Eddie Charlton

This article is about the Australian snooker player. For the English squash player, see Eddie Charlton (squash player).
Eddie Charlton
Born (1929-10-31)31 October 1929
Merewether, New South Wales, Australia
Died 8 November 2004(2004-11-08) (aged 75)
Palmerston North, New Zealand
Sport country  Australia
Nickname Steady Eddie, "wobbly Edward"
Professional 1963–1995
Highest ranking 3 (1976–1981)
Career winnings £322,933[1]
Highest break 138 (1978 Australian Professional Championship)
Century breaks 46[2]
Best ranking finish Final (1975 World Championship)
Tournament wins
Major Australian Professional Championship: 20 (1964-84)
World Professional Match-play Championship (1976)
Non-ranking 28

Edward Francis "Eddie" Charlton, AM (31 October 1929 – 8 November 2004) was an Australian professional snooker and English billiards player. He remains the only player to have been world championship runner-up in both snooker and billiards without winning either title. He later became a successful marketeer of sporting goods launching a popular brand of billiard room equipment bearing his name.

Early life

Charlton was born in Merewether, New South Wales, Australia and came from a sporting family. His brother Jim was also a professional snooker player but never joined the world ranks. Eddie himself was also a senior grade footballer, a champion surfer, a good cricketer and a boxer. One of his proudest moments was when he carried the Olympic torch on part of its journey to the 1956 Games in Melbourne.

He worked for a short while as a coal miner before deciding to become a professional cue sports player on the advice of Fred Davis.

Career

Charlton became a professional player in 1963 at the age of 34. The following season he won his first Australian Professional Championship. For the next 20 years, with one exception, he won the title annually. He unsuccessfully challenged Rex Williams for the World Billiards Championship title in 1974 and 1976. His third appearance was in 1984 when he lost by a handful of points to Mark Wildman. Four years later he lost to two-time champion Norman Dagley in his last World Billiards final.

Charlton was also the most successful Australian snooker player until the emergence of Neil Robertson. From the first year of the rankings in 1976/77, he was ranked number three in the world for the next five consecutive seasons from although he never won a ranking tournament (because in the early years only the Snooker World Championship counted).

Charlton, who was known for his focused and dogged performances, challenged for the Snooker World Championship in 1968 and was the runner up in the final of Snooker World Championship in 1973 and 1975. In his last appearance in 1975, he lost by just one frame (31–30) to Ray Reardon. However his 1972, 1973, and 1980 victories in the BBC's Pot Black competition gave him a high profile with television audiences. He also recorded the first century break (110) on Pot Black, a one-frame per match format.

Charlton was known for playing with a very straight cue action and rarely hitting the ball with any sidespin.[3]

Although he did not reach the final stages of the World Championship in his later career, Charlton continued to perform at a competitive level. His last major achievement was his 10-9 win over Cliff Thorburn at the 1989 World Championship.

Tournament Wins

Non-Ranking Wins: (28)

Personal life

Always active in the organisation and promotion of the game, Charlton was awarded the Order of Australia in 1980. He formed the Australian Professional Players Association and was responsible for bringing many of the top players to play in Australia. He made his final appearance at the Crucible in 1992 where he was defeated 10–0 by defending champion John Parrott, the only recorded whitewash in the history of the World Championship. He released a 30-minute beginners' instructional video, Eddie Charlton's Snooker, Pool & Trick Shots, in PAL VHS format. He stopped competing in 1995 and died in Palmerston North, New Zealand on 7 November 2004 following an operation.[4]

Performance timeline

Tournament1970/
1971
1971/
1972
1972/
1973
1973/
1974
1974/
1975
1975/
1976
1976/
1977
1977/
1978
1978/
1979
1979/
1980
1980/
1981
1981/
1982
1982/
1983
1983/
1984
1984/
1985
1985/
1986
1986/
1987
1987/
1988
1988/
1989
1989/
1990
1990/
1991
1991/
1992
World Championship SF SF F 2R F SF QF SF SF QF 2R SF QF 2R 2R 2R LQ 2R 2R 1R 1R 1R
Performance Table Legend
LQ Failed to qualify #R Lost in the early rounds
QF Lost in the quarter-finals SF Lost in the semi-finals
F Lost in the final W Tournament winner
A Did not participate in the tournament NH Tournament was not held

References

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