| Player Profile |
Gary Wilkinson |

| Born: |
7 April 1966. Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, England |
| Professional Career: |
1987 - 2008 |
| Highest Break: |
139 (1991 British Open) |
| Career Century Breaks |
65 |
| Highest Ranking |
5th (1991/2) |
Gary
Wilkinson joined the professional ranks for the start of the 1987/88 season
having finished at the top of the amateur rankings for qualifying events. He did not qualify for the world amateur
championship as he only got to the northern final of the English event in 1986
but he did represent England
in the Home International matches.
As a
professional he got off to a good start and reached the last 16 of only his
second event, the 1987 Grand Prix and reached the same stage of the British
Open later in the season. In both events Silvino Francisco, the world number
ten was Gary’s
victim at the last 32 stage. Although he failed to qualify for the Crucible, he
ended that debut season with a ranking of 45. The following season, although he
did not gain a last 16 place in any tournament, he made the last 32 on four
occasions including the world championship moving him up to 38th. He
reached the semi-final of the non-ranking English Professional championship as
well.
Things
really started to happen in 1989/90. He reached the semi-finals of both the
opening ranking events, the Hong Kong and Asian Opens and also the UK
championship where he whitewashed Jimmy White 9-0 in the quarters before losing
to Steve Davis. These performances helped put his ranking up to 20th
and he was poised to move even higher. A semi-final in the next season’s Dubai
Classic was followed by a Mercantile Credit quarter-final and he then reached
his first ranking final, the 1991 British Open, where he lost to Stephen Hendry
only in the deciding nineteenth frame. In the interim he had made it to the
quarter-finals of the World Matchplay, an invitation event. He rounded off that
season with a quarter-final at Sheffield
losing 13-3 to Jimmy White but astonishingly he was up to number five when the
new rankings were published.
1991/92
was not so successful as regards to ranking events, his best effort being a
quarter-final in the Welsh Open but in other events he faired better. He
reached the semi-finals of two World Series events, the Scottish Masters and
Indian Challenge as well as the Pontins Professional and reached the last eight
of the Thai Masters but the undoubted highlight of the season and possibly his
whole career came in the World Matchplay. Victories over John Parrott, Jimmy
White and, in the final, Steve Davis gave him his first major title – and £70,000!
What
everyone assumed was going to be a very successful career seemed then to go
into reverse despite joining Ian Doyle’s Cuemasters stable. In 1992/3 he only reached the last 16 in only
four of the nine ranking events although he was runner up in the Scottish
Masters but after just two seasons in the elite he was out of the top 16 and to
date he has not made it back. In the next few seasons there were the odd
quarter-final appearances, most notably in the 1995 world championship but he
has never looked like getting to another major final.
He
has also suffered some fitness problems and after seven seasons in the bottom
half of the top 32 he finally dropped out of that group at the end of the
1999/2000 season and although some encouraging signs have been seen, that slide
continued over the next two seasons, dropping him down to 46th. He managed to stop that slide the following
season, helped by qualifying for the Crucible for the first time for three
years, and moved up a couple of spots but he only won three matches in 2003/04
falling to his lowest ever ranking of 56th. Only one match win in
2004/5 meant that he would lose his place on the tour for the next campaign but
after a couple of other players pulled out he was given a wild card for 2005/6.
However he could not do enough to take advantage and at the end of that season
he finally did lose his place. He continued for the next couple of years to try
to qualify for the tour again but without success.
Gary
has not played competitively since 2008 and he looks like going down as another
of those players who have failed, for one reason or another, to live up to
early potential even though he collected over £880,000 in prize money and made
65 centuries.
Career Highlights
| World Professional Snooker Championship quarter finals |
1991, 1995 |
| World Matchplay champion |
1991 |
| British Open runner up |
1991 |
| Scottish Masters runner up |
1992 |
| UK Champioship semi finalist |
1989 |
| Asian Open semi finalist |
1989 |
| Hong Kong Open semi finalist |
1989 |
| Dubai Classic semi finalist |
1990 |
| WPBSA Non-Ranking Event winner |
1988 |
© Chris Turner 2009
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