Mark Williams

Player

Popular As Mark Williams (snooker player)

Birthday March 21, 1975

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Cwm, Gwent, Wales

Age 48 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 183 cm

#45899 Most Popular

1975

Mark James Williams (born 21 March 1975) is a Welsh professional snooker player who is a three-time World Champion, winning in 2000, 2003 and 2018.

Often noted for his long potting ability, Williams has earned the nickname "The Welsh Potting Machine".

1992

Williams turned professional in 1992 and has been ranked the world number one player three times (1999–00, 2000–01 and 2002–03).

He is one of the group of three players known as the "Class of '92" who all turned professional during the 1992–93 snooker season.

They are Williams, Ronnie O'Sullivan and John Higgins.

Williams was born in Cwm, near Ebbw Vale, in the Welsh county of Gwent (now the county borough of Blaenau Gwent).

He started playing snooker at an early age and won his first junior event when he was eleven years old; it was then that he realised that he wanted to pursue a career as a snooker player.

He scored his first century break when he was thirteen, and had achieved his first 147 break by the time he was eighteen.

As a schoolboy, he was also a promising amateur boxer, remaining undefeated in twelve fights.

He was encouraged to play snooker by his father Dilwyn, who was a coal miner.

At the age of fifteen, Mark did a 12-hour shift down the mines.

1996

Williams finished his first season ranked 119th; three years later, he was ranked in the world's top 16 for the 1996–97 season.

His first ranking tournament win came in January 1996, when he won the 1996 Welsh Open title, beating John Parrott 9–3 in the final.

After failing to qualify for the 1996 World Championship, he won the first ranking event of the new season in October 1996, the Grand Prix, beating surprise finalist Euan Henderson 9–5.

1997

In April 1997, he went on to win the British Open, beating Stephen Hendry 9–2 in the final.

At the 1997 World Championship, he was drawn against his coach Terry Griffiths, who was making his last appearance at the Crucible as a player; Williams eventually beat Griffiths 10–9 on the black, but then lost 8–13 to Hendry in the last 16.

1998

He has also won the Masters on two occasions (1998 and 2003).

He also beat Hendry in a "thrilling" final in February 1998, to take his first Masters title, winning 10–9 in a black-ball finish in the deciding frame, after recovering from 6–9 down.

He reached the semi-finals of the 1998 World Championship, losing 14–17 to Ken Doherty.

1999

The first left-handed player to win the World Championship, Williams has won 25 ranking tournaments, including two UK Championships (1999 and 2002), making him sixth on the all-time list.

The following year, at the 1999 World Championship, he made it through to the final and finished the tournament as runner-up to Hendry.

The 1999–00 season was a very successful one for Williams who won the 1999 UK Championship and the World Championship.

These results, along with another ranking title and three runner-up positions, allowed him to capture the world number one position for the first time.

In the World Championship final he came from 7–13 behind his fellow countryman Matthew Stevens to eventually win 18–16.

He also produced a notable comeback in his semi-final match against John Higgins, coming from 10 to 14 down to win 17–15.

2000

Williams won only one ranking event in the following season, the Grand Prix, with a 9–5 victory over Ronnie O'Sullivan in the final, but he was a runner-up in two other ranking events, the 2000 UK Championship and the China Open.

This was enough to retain his number one ranking, although his title defence at the World Championship fell in the second round with a 12–13 defeat to Joe Swail.

2001

In the 2001–02 season, Williams also only won one ranking tournament, as he struggled to find the form from the previous season, winning the China Open, where he defeated Anthony Hamilton 9–8 from 5–8 down in the final.

However, he lost to the same player 9–13 in the second round of the World Championship and the number one ranking to Ronnie O'Sullivan.

2002

His most successful season to date was 2002–03, when he won the Triple Crown: the UK Championship, the Masters and the World Championship.

In doing so, he became only the third player, after Steve Davis and Stephen Hendry, to win all three Triple Crown events in one season.

He is the first player (and to date, the only player) to win all three versions of the professional World Championship: the World Snooker Championship, the Six-red World Championship and the World Seniors Championship.

Another strong performance came in the 2002–03 season when he won the 2002 UK Championship, Masters and World Championship titles.

This made him only the fourth player after Hendry, Davis and John Higgins to hold these titles simultaneously, and only the third player after Davis and Hendry to have won them all in one season.

These results enabled him to reclaim the number one spot at the end of the season.

In the UK Championship final he beat Ken Doherty 10–9, and in the Masters he beat Hendry 10–4.

2003

His form began to decline after his second World Championship title in 2003; he then dropped out of the top 16 following the 2007–08 season, but he regained his place for 2009–10.

Williams has compiled over 600 century breaks in professional competition, including three maximum breaks.

Winning the 2023 British Open aged 48 years and 194 days made him the second-oldest player—after Ray Reardon—to win a professional ranking tournament.

Before the 2003 World Championship he had a scare with his cue when it was damaged and badly bent on his flight with Ryanair to play in the Irish Masters, but he had it repaired before the tournament.