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Zhao Xintong

Chinese snooker player (born 1997) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zhao Xintong
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Zhao Xintong (Chinese: 赵心童; born 3 April 1997)[3] is a Chinese professional snooker player and the reigning World Snooker Champion. He first turned professional in the 2016–17 season, aged 19, having previously recorded wins against a number of top professionals while competing as an amateur wildcard. He had a breakthrough season in 2021–22, during which he won his first ranking title at the 2021 UK Championship, defeating Luca Brecel 10–5 in the final, and first entered the top 16 in the snooker world rankings. He won his second ranking title at the 2022 German Masters with a 90 whitewash victory over Yan Bingtao in the final; he became only the third player, after Steve Davis and Neil Robertson, to win a two-session ranking final without conceding a single frame. He was ranked sixth in the world after the 2021–22 season.

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In January 2023, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association suspended Zhao as part of a match-fixing investigation involving ten Chinese players. He was subsequently charged with having knowledge of match-fixing and betting operations on the World Snooker Tour. Following an independent disciplinary tribunal, he was banned from competition for 30 months, which the WPBSA reduced to 20 months, given his early admissions and guilty plea. Having lost his professional status, he returned to competition as an amateur player after his ban expired on 1 September 2024. He won four Q Tour events in a row between October 2024 and January 2025, thereby guaranteeing that he would top the 2024–25 Q Tour Europe rankings and regain his professional status for the start of the 2025–26 season.[10] He became the first player to make a maximum break on the Q Tour, achieving the feat twice in Events 3 and 4.[11][5]

Still competing as an amateur, Zhao qualified for the main stage of the 2024 UK Championship but lost to Shaun Murphy in the first round. At the 2025 World Snooker Championship, he won four qualifying matches to reach the main stage, where he went on to defeat Ronnie O'Sullivan 177 in the semi-finals and Mark Williams 1812 in the final to win his first world title, second Triple Crown title, and third ranking title. He became the first player from mainland China and also the first from Asia to win the world title; he was also the first player to win a ranking event while competing as an amateur. He became the fourth qualifier to win the world title, after Alex Higgins, Terry Griffiths, and Murphy. His performance at the World Championship meant that on his return to the professional tour, he would be entering the snooker world rankings as world number 11.

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Career

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Early life

Zhao was born on 3 April 1997 and raised in the Songgang subdistrict of Bao'an, Shenzhen, Guangdong.[3][1] His father, Zhao Xiaowei, who transferred from Xi'an to Songgang in 1995,[12] is a finger reconstruction surgeon[12][13] and the vice president of Songgang People's Hospital as of the 2010s.[14][15][16][17] Zhao's mother Wen Anxiao is a Songgang local[15] and the head nurse of the same hospital as of the 2010s.[15][18]

Zhao's early exposure to snooker was shaped by Shenzhen, which is known for having a well-established snooker culture, as the sport spread across the British Hong Kong–Shenzhen border in the 1980s.[1][19] Zhao began playing at age eight on snooker tables set up outside stores near his house.[20] He was not tall enough for the snooker table but, rather than using a stool, he made up his height by wearing roller skates when practising at a snooker training club in Luohu, Shenzhen, partly to look cool.[1] He could move around the table quickly on roller skates and developed the habit of quick firing.[14] His parents set up a snooker table in their house when Zhao was ten years old.[1]

After graduating from Songgang No.1 Elementary School,[1] he dropped out of Songgang Middle School in 2009 to train full time.[1] It was rare in China for the family's only child to have parental support for quitting middle school. In 2013, he trained at the newly established WPBSA-CBSA Snooker Academy in Changping, Dongguan.[19]

2012–2016: Amateur career

This boy was astonishingly good and better than anybody I have ever seen at that age – and that includes Ronnie O'Sullivan!

Steve Davis[21]

In June 2012 at the Zhangjiagang Open, Zhao defeated Xiao Guodong, Kevin McMahon, and Yu Delu, to reach the last 16 of the tournament where he lost 34 to Stephen Lee.[22] He built on this success by reaching the second round of Asian Tour Events the Yixing Open and Zhengzhou Open.[23][24]

As a wildcard entrant, he defeated former World Champion Ken Doherty in the professional event, the International Championship.[25] He lost in a deciding frame 56 to Matthew Stevens in the last 32.[26] Having also earned his way to the last 32 of two other events, Zhao started to gain a reputation for being a "Wildcard Menace".[27]

The following season, at the 2013 International Championship, he beat six-time World Champion Steve Davis 61.[25] Davis later described Zhao as "astonishingly good" and compared him with a young Ronnie O'Sullivan.[28] He reached the third round of the competition before losing 26 to Marco Fu.[29] He defeated Fu in the first round of the 2014 Shanghai Masters.[30] Zhao entered the World Amateur Championship in late 2013 and reached the final, losing to his fellow countryman Zhou Yuelong 48, missing out on a chance to join the main professional snooker tour for the 201415 season.[31]

He was narrowly defeated in the first round of the ACBS Asian Snooker Championship.[32] He won three games in the first event of the 2015 Q School but then lost 34 to Alexander Ursenbacher in the penultimate round. He reached the final round of the second event before losing 34 to Duane Jones in a black ball finish in the deciding frame.[33][34] He completed a 60 whitewash of Stuart Carrington to qualify for the 2015 International Championship before losing 26 to John Higgins in the first round.[35] Zhao made his first appearance at a Triple Crown event at the UK Championship, but lost in the first round. He also qualified for the German Masters and Welsh Open, but was knocked out in the opening round of each.[34] He reached the final of the 2015 IBSF World Snooker Championship, but lost 68 to Pankaj Advani.[36] However, Zhao won a two-year card for the main tour after Advani declined the invitation.[37]

2016–2020: Early professional years

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Zhao at the 2016 Paul Hunter Classic

Zhao met Ronnie O'Sullivan in the second round of the 2016 English Open. Breaks of 130, 107 and 80 gave him a 32 lead, but he missed chances to take the win and was defeated 34. O'Sullivan said afterwards that Zhao's attacking style of play had reminded him of seven-time World Champion Stephen Hendry at a similar age.[38] Zhao qualified for the 2017 German Masters by beating Li Hang 53 and John Higgins 51, and a 50 whitewash of Sunny Akani saw Zhao reach the last 16 of a ranking event for the first time. He held a narrow 43 advantage over Ali Carter but lost the last two frames.[39] He also reached the third round of the Gibraltar Open before losing 34 to Mark Williams.[34]

Zhao was not ranked high enough at the end of the 201718 season to retain his spot on the World Snooker Tour, so he entered 2018 Q School in a bid to win back his place.[40][41] He defeated Dechawat Poomjaeng in the second event final of Q School to regain his professional status.[42] He reached his first professional ranking semi-finals at the 2018 China Championship, where he lost 46 to Mark Selby.[43] He reached the quarter-finals of the Welsh Open, losing 25 to eventual finalist Stuart Bingham.[44] Zhao qualified for the World Snooker Championship for the first time in 2019 but lost 710 to Selby in the first round.[45]

In the 201920 season, Zhao reached the last 16 stage of four ranking events and the quarter-finals of the 2020 German Masters, elevating his world ranking to 29th by the end of the season. Snooker professionals Ronnie O'Sullivan, Stephen Hendry and Alan McManus all suggested at the time that Zhao could potentially become a leading player in world snooker due to his enormous potential.[46] In December 2020, Zhao reached the quarter-finals of the World Grand Prix. After beating Jamie Jones 42 in the first round and John Higgins 43 in the second, he was defeated 35 by Jack Lisowski.[47]

2021–22 season: UK Championship winner

At the 2021 UK Championship, Zhao claimed his first ranking title, defeating Luca Brecel 105 in the final. The win elevated Zhao into the top 16 of the world rankings, at number 9.[48] He qualified for the invitational 2022 Masters for the first time,[25][49] where he played John Higgins in the first round; he lost 26.[50]

At the 2022 German Masters, he defeated Yan Bingtao 9‍–‍0 in the final to claim his second ranking title. He became only the third player, after Steve Davis and Neil Robertson, to win a two-session ranking final by a whitewash.[51] At the 2022 World Snooker Championship, he defeated Jamie Clarke in the first round, but lost in the second round to Stephen Maguire.[52]

2023–2024: Professional suspension and ban

In January 2023 by the sport's governing body, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), suspended Zhao as part of a match-fixing investigation involving ten Chinese players.[53] On 6 June 2023, the independent disciplinary commission ruled that: "Zhao XT, alone among the Respondent players, did not himself fix any match. His involvement was limited to placing bets for Yan [Bingtao] through Li [Hang], whereby he became liable as a party to the two match fixes. He is good friends with Yan, whom he has known since the age of 16. He attempted to dissuade Yan from match fixing on both occasions with no success. He felt he had no other option but to place the bets for Yan, as Yan had requested. He has shown genuine remorse for his actions."[54] The matches involved were both from March 2022. The Yan Bingtao vs Ricky Walden match at the 2022 Welsh Open and Yan vs Oliver Lines at the 2022 Turkish Masters.[54]

The commission noted the circumstances contributing to Zhao's actions, writing, "The Respondents who were based in Sheffield lived together or in close proximity to each other and were heavily reliant on each other socially and financially. [...] During the Covid-19 pandemic, the Respondents were not able to return to their native China. Many of them felt lonely, bored and even more isolated in the UK during this time. Many of them also suffered on a continuing basis from financial difficulties, exacerbated by the pressures of living costs in the UK, the expenses of travelling to compete in snooker tournaments abroad and ill-judged gambling and betting habits. This set of circumstances made the youngsters among the Respondents particularly susceptible to influence and manipulation from the older Chinese snooker players, who took them under their wing. They were accorded respect by the youngsters, who looked to them for advice and guidance."[54] The older players referred to are Liang Wenbo and Li Hang.[54]

Zhao was banned for 30 months and ordered to pay £7,500 in costs, but the WPBSA reduced the ban to 20 months because of Zhao's early admissions and his guilty plea.[55][56] The Chinese Billiards and Snooker Association (CBSA) upheld the original 30-month ban. WPBSA regulations state that players need to be in "good standing" with their national federation to compete on the World Snooker Tour.[57] However, the chair of the WPBSA, Jason Ferguson, confirmed that Zhao's 30-month ban would apply only to events sanctioned and governed by the CBSA. He was therefore eligible to enter the 202425 Q Tour after 1 September 2024 (the date on which the WPBSA ban expired), as well as any other amateur competition not sanctioned by the CBSA.[58][59]

2024–25 season: World Championship winner

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Zhao in 2025

After his suspension from the professional tour ended on 1 September 2024, Zhao competed on the amateur Q Tour in the hope of regaining professional status; his first competitive match was at Q Tour Event 2 in Sofia later that month.[60] In October 2024, he won Q Tour Event 3 in Stockholm;[4] in the final frame of his 41 win over Shaun Liu in the round of 64, Zhao became the first player to make a maximum break on the Q Tour.[11] He won Q Tour Event 4 in Manchester on 10 November, defeating Ryan Davies 42 in the final. On his run to the trophy, he made another maximum break in his 41 quarter-final win over Oliver Sykes, as well as three centuries in defeating Craig Steadman 41 in the semi-finals.[5][61]

On 5 November 2024, WPBSA and WST announced that Zhao would be invited to play in the UK Championship (an event he had won in 2021) as a WPBSA qualifier, on account of his win in Event 3 on the Q Tour.[62] He won four qualifying matches to progress to the main stage of the UK Championship but was then eliminated 56 by Shaun Murphy in the first round.[63][64][65]

Zhao won Q Tour Event 5 in Vienna on 15 December 2024, and Q Tour Event 6 in Mons, Belgium, on 12 January 2025, defeating Australian Ryan Thomerson 42 and Iran's Ehsan Heydari Nezhad 41 in the finals, respectively, thereby winning four straight events and 32 consecutive matches on the Q Tour.[6][7] His performance in Event 6 guaranteed his place at the top of the Q Tour Europe rankings list, securing him a new two-year tour card for the 202526 season.[8][9] Topping the Q Tour Europe rankings list also guaranteed Zhao a spot in the 2025 World Snooker Championship qualifying draw.[66][7]

He successfully qualified for the World Championship by winning four qualifying matches, only the third amateur-ranked player ever to reach the main stage of the tournament.[67] He defeated Jak Jones 104, Lei Peifan 1310 and Chris Wakelin 135 to reach the semi-finals,[68] where he beat seven-time world champion Ronnie O'Sullivan 177 with a session to spare.[69] He then defeated Mark Williams 1812 in the final to win his first world title.[70] Zhao became the first Chinese player, the first Asian player, and the first amateur to win the World Championship.[71][72] As a result of winning the title, Zhao attained professional status on the basis of ranking points attained during the season, entering the world snooker rankings at number 11.[73] The tour card Zhao had attained by topping the Q Tour Europe rankings was awarded to Dylan Emery, who had finished second in those rankings.[74] Zhao finished the 202425 season having played 49 matches since returning to competition, winning 47 of them.[75][73] He was prohibited from entering events in mainland China until July 2025, as his original 30-month ban from competition was upheld by the CBSA.[76]

The first tournament of the new season after winning the World Championship was the 2025 Shanghai Masters. Zhao reached the semi-final before being defeated by Kyren Wilson.[77] This was the end of a 26 match winning streak, since his loss to Murphy at the UK Championship the previous year.[78]

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Performance and rankings timeline

More information Tournament, 2012/13 ...
More information Performance Table Legend ...
NH / Not Heldmeans an event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was a ranking event.
MR / Minor-Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was a minor-ranking event.
  1. It shows the ranking at the beginning of the season
  2. He was an amateur
  3. New players do not have a ranking
  4. Players qualified through Q School started the season without ranking points
  5. He was an amateur after his ban ended on 1 September 2024
  6. Zhao had initially been entered into the tournament during the qualifying stages played in November, and had progressed to play in the televised stages in Berlin. However, before the main event started, he was suspended by the WPBSA, due to a match-fixing investigation and was subsequently withdrawn from the tournament.
  7. The event was called the Players Tour Championship Grand Final (2012/2013–2015/2016)
  8. The event was called the World Masters of Snooker (2023/2024)
  9. Zhao had initially been invited to play in the Masters, but was suspended by the WPBSA the week before the tournament started, due to a match-fixing investigation and was subsequently withdrawn from participating.
  10. The event was called the Riga Open (2014/2015–2015/2016)
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Career finals

Ranking finals: 3 (3 titles)

More information Legend, Outcome ...

Pro-am finals: 1 (1 title)

More information Outcome, No. ...

Team finals: 2 (1 title)

More information Outcome, No. ...

Amateur finals: 6 (4 titles)

More information Outcome, No. ...

References

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