stop bickering. let’s just enjoy the snooker. and once in a while - read a book. don’t tell me there are no books about snooker, because I know better.
Michael McMullan is ON BOARD! 🎙️
Commentary is available in the UK and Europe for 53 days of qualifying this season! 👌
Sign up to WST Play now to access from June 10th!
Ronnie got relegated to the loser‘s round at the Huacai by Siming Chen but is still potting decent stuff at the moment. available in Europe without VPN via https://t.co/M1f7OXdDiE
the regular outcome, proven again this year, is that 75% of „new“ tour card winners had one before. is that unfair? no. Boring? Maybe.
Take Umut Dikme for example. played well all year, almost qualified for the world’s, falls just short again in Q-school, maybe never to be seen again. A little sad. New faces are good for the game. If they drop off after two years, they had their chance, but this way it’s more luck than anything else…
🇹🇭 THAI THROWBACK!
One from the archive as we celebrate four players who competed at the 2019 World Cup of Women's Snooker who are now all ranked within the world's top 11 players seven years later 👏
▪ Baipat Siripaporn (11) - 2023 World Champion 🏆
▪ Mink Nutcharut (3) - 2022 World Champion 🏆
▪ Jel Narucha Phoemphul (5) - 2025/26 World Under-21 No.1⃣ ranked
▪ Mind Panchaya Channoi (7) - 2026 World Champion 🏆
Jel and Mind were just 13 and 11 years old respectively as they each made their Tour debuts at the event! 🤯
#WomensSnooker
@esel_freund thank you for doing that. people take for granted that all data simply appears out of thin air. I can’t even imagine how many hours of unpaid labor goes into that site.
@fouldsy147 booked Mattioli standard checkout time? probably not. but, while this would up the probability of the better player coming through, fewer of the „new talent“ would ever get a chance to get on tour at all. I like diversity, and this format provides some.
ONYEE NG TO RETURN TO WORLD NUMBER 1⃣
Hong Kong China's @Onyee159 🇭🇰 will return to the summit of the World Women's Snooker Tour rankings for the first time in over seven years following her run to the semi-finals of this year's World Championship in China.
The three-time world champion claims top spot for the first time since April 2019 following two successful seasons which have seen her win four world ranking crowns and reach a further four finals during the current counting period.
The 35-year-old has enjoyed a strong start to 2026, having lifted titles at the Belgian Open and British Open tournaments, as well as having reached the final of the WSF Women's Championship.
She continues an impressive run of consistency which has seen reach her reach the semi-final stages or better at 20 of her last 22 tournaments contested on the WWS Tour since May 2023.
#WomensSnooker
@MrEsnukero Got my copy for the library yesterday. beautiful hardcover edition. 😍
taking it on a prolonged weekend trip tomorrow. can’t wait to have a look on the inside. 👍