sit up and take notice. Neal finished his debut season ranked 30th.
That performance at Sheffield gave him
confidence and he started the next season by reaching the semi-final of the
Grand Prix, losing out to eventual winner, Dennis Taylor.
1985/86 saw him reach another ranking semi-final, this time in the Goya Matchroom
Trophy as well as the quarter-final of the Mercantile Credit Classic. He was
also runner-up to Tony Meo in the English Professional Championship having
beaten his Dad in an earlier round.
He
was now in the top 16 and he began the next season as one of the players to
beat. Barry Hearn had signed him to his Matchroom stable and he did not have to
wait long for his first title. It came in the first event, the BCE
International where he beat Cliff Thorburn 12-9 in the final.
The
next event was the Grand Prix and he reached the semi-final following this with
runner-up spot in the UK.
He missed out in the Mercantile but made it to his third final of the season in
the British Open where Jimmy White beat him and crowned a fantastic season with
a semi-final at the Crucible. Just to put the icing on the cake, he won the
Pontins Professional tile as well. Only Steve Davis in regaining his world
title had a better season and Neal was number three in the rankings.
In ranking events a quarter final at the Crucible was the only time he got
beyond the last 16 but he was runner-up in both the Irish Masters and the
English Professional.
1989/90
was a productive season, as he reached three quarter-finals and regained his
top 16 position. He followed this with an even better year in 1990/91, when he
got to the Mercantile Credit Classic semi-final as well as three other
quarters. A second Pontins Professional title was added as well and he was up
to number six again.
In
1992/93 he won the Scottish Masters and reached the quarter finals of the world
championship and Grand Prix but although he reached the International Open
quarter final in 1993/4 he lost his place in the top sixteen at the end of that
campaign. He still managed one further quarter final, in the 1998 British Open
but match wins were becoming harder to find and he sipped down the rankings
finally dropping off the tour at the end of the 2002/3 season.
Foulds
is one of that special group of players who have earned over £1million in prize
money.
He
has recently taken up commentating and is proving to be a hit with television
viewers. Other off table activities include voice commentaries for Ladbroke's
in their betting shops.
Career Highlights
| World Professional Snooker Championship semi finals |
1987 |
| International Open champion |
1986 |
| Scottish Masters champion |
1992 |
| Dubai Dury Free Masters champion |
1988 |
| UK Championship runner up |
1986 |
| Benson & Hedges Mastersrunner up |
1987 |
| British Open runner Up |
1987 |
| World Cup winner |
1988 (England Team) |
| Pontins Professional champion |
1987, 1991 |
| Pontins Spring Open champion |
1984 |
| Matchroom League runner up |
1987 |
| English Professional Championship runner-up |
1986, 1988 |
| English Under-19 champion |
1982 |
© Chris Turner 2009
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