THERE’S BEEN a fair bit of activity since the World Championship but television gave snooker the blood in its veins and so the first televised event of the season will mark the start of the new campaign for most.
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Snooker
THERE’S BEEN a fair bit of activity since the World Championship but television gave snooker the blood in its veins and so the first televised event of the season will mark the start of the new campaign for most.
Read MoreDING JUNHUI, who failed to qualify for this week’s Wuxi Classic, beat Michael Holt 4-2 to win the first Asian Tour event of the season, the Yixing Open, today.
Read MoreNEAL Foulds was the junior partner in the last ‘father-and-son’ duo to feature on the professional snooker tour before this season, when Peter and Oliver Lines will give it a go.
Foulds, now 50, went on to eclipse Geoff’s feats on the table, becoming a ranking-event winner by lifting the International Open trophy, and claiming other success by winning the Scottish Masters, Dubai Masters and Pot Black.
Now a highly-respected commentator with the BBC, ITV, Eurosport and Sky had some interesting observations about the experience overall, and pros and cons of going to work on the baize with your dad in tow.
Former world No3 Foulds said: “I found playing on adjacent tables as you sometimes did very tricky, it was hard to concentrate. Because we were both so interested in how the other was getting on playing on adjacent tables was not easy.
“I remember at the UK Championships at the Guildhall in Preston my dad had qualified – and he didn’t always - and was playing Steve Davis on the next table.
“I was playing David Taylor, who was a good player and I was just a rookie. And I kept wanting to watch my dad, as I always had – but I had a match on myself!
“The two matches we did play against each other were horrible experiences, really tough, and I don’t envy Peter and Oliver if that happens. I was competitive and always wanted to win, but I had never wanted my dad to miss a ball in my life.
“And here I was hoping he would miss so I could get to the table. It was very tough.
“We played in the International in Stoke, at Trentham Gardens, and I won 5-0. It wasn’t that he didn’t try, he just couldn’t play against me and I wasn’t much better but held it together.
“Then in the English professional championship it was slightly more relaxed and I won 9-4, my mum came to that one and she wasn’t a good watcher.
“The one thing you have that is unique is that you have someone who is 100 per cent behind you, as you would expect anyone’s dad to be – AND they know snooker.
“So they won’t say the wrong things as some dads might, they’ll hopefully say the right things that you need to hear as a rookie professional.
“I always supported my dad, and went to watch him play in his big matches, so I had a decent idea of how good you had to be.
“And I was rubbing shoulders with people like John Virgo, Dennis Taylor and Willie Thorne from a young age, and it helps having come from that environment, the whole thing is less intimidating.”
PETER Lines hopes he has prepared son Oliver for his rookie year on tour, and insists Ronnie O'Sullivan is the best example of how to practice for a young pro.
Read MoreOLIVER Lines jets off to China this week where in his rookie professional year on the tour he will stand proudly alongside father Peter.
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Read MoreWORLD SNOOKER has indicated that Ali Carter’s world ranking position will be frozen while he receives treatment for lung cancer.
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Read MoreIt is five weeks since Mark Selby won the World Championship and now Q School and the early season qualifiers are out of the way the time is fast approaching for the return of TV snooker.
Read MorePETER Ebdon clinched his place at the Australian Open on Tuesday night – but another former world champion Ken Doherty missed out on a chance to see the in-laws.
Read MoreJACK Lisowski continued a fine start to the season by booking his place at the Australian Goldfields Open with a 5-2 victory over Dave Gilbert at the Capital Venue in Gloucester.
Read MoreRONNIE O’Sullivan has revealed he is taking what amounts to another six-month tour sabbatical – and starting his season in earnest in November.
Read MoreDING JUNHUI is the biggest casualty of the Wuxi Classic qualifiers so far, suffering a shock 5-0 defeat to an amateur, Oliver Brown, in Gloucester on Sunday night.
Read MoreALI CARTER has been diagnosed with a form of lung cancer and has withdrawn from the Wuxi Classic qualifiers in Gloucester.
Read MoreIT’S BACK to work for snooker’s great and good as the Wuxi Classic qualifiers get underway at the Capital Venue in Gloucester on Saturday.
Read MoreDING JUNHUI has been fined £5,000 after failing to attend World Snooker’s annual awards dinner.
Read MoreTHE FOUR qualifiers from the second Q School event, which ended on Wednesday, are all former members of the professional circuit.
Read MoreNEIL ROBERTSON has described the new prize money ranking list, coming into force for the new season, as “a terrible system.”
Read MoreMARK Williams has pulled together a celebrity XI including several snooker players to take part in a charity football match in his home village of Cwm in Wales on Saturday afternoon.
Read MoreTHE CLOSING date for the annual Pink Ribbon pro-am at the Capital Venue South West Snooker Academy in Gloucester has been extended to May 22.
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