Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The World Billiards Championship is an international cue sports tournament in the discipline of English billiards, organised by World Billiards, a subsidiary of the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA). In its various forms, and usually as a single competition, the title is one of the oldest sporting world championships ...
The IBSF World Billiards Championship (previously known as the World Amateur Billiards Championship) is the premier, international, non-professional tournament for the game of English billiards. Dating to some form to 1951, the event has been sanctioned by the International Billiards and Snooker Federation since 1973.
The World Nine-ball Championships are held annually, and are sanctioned by the World Pool-Billiard Association. Events have been held for boys and women, and for the main world championships since this time, with a girl's tournament being created in 2004. In 2013, the men's championship was changed from being inclusive for all [a] to a men's ...
Since 2012 World Billiards has organised the World Billiards Championship (English billiards) plus up to 20 other world ranking tournaments per year. Apart from the World Championship, other major ranking tournaments include the American Cup in Canada, the European Open, the Pacific International in Australia and the Asian Grand Prix in Singapore.
World Billiards Championship may refer to: UMB World Three-cushion Championship, a professional tournament in the carom billiards discipline of three-cushion billiards; World Billiards Championship (English billiards), a professional tournament in the game of English billiards; IBSF World Billiards Championship, an amateur tournament in English ...
In 2012, the IBSF World Billiards Championship was merged with the former professional championship under the name World Billiards Championship, and tournaments were held in both points and timed format. Causier won the 2013 150-up ("short format") title, and was runner-up in the timed ("long") format.
Ruth Harrison (left) and Ellen Eddowes, finalists in the 1931 Championship The 1948 Women's Billiards Association awards ceremony. Pictured (left to right) are Ruth Harrison (inaugural champion), Thelma Carpenter (three-time champion), Joyce Gardner, Agnes Morris, Valerie Hobson, Evelyn Morland-Smith (four-time champion), Beryl Stamper, Joan Adcock, E. Peters.
[3] [4] In January 2020, World Snooker was rebranded as World Snooker Tour. [5] World Billiards supervises the English billiards ranking tournaments and ranking list. [6] It was established as a limited company in 2011, with all shares owned by the WPBSA. [7] World Women's Snooker (WWS) had changed its name from World Ladies Billiards and ...