Ann-Marie Farren

Ann-Marie Farren (born 1971) is an English former snooker player. She won the World Ladies Snooker Championship in 1987, at the age of 16, and was runner-up in 1988 and 1999.[1]

Ann-Marie Farren
Born1971
England
Sport country England
Professional1991–1995 (WPBSA)
Highest ranking344 (WPBSA)

Biography

Farren started playing aged seven, on a 4ft by 2ft snooker table that her father Hugh bought her. She left Chilwell Comprehensive School with one O-level, having prioritized snooker above her studies, and went into snooker as a career. She prepared for the 1987 world championship by practicing on a £4,000 table her father installed for her in a specially built room in the garden.[2]

56 players participated in the 1987 tournament. Farren progressed through to the final, where she played Stacey Hillyard. Farren achieved a 5–1 victory to take the prize of £3,500 and the trophy, plus a double magnum of champagne that she was not old enough to drink, being only 16 years and 48 days old at the time.[3] She was the second-youngest champion, the youngest being her beaten opponent Hillyard, who had won at the age of 15 in 1984.[4][2]

Farren was runner-up in the world championship in 1988 and 1989, losing both times to Allison Fisher, who was regarded as the dominant player of the era.[3]

When the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association opened membership for events to anyone over the age of 16 in 1990, Farren was one of six women to join, along with Allison Fisher, Stacey Hillyard, Georgina Aplin, Karen Corr, and Maureen McCarthy, whilst 443 men joined at the same time.[5]

Farren once modeled waistcoats alongside 1985 World champion Dennis Taylor on The Clothes Show.[2]

She started a media studies course at Newark and Sherwood College in 1994, with ambitions to become a journalist, and later joined the UK civil service.[2]

Titles and achievements

World Ladies Snooker Championship Finals

Other

  • 1994 British Ladies Champion
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References

  1. World Champions Archived 18 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine Women's World Snooker. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  2. Smart, Andy (21 April 2010). "Nottingham Evening Post: Ann-Marie was world snooker champion at 16". Nottingham Post.
  3. Women’s World Snooker Championship – A Potted History Archived 21 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Huart, Matt. Women's World Snooker. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  4. Acteson, Steve (16 October 1987). "Snooker: Farren wins world title after Fisher freezes". The Times via NewsBank.
  5. Acteson, Steve (13 October 1990). "A motley cast of hundreds waiting for the cue – Snooker". The Times via NewsBank.
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