| Player Profile |
Alex Higgins |

| Born: |
18 March 1949. Belfast, Northern Ireland |
| Died: |
24 July 2010 |
| Turned Professional: |
1971 |
| Highest Break: |
142 (1985 British Open) |
| Career Centuries |
46 |
| Highest Ranking |
2nd (1976/77and 1982/83 |
Alex Higgins, who hit the snooker world like the hurricane
which became his nickname, was to become the biggest box-office draw the game
had ever known. Completely unorthodox, always controversial he was never out of
the news, on or off the table. No one had seen anyone like him when he played
in the 1972 world championship. He would virtually throw his whole body at the
cue ball but could pull off the most amazing shots anyone had seen at that time
and people flocked to see him in their thousands whenever he played. Even Jimmy
White probably never had quite the drawing power of Alex at his peak.
Born in Belfast, Alex started
playing snooker at the age of eleven at a local club, The Jampot, but at 14 and
only seven and a half stones, he left for England and a career as a jockey.
However he put on a lot of weight and was released from his apprenticeship
without ever having ridden in public. He returned to Belfast and the Jampot and by 1965, age 16 he
had compiled his first maximum. In 1968 he won both the All-Ireland and Northern Ireland
amateur championships. He wanted to make some real money out of the game and
moved to Manchester
in 1971 and turned professional.
He entered the 1972 world championships and set the snooker
world alight by beating John Spencer 37-32 to become champion at his first
attempt. He was just what the game needed. The people loved him and the
sponsors rushed to put more money into the game. He only managed to reach the
semi-finals the following year and the quarters in 1974. Another semi-final in
1975 was followed by reaching the 1976 final where he lost to Ray Reardon. The
following two years saw him go out in the first round but in 1979 he only lost
his quarter-final in the deciding frame to the eventual champion, Terry
Griffiths, and the next year he made it to his third final, a narrow 16-18
defeat by Cliff Thorburn. An early exit in 1981 was followed by unforgettable
scenes in 1982 as he beat Ray Reardon to become champion again. This was after
a wonderful semi-final encounter with Jimmy White, arguably the best match ever
seen at the Crucible.
In the meantime Alex had reached four successive Benson
& Hedges Masters finals from 1978 to 1981, winning the first and last of
them as well as the 1980 British Gold Cup, 1979 and 1980 Tolly Cobbold Classic
and three Irish Professional titles. He added a fourth in 1983 and ended that
year with a dramatic win in the Coral UK Championship. He was 0-7 down to Steve
Davis but won the match 16-15.
He had a drinking problem and was consistently in trouble
with the authorities receiving numerous bans and he was finding it harder to
compete on the table. He was, however, a member of Ireland’s winning World Cup team
for three consecutive years, 1985-87 and in 1989 won the Irish Masters as well
as a fifth Irish Professional title.
Further lengthy bans caused him to slip down the rankings
and he now had to play through several qualifying rounds to reach the money
earning stages of the big tournaments. This he consistently failed to do and to
add to his problems, he developed cancer. He seems to have kept the cancer at bay and he was entered for the World
Championship qualifiers in 2003 but did not actually play although he did play
in another event, the unofficial Irish Open Championship where he was beaten
5-1 by 16 year-old Darren Dornan.
The
official Irish Professional Championship returned to the
calendar in 2005 and even though he was now 56, he took part but lost
in the
first round. He continued to play in exhibitions with the likes of
Jimmy White when his health permitted but he looked increasingly frail
and the end fially came when he died at the home where he lived on 24
July 2010. He was 61.
No one can doubt that he was the bad boy of
snooker for most of his career and brought most of his problems on himself
but equally it can be said that, without him, the big snooker revival of the
seventies would never have happened.
In 2011 Alex was one of the intial eight inductees into the Snooker Hall of Fame.
Career Highlights
| World Professional Snooker Champion |
1972, 1982, |
| World Professional Snooker Championship Runner up |
1976, 1980. |
| UK Championship winner |
1983 |
| Benson & Hedges Masters champion |
1978, 1981 |
| Benson & Hedges Irish Masters champion |
1989 |
| British Gold Cup champion |
1980 |
| Tolly Cobbold Classic champion |
1979, 80 |
| Irish Professional champion |
1972, 1978(twice), 1979, 1983, 1989 |
| Men Of The Midlands champion |
1972, 1973 |
| World Doubles champion |
1984 (with Jimmy White) |
| World Cup winner |
1985, 1986, 1987 (All Ireland team) |
| Canadian Open champion |
1975, 1977 |
| Pontins Spring Open champion |
1977 |
| Watney Open champion |
1975 |
| Northern Ireland Amateur champion |
1968 |
| All-Ireland Amateur champion |
1968 |
© Chris Turner 2009
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