There is a sense of sadness and reflection within snooker this weekend following the passing of Ray Reardon on Friday at the age of 91.
The proud Welshman lived a long and successful life that should be celebrated rather than mourned, however.
Born in 1932, Reardon was a man of many careers. First and foremost, he was a wonderful snooker player.
But before that, he was also a coal miner who evaded death in his 20s after a collapsed mine left him trapped underground for several hours. He was later also a policeman.
Snooker was his primary passion of course – a game he had played since being introduced to it by his uncle as a young boy.
A pioneer of modernising the sport into what we know today, Reardon was professional snooker’s first dominant force.
Let’s, then, remember just a few of his finest snooker achievements.
Pot Black
Reardon was a six-time Welsh amateur champion and a former English amateur champion by the time he turned professional in 1967.
At that time, snooker was a mangled mess of affairs with hardly any professional players, a lack of proper tournaments, and not even a ranking system in place.
Reardon was later at the forefront of the battle with authorities to change the game for the better and improve its standards.
One tournament that completely transformed snooker’s image with the public was Pot Black.
The single-frame event was aired on BBC just at a time when colour television was coming into prominence across the United Kingdom.
It introduced players like Reardon, John Spencer, John Pulman, and Fred Davis to a wider audience who became infatuated with their craft and character.
Reardon won the inaugural Pot Black in 1969, a victory that spearheaded the success he’d enjoy in the following decade.
World Snooker Championship
The 1990s period was dominated by Stephen Hendry and the decade before that was controlled by Steve Davis.
Yet before those two, Ray Reardon was the first governor of the game who relentlessly reigned throughout the 1970s.
In 1970, Reardon beat Pulman 37-33 to claim the world title for the first time and subsequently added four more on the bounce between 1973 and 1976.
By this point, the sport was growing but was still being held back by mismanagement, lacklustre promotion, and a constant shift of venues for its blue-riband tournament.
That all began to change in 1977 when the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield hosted the World Snooker Championship for the first time.
By now, Reardon was well into his 40s and there were plenty of eager young stars who were soon set to enter the fold.
In 1978, it all came together one last time for Reardon and thankfully at the Crucible, where he overcame Perrie Mans to etch his name onto the trophy for a sixth time.
World number one
A limited ranking system for snooker was introduced in the mid-1970s as the sport continued its attempt to legitimise its standards.
Only one tournament counted, however, with results from the previous three World Championships used to determine the order.
As the word champion in 1973, 1974 and 1975, Reardon naturally became the first world number one when the rankings system was launched ahead of the 1975/76 campaign.
But even though only a solitary tournament was utilised, Reardon was very much a deserving world number one.
Around this time, the Tredegar potter won several other prestigious titles including the Masters, the Champion of Champions, the Pontins Professional, and Pot Black again in 1978.
Reardon held top spot in the rankings from 1975 to 1981, and he regained the coveted position ahead of the 1982/83 snooker season.
Professional Players Tournament
Ray Reardon reached top spot in the rankings again off the back of his terrific performance at the 1982 World Championship, when he reached the final only to be denied glory for a seventh time by Alex Higgins.
Several months later he turned 50, making his achievement at the Professional Players Tournament even more outstanding.
For the first time that season, some events other than the World Championship were attributed with ranking event status.
Reardon lost in the last 16 of the first such tournament, suffering a 5-2 reverse to eventual International Open champion Tony Knowles in Derby.
Less than two weeks later, however, he beat the likes of Alex Higgins and Eddie Charlton en route to the final of the Professional Players Tournament.
In the title-deciding affair, Reardon faced a fresh face of the main tour called Jimmy White, who was three decades his junior.
Reardon won 10-5 with a high break of 132, and in doing so he became the oldest ranking event champion – a record that still stands today.
Coaching Ronnie O’Sullivan
Ray Reardon won a couple more notable tournaments after that and in 1985 he was awarded an MBE for his services to snooker.
By the late-1980s his game was in decline, and he eventually retired from professional snooker in 1991 after losing in that year’s World Championship qualifiers.
More than ten years on, Reardon received a phone call from Ronnie O’Sullivan Snr who felt that his son needed help mastering the tactical side of the game.
Reinvigorated with the motivation to nurture the sport’s brightest and most natural talent, Reardon jumped at the opportunity.
He was watching proudly from the sidelines as O’Sullivan romped to glory at the 2004 World Snooker Championship, where he demonstrated a lot of his newly acquired nous for safety play.
In his post-match celebrations, O’Sullivan donned mock vampire teeth in reference to Reardon’s renowned nickname as Dracula.
Reardon later admitted that coaching the Rocket added another ten years to his life.
And what a spectacular life it was.
Featured photo credit: WST
Reardon sits alongside Steve Peters and Ronnie O’Sullivan Snr as the most important figures in the Rocket’s career. Reardon’s involvement aided O’Sullivan’s transition into becoming an all-round matchplayer of the highest order. The standard produced by O’Sullivan in the 2004 World Championship is the highest I’ve seen throughout one edition. He lost just 12 frames in his last three matches.
Thanks to Ray Reardon for what he has contributed to snooker. Thanks to YouTube and other sharing platforms people today can see snippets of his on – and – off table style and class from his heyday. A wonderful exponent of the sport from the earliest days of its professionalism and commercialisation. The first “decade dominator” too obviously.
Well, Joe Davis, Fred Davis and John Pulman all enjoyed decade dominance. Reardon the first in modern era, of course.
I’ve been looking through some H2Hs involving the legendary Welshman. Here’s a selection of his record against many of the big names he faced:
Trailed Steve Davis 10-7. Reardon’s last Crucible match was a last 16 loss to Davis. He did ,however, whitewash Davis three times.
Jimmy White led 5-4 despite losing his two finals with Reardon.
Alex Higgins led 26-16.
Eddie Charlton held a slender 13-12 advantage.
The opponent he faced most was John Spencer. Reardon enjoyed a 27-25 lead, with one draw on the record as well.
Reardon finished 12-9 up on Dennis Taylor who often had said Reardon’s best would compare favourably with any great.
John Virgo surprisingly led 6-2.
The late Willie Thorne was 6-4 up.
Reardon 5-4 Cliff Thorburn.
He comfortably led John Pulman 13-4.
In a Welsh derby, Terry Griffiths was 9-5 up.
He was 13 all (plus one draw) with compatriot Doug Mountjoy.
5-2 up on Cliff Wilson.
Fred Davis trailed 8-3 to Tredegar’s finest.
Stephen Hendry won both of their meetings.
His only meeting with John Parrott saw Reardon triumph 13-12 in the 1985 World Championship quarter-finals.
4-2 ahead against Kirk Stevens.
A win in the 1978 World final was one of six victories he secured against Perrie Mans. The South African only triumphed twice.
Reardon won 26 tournaments, spanning from 1967 to 1983. He also was part of two Welsh World Cup winning teams.
He was the first snooker player to appear on This Is Your Life. He’s also been on Desert Island Discs and Parkinson.