Stuart Bingham
English professional snooker player, 2015 world champion / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Stuart Bingham (born 21 May 1976)[2] is an English professional snooker player who is a former World Champion and Masters winner.
Born | (1976-05-21) 21 May 1976 (age 47) Basildon, Essex, England |
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Sport country | England |
Nickname | Ball-run[1] |
Professional | 1995–present |
Highest ranking | 2 (May 2015 – March 2017) |
Current ranking | 29 (as of 8 April 2024) |
Maximum breaks | 9 |
Century breaks | 579 (as of 17 April 2024) |
Tournament wins | |
Ranking | 6 |
Minor-ranking | 4 |
World Champion | 2015 |
Bingham won the 1996 World Amateur Championship but enjoyed little sustained success in the early part of his professional career. His form improved in his mid-thirties: at age 35, he won his first ranking title at the 2011 Australian Goldfields Open, which helped him enter the top 16 in the rankings for the first time.
At 38, Bingham won the 2015 World Championship, defeating Shaun Murphy 18–15 in the final. The oldest first-time world champion in snooker history, he was the second player, after Ken Doherty, to have won world titles at both amateur and professional levels. His world title took him to a career-high number two in the world rankings, a spot he held until March 2017. In 2017, Bingham received a six-month ban from professional competition after breaching rules concerning betting on matches involving himself and other players. He won his second Triple Crown title at the 2020 Masters, defeating Ali Carter 10–8 in the final. Aged 43 years and 243 days, he superseded Ray Reardon as the oldest Masters' champion, a record he held until Ronnie O'Sullivan won the 2024 Masters aged 48 years and 40 days.
A prolific break-builder, Bingham has compiled over 550 century breaks during his career. He has scored nine career maximum breaks, the fourth most of any player, behind only Ronnie O'Sullivan (15), John Higgins (13), and Stephen Hendry (11).