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Issara Kachaiwong
Thai snooker player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Issara Kachaiwong (Thai: อิศรา กะไชยวงษ์; born October 4, 1983, in Chanthaburi, Thailand), is a Thai former professional snooker player.
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Career
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Kachaiwong became the Thai national under-20 champion. He won the first edition of the General Cup International, defeating players like Mark Allen and Dominic Dale and also capturing a gold medal at the 2004 Thai Games, before he finally qualified for the main tour by winning the 2006 Asian championships, defeating Mohammed Shehab 6–3 in the final.
His best performance in the debut season came at the 2006 Grand Prix in October in Aberdeen. During that tournament he won 4 of his five matches during the group stages. His only loss came against John Higgins. However he failed to make the top two as both Higgins and Alan McManus, who Kachaiwong had beaten, had better frame differences. He was the only player who won four times in the group stages who did not make it through to the knockout stages. The rest of Kachaiwong's results was not good enough to keep him on tour, but he was handed a wild card for another season. Despite a last 64 run at the season-ending World Championship, he was again relegated.
At the 2010 ACBS Asian Snooker Championship Kachaiwong beat Mohammad Sajjad from Pakistan 7–3 in the final to become the champion and regained his tour card for the 2010–11 season.[1] At the China Open where he reached the final qualifying round. He finished the season 87th in the world rankings and failed to retain his place on the tour.
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Performance and rankings timeline
NH / Not Held | means an event was not held. | |||
NR / Non-Ranking Event | means an event is/was no longer a ranking event. | |||
R / Ranking Event | means an event is/was a ranking event. | |||
MR / Minor-Ranking Event | means an event is/was a minor-ranking event. | |||
PA / Pro-am Event | means an event is/was a pro-am event. |
- It shows the ranking at the beginning of the season
- He was an amateur
- New players on the Main Tour do not have a ranking
- The event was called the Grand Prix (2004/2005, 2006/2007-2009/2010)
- The event was called the Six-red Snooker International (2008/2009) and the Six-red World Grand Prix (2009/2010)
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Career finals
Non-ranking finals: 2 (1 title)
Pro-am finals: 2 (2 titles)
Amateur finals: 6 (5 titles)
References
External links
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