World
ranking: 22
Last five seasons: 10-5-6-6-4
Date of birth: 11-05-64
Lives: Liverpool, Merseyside
Turned professional: 1983
Ranking tournament victories: 9 - European Open 1989, 1990, 1996;
Embassy World Championship 1991; Dubai Duty Free Classic 1991, 1992; UK
Championship 1991; International 1994; Thailand Classic 1995
Last season's prize money: £85,860
Career prize money (up to start of 2001-2002 season): £2,889,750
Highest tournament break: 147 - Matchroom League 1992
John Parrott is one of snooker's most
instantly recognisable faces and has done much to popularise the sport
both on and off the table.
He has managed to combine playing with a
highly successful television career, most notably through his team
captaincy against footballer Ally McCoist on the BBC's 'A Question of
Sport'.
The lifelong Everton fan, who has won
tournaments in nine different countries, has been an ever-present at the
Crucible since 1984.
He has reached eight quarter-finals, one
semi-final and two finals. His first final came in 1989, but he was
taught a harsh lesson by Steve Davis, who won 18-3 - the biggest margin
of victory in an Embassy final.
But Parrott learned from the experience
and two years later, he put it to good use, beating Jimmy White 18-11 in
the 1991 final to win snooker's greatest prize. He added the UK
Championship for good measure later that year and is one of only four
players - Davis, Stephen Hendry and John Higgins are the others - to
have held both titles in the same year.
"It was just such a wonderful feeling
getting to the world final and winning it was something else. Those
moments do not come along too often and you have to savour them," he
said.
Parrott led England to victory in the
2000 Nations Cup at The Hexagon, Reading. He marshalled his troops -
Stephen Lee, Ronnie O'Sullivan and White - to a 6-4 victory over
defending champions Wales.
Fittingly, it was the skipper who held
his nerve against opposite number Darren Morgan in the deciding frame to
seal the match for the host nation.
After a disastrous start to the 2000-2001
season, Parrott was always fighting a losing battle to retain the top-16
place he had held for 13 successive seasons.
It was not until the fourth ranking event
in China that he managed to win a match and although he reached the
semi-finals of the Thailand Masters in March, it was a case of too
little too late.
The wise-cracking Liverpudlian, who is also an accomplished after-dinner
speaker, was finally sentenced to life outside the elite top 16 by
Michael Judge, who beat him 10-6 in the first round of the World
Championship.
"The way I have played this season I
don't deserve to be in the top 16. I have no qualms about that," he
said. "Maybe next season, if I manage to win a match before the TV
stage, I might be a bit more dangerous."
Asked whether he had any thoughts of
bringing forward his retirement, Parrott replied: "Not in the slightest.
As I've said before, I will probably play two more seasons then finish.
I want to see my kids grow up."
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