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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_ParrottJohn Parrott - Wikipedia

    John Parrott. John Stephen Parrott MBE (born 11 May 1964) is an English former professional snooker player and television personality. He was a professional during the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s, and remained within the top 16 of the world rankings for 14 consecutive seasons. He twice reached the final of the World Snooker Championship.

  2. Career Total Statistics for John Parrott - professional Results - Match results, Frame scores, ... Won: 55 (64.71%) First match in tournament: Played: 318:

    • England
    • 27
    • May 11th 1964 (age 60)
    • 1983
  3. The 1998/99 season was his 11th consecutive in the top 16 of the world rankings. Parrott is one of only five players to win both the World Championship and the UK Championship in the same year. Steve Davis, Stephen Hendry, John Higgins and Ronnie O'Sullivan are the others. Miscellaneous. His career record against Jimmy White is 17-11.

    • May 11, 1964
    • "The Entertainer", "Mr. JP"
    • Liverpool, Merseyside, England
    • 1983
  4. www.rkgsnooker.com › player › player-profileJohn Parrott - RKG Snooker

    John Parrott, MBE (born 11 May 1964) is an English former professional snooker player and television personality, remembered as one of the best players in the early 1990s. Parrott won the World Snooker Championship in 1991, defeating Jimmy White in the final. Two years earlier he had lost 3–18 to Steve Davis, the heaviest final defeat in ...

    • In Short
    • Amateur Career
    • Going Pro
    • Top 16
    • European Open Success, Masters and World Disappointment
    • World Champion
    • Continued Success
    • Decline
    • 2008/9
    • 2009/10

    While now most recognisable as a BBC pundit, it should not be forgotten that at his peak John was a brilliant snooker player, who competed at the very highest level for much of the 1990’s. One of only five players to win the World and UK Championship events in the same year, he stands seventh on the list of ranking event winners with nine titles an...

    As a youngster, it was in fact crown green bowling that was John’s favourite past-time. One day when he was aged just 12 however, it began to rain, so his father took him to the Dudley Institute, a local snooker club just over the road and immediately John was fascinated by the game. His game quickly began to improve and under the guidance of manag...

    Turning professional in 1983, his début season was to be promising, as he moved straight into the rankings in 20th position. The highlight of the campaign came at the Lada Classic, where he beat Doug Mountjoy 5-4 to qualify for the TV stages of an event for the first time. Once there he then defeated Alex Higgins 5-2 and Tony Knowles 5-1 before fal...

    1986/7 started strongly for John, as he reached the semi-finals of the UK Championship, before losing out in Sheffield to Jimmy White in the last 16. Still he had done enough to move up four places to 13th, crucially meaning that he would no longer have to qualify for the TV stages of ranking events. Once there, John went from strength to strength ...

    Now regularly reaching finals in 1988/9, John finally made his breakthrough in the 1989 European Open, when he defeated Terry Griffiths 9-8 to take his first ranking event title. Following a great run to the final of the B&H Masters at Wembley, where he eventually lost out to rising star Stephen Hendry, he repeated the feat at the World Championshi...

    The 1990/91 season was to be a strange one for John as he began to experience a number of issues with his cue. Struggling to find his best form he eventually took the decision to make a change and the results were immediate. Having reached the final of the Irish Masters in his first tournament using the cue, again losing to Davis, John went into th...

    He managed to cement this position in the following season, as he won the Dubai Desert Duty Free Classic and the UK Championship to help move him back up to number two in the rankings, just behind Stephen Hendry, who also defeated him for the third time in a Masters final. The only disappointment was that as with every other world champion, he fell...

    Entering his mid-thirties however, by 2000 John was starting to struggle for form and his increased involvement with the media proved to be further distraction as he slipped to 10th in the rankings, his lowest position since 1988. Things did not get any better during 2000/01 when despite a run to the semi-finals of the Thailand Masters, first round...

    John was to get off to a slow start in 2008/9, as he was forced to withdraw from the Shanghai Masters as a result of a date clash with his charity golf event. He did manage to go on a good run during the 2008 Grand Prix when he defeated Atthasit Mahitthi, Ken Doherty and Mark King to reach the last 16, but his subsequent 5-0 whitewash at the hands ...

    John’s season got off to a nightmare start as he was blitzed 5-0 in qualifying for the season-opening Shanghai Masters event by Welsh youngster Michael White. Following such a poor performance, speculationbegan to mount as to his future in the game beyond the end of the season. Following that match however John’s fortunes began to improve, a 5-4 vi...

  5. May 1, 2021 · John Parrott’s 1991 World Championship triumph: 30 Years On – Part Three. John Parrott was back in familiar territory as he prepared for his third successive Crucible semi-final at the 1991 World Snooker Championship. The world number three had secured his return to the single-table set-up in Sheffield following a hard-fought 13-10 victory ...

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  7. John Parrott was born on 11 May 1964 at the Oxford Street Maternity Hospital, Liverpool. He was a keen bowls player until the age of 12, but then discovered snooker. He lost in the final of the English Under-16s Championship in 1980, [citation needed] but won the 1981 Pontins Junior Championship. In 1982, he was Pontins Open Champion and Junior ...