| Biography: |
A ready wit has helped John Parrott, one of the most
successful players of the past twenty years, to become a
leading personality both on and off the table. John has won
every major prize in Snooker apart from the big invitation
events such as the Masters.
As a 12 year-old, John was an excellent bowls player but one
wet day, his father took him into a snooker hall and the game
took over from then on. He made a 129 break at 16 and in 1981
won the Pontins Junior championship having lost in the
national under-16 final the year before. In 1982 he was runner
up in the national uner-19 event, losing to Neal Foulds in the
final but went on to win the Pontins Open Championship and
Junior Pot Black. After he took that latter title again in
1983 he turned professional having reached the final of the
English Amateur championship in the meantime.
John made a dream start to his pro career reaching the
semi-final of the Lada Classic and the last 16 of the World
Championship. He beat some of the game's top players and
finished the season 20th in the rankings, already being spoken
of as a future world champion. In his second season he reached
the World quarter-finals and followed that with more
quarter-finals and a UK semi-final in 1986. This combined with
consistently reaching the last 16 at the Crucible, something
which he achieved every year until 1996, saw him enter the top
16 for the 1987/88 season and he has remained there ever
since.
That next season he reached his first ranking final losing out
to Steve Davis 13-11 in the Mercantile Credit Classic. He also
made it to two other ranking semi-finals and won the Pontins
Professional Championship and was up to seventh in the
rankings. 1988/89 proved to be his best season to date
especially the second half. In January he reached the final of
the B&H Masters at Wembley, losing to Stephen Hendry, and this
was followed immediately by beating Terry Griffiths 9-8 to
take his first ranking title, the European Open. He followed
this with a semi-final in the British Open and then went on to
reach the World final at Sheffield. There he put in a
disappointing performance going down 18-3 to Steve Davis. The
heaviest defeat anyone has suffered in a Crucible final.
Despite that defeat he was now the world number two and he
retained his European Open title the next season with
semi-finals in Dubai and at the Crucible. 1990/91 was another
consistent season including a UK semi-final and he arrived at
Sheffield for the Embassy fresh from achieving runner-up slot
in the Irish Masters. He was better prepared than he had been
two years earlier and after beating Steve Davis in the semis
he comfortably beat the crowd's favourite, Jimmy White, 18-11
to become World Champion as had been predicted many years
before.
His first season as world champion could not have started
better. He won the opening ranking event, The Dubai Classic
and shortly afterwards, the UK Championship as well. He failed
to successfully defend his world title but the next season he
again won in Dubai but just failed to retain the UK title as
well, losing in the final to Jimmy White. The 1994 Sky Sports
International, 1995 Thailand Classic and 1996 European Open
brought the number of his ranking titles to nine. The European
Open has proved particularly rewarding for him as he has won
it three times and been runner up twice (three times including
one German Open). He also picked up the 1994 invitation event,
the Malta Grand Prix and the 1998 German Masters but has not
added to his ranking title in recent years.
Despite not winning any more ranking events, he has proved a
consistent performer and has reached several ranking finals in
recent years. John has been in the top ten of the rankings for
the past 13 seasons, eleven of those in the top six.
He has won not far short of three million pounds in prize
money and remains one of the most popular players around if
now one of the most senior. Only Hendry and Davis can better
his Crucible record of eight quarter-finals, one semi, one
runner-up and one victory.
He is a lifelong Everton fan and a keen follower of horse
racing. Nowadays he combines his snooker career with a highly
successful television one. As one of the team captains in A
Question of Sport, he has brought a new dimension to that
programme and is in regular demand for his comments on TV
snooker broadcasts. All this off the table activity may have
finally affected his game as his form has slumped of late.
The 2000/01 season was possibly John's worst ever. He lost his
opening match in all but three ranking events with the only
bright spot being a semi-final in the Thailand Masters. He
dropped out of the top 16 after a run of 14 seasons, falling
to number 22. During the following season, although he got
past his first match in all but two events, he still could not
get beyond the last 32 and managed to climb back to 18th. He
did perform better than some of his close rivals and his 'one
season' points total means he will start the next season with
a reasonable chance of getting his top-16 place back but he
will need all his skill and dedication to get back among the
very top players.
Whatever his future on the table, his bright personality has
ensured him another career on television whenever he finally
decides to put away his cue. His prize money total of just
under £3 million puts him sixth on the list of all-time
earners.
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Achievements:
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Career Highlights:
World Professional Snooker champion 1991
World Professional championship runner-up 1989
UK Championship winner 1991
European Open champion 1989, 1990, 1996
Dubai Classic champion 1991, 1992
Sky Sports International champion 1994
Thailand Classic champion 1995
Malta Grand Prix champion 1994
Norwich Union European Grand Prix champion 1990
Humo Masters champion 1990
German Masters champion 1998
Pontins Professional champion 1988
Pontins Open champion 1982
Benson & Hedges Masters runner-up 1989, 1990
Irish Masters runner-up 1991
World Matchplay Championship runner-up 1988, 1989
Junior Pot Black champion 1982, 1983 |