Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Ding Junhui
| Ding Junhui | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Personal Information | |
| Date of birth | April 1, 1987 |
| Nationality | Chinese |
| Career | |
| Professional | 2003 - present |
| 2004/5 World Ranking | 76 |
| Best World Ranking | 76 |
| World Championship Best | n/a |
| Highest Break | ? |
| Ranking Tournament Wins | |
| China Open | 2005 |
Ding Junhui (Chinese: 丁俊晖) (born April 1 1987) is a Chinese snooker player, born near Shanghai and now resident in England.
Junhui started playing snooker at the age of 9 when he joined his father and his friends while he was bored. He practices the game 8 hours every day and in 2003 he became the no. 1-ranked player in China.
Junhui shot to international prominence in 2002, when he won the Asian under-21 championship, the Asian Championship, and the IBSF World under-21 championship. He was unable to progress much in 2003 as both the Asian Championship and under-21 Championship had to be cancelled because of the SARS virus crisis, but he was a semi-finalist in the IBSF World under-21 championship and was awarded a Main Tour concession by the World Snooker Association which enabled him to turn professional in September 2003.
In February 2004 Junhui was awarded a wildcard entry to the Masters in London, where in the first round he defeated the world no. 16-ranked player, Joe Perry, before narrowly losing in the second round to Stephen Lee. His performance favourably impressed many commentators who have rated him a likely future World Champion.
In March 2005 he celebrated his 18th birthday by reaching the final of the China Open in Beijing, defeating world top-16 ranked players Peter Ebdon, Marco Fu, and Ken Doherty to contest the final with world no-3 ranked Stephen Hendry, whom he defeated by 9 frames to 5 to score his first ranking tournament win.
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