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James Wattana

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Sport country
  
Name
  
James Wattana

Highest break
  
147 (x3)


Career winnings
  
£1,690,278

Highest ranking
  
3

James Wattana prosnookerblogcomwpcontentuploads200905watt

Born
  
January 17, 1970 (age 54) Bangkok, Thailand (
1970-01-17
)

Nickname
  
Thai-PhoonThai TornadoTong Sit Choi (in Thailand)

Current ranking
  
114 (as of 1 December 2015)

Professional
  
1989–2008, 2009–2014

1992 british open final jimmy white vs james wattana


James Wattana (Thai: เจมส์ วัฒนา; born January 17, 1970, as วัฒนา ภู่โอบอ้อม Wattana Pu-Ob-Orm, then renamed รัชพล ภู่โอบอ้อม Ratchapol Pu-Ob-Orm in 2003) is a Thai former professional snooker player who now competes with an invitational tour card.

Contents

James Wattana James Wattana Pro Snooker Blog

A professional between 1989 and 2008 and again from 2009 to 2014, Wattana reached his highest ranking position - 3rd - for the 1994/1995 season. He has won three ranking tournaments - the 1992 Strachan Challenge and the Thailand Open in 1994 and 1995 - and has finished as the runner-up in a further five. He twice reached the semi-finals of the World Snooker Championship, in 1993 and 1997. His defeat in the semi-finals of the World Championships in 1993 to Jimmy White, the eventual tournament runner up, came on only his second appearance at the final televised stages in the Crucible Theatre. His first being in the previous year where he only managed the second round in which he was defeated by the eventual tournament winner, Stephen Hendry.

James Wattana FileJames Wattana at Snooker German Masters DerHexer 20130130

James wattana vs john parrott quarter final 1994 uk championships


Career

James Wattana James Wattana World Snooker

Wattana won his first major tournament, the Camus Thailand Masters, in 1986, aged only 16. He turned professional in 1989, after winning the 1988 World Amateur Championship. He won £6,000 first prize for winning the 1989 Kent Challenge in Hong Kong. His career peaked in the mid-1990s, when he twice won the Thailand Open and rose to number three in the world rankings. Prior to Wattana becoming a professional, snooker had been dominated by British (and to a lesser extent Irish, Canadian and Australian) players.

James Wattana snookerorg James Wattana

He was the eighth professional player to earn more than £1 million in prize money, and with three maximums he is one of only seven players to have scored more than two maximum breaks in competition. He scored his first one in 1991 at the World Masters and the second at the 1992 British Open, which was then, at six minutes and nine seconds, the fastest ever made.

James Wattana UK2013 05 Ding Junghui VS James Wattana Highlights YouTube

Wattana's success caught the imagination of the Thai public, and he became the most admired sportsman in his home country. He helped raise the profile of the game in the Far East, and has been followed into the game by many players from Thailand, Hong Kong, and China, the most successful ones being Marco Fu and Ding Junhui. He is a Commander Third Class of the Most Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand, only the second sportsman to receive the country's most prestigious civilian honour.

He reached the semi-finals of the World Snooker Championship in 1993 and 1997, in the latter losing narrowly to Stephen Hendry. After a strong 2004/2005 season he returned to the top 32 of the world rankings, despite being the first player since 1992 to lose a World Championship match 10–0. He did this in the final qualifying round against Allister Carter. By 2007 his continued poor form meant that he dropped off the main tour in 2008. He continued to play, however, and in 2008 he entered the World Amateur Championships in Wels, Austria where he lost to eventual champion Thepchaiya Un-Nooh in last 16. He won the 2009 Asian Championships in Tangshan, China after beating Mei Xiwen 7–3 in the final.

His position on the current provisional rankings received a huge boost with a run to the venue stage of the China Open thanks to four straight qualifying victories.

The 2011/12 season proved to be relatively good, managing to qualify in 2 of the 8 ranking events, the Shanghai Masters losing to Ronnie O'Sullivan 1–5 and the German Masters, beating Stephen Hendry 5–1 in the qualifiers, but then losing to Graeme Dott in the first round. At the end of the season he finished ranked 63, just inside the top 64.

In 2014, he lost his place on the professional snooker circuit, as he finished outside the top 64 on the official world rankings list at the end of the 2013/2014 season. However, he was one of three players awarded an invitational tour card for the next season - alongside Hendry and Steve Davis - and has since competed fairly regularly in tournaments as an amateur. In 2015, he lost in the first round of the qualifiers for the World Championship 3-10 to Jimmy White. In 2016, he lost in the first round of the qualifiers for the World Championship 6-10 to Peter Ebdon.

Non-ranking finals: 13 (7 titles, 6 runner-ups)

References

James Wattana Wikipedia


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