| Player Profile |
Dennis Taylor |

| Born: |
14 January 1949. Coalisland, Co. Tyrone, Northern Ireland |
| Professional Career: |
1972 - 2000 |
| Highest Break: |
141 (1987 Matchroom Championship |
| Career Centuries |
63 |
| Highest Ranking |
2nd (1979/80) |
One of the most instantly recognised faces in the game, Dennis
Taylor is one of snooker’s real entertainers. Always ready with some joke or
other, even in the middle of a match, he is universally popular. He will for
ever be remembered for his epic world championship win against Steve Davis on
the final black with some 18 million people watching on television well after
midnight.
Dennis was born in Coalisland, Co. Tyrone in Northern Ireland
and started playing snooker when he was nine and was the local senior champion
at 14. He moved to England
in 1966 and lived near Blackburn in Lancashire.
In 1968 he won the national under-19 billiards championship. He played in one
amateur international for England
before turning professional in November 1972. His first professional event was
the 1973 world championship when he lost in the first round 8-9 to Cliff
Thorburn. He failed to qualify in 1974 but the following year reached the
semi-finals where Eddie Charlton beat him 19-12. 1977 saw him in another
semi-final but in 1978 he went out in the first round of both the world and UK
championships. It was in 1979 that he made it to his first final, at the
Crucible, against Terry Griffiths, in the world championship. He lost 24-16.
His career continued in much the same vein for the next few
years: a few semi-finals, the odd final, but never actually winning anything.
In one of those finals, the 1981 Jameson International, he was embarrassed to
be whitewashed 9-0 by Steve Davis. Nevertheless he was becoming one of the most
consistent players on the circuit and was ranked at number two in 1979/80. In
1980 came some modest success when he successfully challenged Alex Higgins for
the Irish Professional title and successfully defended it the following year
before winning the first of the new knock-out style championships in 1982. He went
to win that title three more times in 1985, 86 and 87. Still a major victory
eluded him.
Success was to come in his 13th season as a professional,
1984/5 and strangely, it was the sudden death of his mother, which was to be
his inspiration. Because of this he pulled out of the first ranking event that
season, the Jameson International, after reaching the quarter-finals. Also he
had since the spring of 1983, been using those famous ‘upside down’ glasses,
which have since become his trademark. The next tournament was the Rothmans
Grand Prix at the Hexagon in Reading.
Dennis did not want to play but his family persuaded him. The whole nation
shared his tears of joy as he beat Cliff Thorburn for his first major
title. Still better was to come, of
course, and the season ended with that famous win over Steve Davis to make him
champion of the world.
Although he lost in the opening round at the
Crucible the following year, and did not win another ranking event, he did win
the Masters at Wembley in 1987 and the Canadian Masters twice. Even without
ranking victories, he managed to keep his place in the top 16 until the end of
the 1993/4 season, having been ever present in that elite group since rankings
were introduced in 1976. He was becoming more and more involved as a
commentator and early exits from most tournaments facilitated this. At the 1999
world championships he announced his retirement but in the event decided to
have just one more season. No success came his way and a year later he
definitely put away his cue with career prize money just short of £1½ million .
Career Highlights
| World Professional Snooker Champion |
1985 |
| World Professional Snooker Championship Runner up |
1979 |
| Benson & Hedges Masters champion |
1987 |
| Rothmans Grand Prix champion |
1984 |
| Irish Professional champion |
1980, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1987 |
| World Cup winner |
1985, 1986, 1987 (All-Ireland team) |
| Canadian Masters champion |
1985, 1987 |
| Kit-Kat Break for World Champions winner |
1985 |
| Forward Chemicals Tournament champion |
1979 |
| Thailand Masters champion |
1985 |
| Carlsberg/Carling Challenge champion |
1986, 1987 |
| Tokyo Masters champion |
1987 |
| Matchroom Professional champion |
1987 |
© Chris Turner 2009
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