Everything about Ray Reardon totally explained
Ray Reardon, MBE (
8 October 1932) is a retired
Welsh snooker player. He dominated the sport in the
1970s, winning six
World Championships in that decade. A genial figure, his dark
widow's peak and sharp-toothed grin nonetheless earned him the nickname Dracula.
Early Life & Career
Born
8 October 1932, in the
coal mining community of
Tredegar in
Wales, Reardon left school and became a coal miner when he was just 14, like many of his generation and earlier. It is rumoured that he used to wear
gloves to protect his hands for snooker. Following an accident underground in which Reardon was actually buried for several hours, he quit mining and became a
police officer. He played snooker at an amateur level for many years including wining 5 Welsh Amateur titles and the 1964 English Amateur title, before finally turning professional in
1967.
His first appearance at the World Championship was in
1969, and he won his first title the
following year, beating John Pulman 39-34 at
London's
Victoria Hall. After winning the title, Reardon was in big demand for exhibitions and on the holiday camp circuit. Winning the first ever
Pot Black in 1969 made him instantly recognisable, and Reardon and
John Spencer were the first two men to capitalise on the snooker boom in the early 1970s.
Entertainer
Reardon also became popular because he added a touch of humour and entertainment to his game. A deadly long potter and tactician in his prime, he played seventeen World Championship matches without defeat and won the title four years in succession. He won his second in
1973 in
Manchester when he beat Eddie Charlton 38-32, but the match of the championship was the semi-final between Reardon and Spencer, which Reardon won 23-22.
He beat the up-and-coming
Graham Miles the
following year, and in
1975, when it was held in
Melbourne,
Australia, he'd a tough quarter-final with Spencer which he won 19-17. He then beat
Alex Higgins 19-14 before meeting local hero
Eddie Charlton in the final. Reardon initially trailed by 23 frames to 29, putting Charlton two frames away from the title, but Reardon then won seven consecutive frames to lead 30-29. Charlton took the sixtieth frame to tie the match but Reardon took the vital sixty-first and won his fourth title.
Reardon won his fifth the
next year in Manchester, beating Alex Higgins 27-16. Earlier that year, he'd won the
Benson and Hedges Masters in London, his second snooker title after the World Championship. His unbeaten run at the World Championship ended at the first Crucible championship in
1977, when he lost to John Spencer in the quarter-finals 6-13, his first defeat since
Rex Williams in
1972.
He regained the title in
1978 winning it for the sixth time by beating
Perrie Mans 25-18. Reardon remains the oldest winner of the World Championship at the age of 45 years and 6 months. He then regained his Pot Black title in
1979.
Six World Titles
After his sixth world title he didn't win another, but he remained one of the world's very best players for some years. He was beaten by
Dennis Taylor in the 1979 quarter-final, and by
David Taylor at the same stage in 1980. He went a step further in 1981, being surprisingly beaten by countryman
Doug Mountjoy in the semi-finals.
It was the rise of Steve Davis in 1980-81 that saw Reardon and his generation lose their grip on the sport as it became "a young man's game", having previoiusly been dominated by players in their 30s and 40s.
However, despite Davis' total domination over an 18 month period between late 1980 and the Spring of 1982, Reardon remained a major force in the game. At 49, he reached the World final in
1982, losing to Alex Higgins 15-18.
In 1983, Reardon's career went through an
Indian summer. He reached the final of the
Benson & Hedges Masters, losing 7-9 to
Cliff Thorburn, and went on to win several tournaments including the
Yamaha Organs International Masters, where he beat
Jimmy White 9-6 in the final. This led him to be fancied in some quarters for that year's World Championship, but he was beaten 12-13 in a high-quality second round match by
Tony Knowles.
After 1983, he never again looked likely to triumph in major championships although he reached the semi-finals of the World Championships once more, in 1985 (losing 5-16 to Davis). He last played at the Crucible in
1987, losing to Steve Davis again in the second round.
World Number One
When the
world rankings were introduced in
1976, Reardon was the first number one, retaining that position until 1980/81. His win in the
1982 Professional Players Tournament at the age of 50 led to him recapturing the world number one position in the first set of rankings to be calculated on tournaments other than the World Championship. Apart from Reardon, only
Mark Williams,
Ronnie O'Sullivan,
Stephen Hendry and
John Higgins have ever recaptured the number one ranking.
Reardon remains the oldest player ever to win a ranking tournament. He has also won the
State Express World Team Classic for
Wales during the first two years of the tournament in
1979 and
1980 with Mountjoy and
Terry Griffiths. He also won the
Welsh Professional Championship in
1981 and
1983. His last final was the
1985 World Doubles when he partnered Tony Jones and lost to
Steve Davis and
Tony Meo 5-12. He was awarded the MBE in the same year.
Reardon began to struggle in 1982 when his father died. He also developed poor sight and started wearing '
Dennis Taylor-style glasses' later on in his career. He went out of the top 16 in 1987 but surprisingly whitewashed Steve Davis 5-0 in the 1988 British Open. He retired in
1992, but maintains an active interest in the game. He has recently been advising
Ronnie O'Sullivan.
Tournament wins
Ranking wins
Other wins
World Championship - 1970, 1973 (world rankings didn't begin until 1974)
Benson & Hedges Masters - 1976
Pot Black - 1969, 1979
World Cup - 1979, 1980 (with Wales team)
Yamaha International Masters - 1983
Welsh Professional Championship - 1981, 1983Further Information
Get more info on 'Ray Reardon'.
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