Alex Higgins

Higgins turned professional in 1970 and won the World Snooker Championship in 1972, defeating John Spencer 3731 in the final to become the first qualifier to win the world title, a feat that only three other players—Terry Griffiths in 1979, Shaun Murphy in 2005 and Zhao Xintong in 2025—have achieved since. Aged 22, he was then the sport's youngest world champion, a record he held until 21-year-old Stephen Hendry won the title in 1990. He was world championship runner-up to Ray Reardon in 1976 and Cliff Thorburn in 1980. At the 1982 event, Higgins came from 1315 behind to defeat Jimmy White 1615 in the semi-finals, producing a 69 clearance in the penultimate that is regarded as one of the greatest s in the sport's history. He defeated Reardon 1815 in the final, winning his second world title ten years after his first. Images of a tearful Higgins holding his baby daughter after his 1982 victory are regarded as some of the most iconic in the history of British televised sport.
Higgins won Masters titles in 1978 and 1981 and won the UK Championship in 1983, where he recovered from 07 behind to defeat Steve Davis 1615 in the final. As of 2023, he was one of 11 players to have completed a career Triple Crown. He won the World Doubles Championship with White in 1984 and played with Dennis Taylor and Eugene Hughes on the all-Ireland team that won the World Cup three consecutive times from 1985 to 1987. He won his last professional title at the 1989 Irish Masters, defeating Hendry 98 in the final. He failed to qualify for the professional tour in 199798 and played his last professional match in August 1997.
Remembered for his turbulent lifestyle, Higgins was a heavy smoker, struggled with drinking and gambling, and admitted to using cocaine and marijuana. He had tempestuous relationships with women—both his marriages ended in divorce, and he had widely publicised altercations with other girlfriends, one of whom stabbed him three times during a domestic argument. Known as an unpredictable, difficult, and volatile character, he was often disciplined by the sport's governing body, most notably when he was fined £12,000 and banned for five tournaments in 1986 after head-butting an official, and banned again for the entire 199091 season after punching another official and threatening to have Taylor shot. Diagnosed with throat cancer in 1998, he died of multiple causes in his Belfast home on 24 July 2010, aged 61. Provided by Wikipedia
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