It has become a tradition around this time of the year on SnookerHQ.com to publish a top ten list of players who have never won a World Snooker Championship.
There have been a few changes to the order since the original list was first published back in 2014.
But many of the same players remained having failed to etch their names onto the silverware over the course of the last decade or so.
While it was always intended to devise the list in a fair way – weighing up not only players’ talent but their also pedigree within the game, their respective eras, and most importantly their overall record at World Championships – there was always an element of subjectivity to it.
As a result, there was a tweak to the system last year and a transition toward ordering the top ten through a more statistical approach.
A new points system determined which ten players should be recognised as the best to have never won the World Snooker Championship.
The points system takes into account three important factors – prior performances at the World Championship in the modern era (1969-present), number of titles won, and highest career ranking positions.
Points System
World Championship Record
Final appearances: 3 points for each
Semi-final appearances: 2 points for each
Quarter-final appearances: 1 point for each
Titles
Ranking titles: 1 point for each
Masters titles: 2 points for each
Other WPBSA/WST titles (10+): 3 points
Other WPBSA/WST titles (5+): 2 points
Other WPBSA/WST titles (1+): 1 point
Highest Ranking
World number 1: 3 points
World number 2: 2 points
World number 3: 1 point
*A player’s overall WSC record will be the determining factor if players finish with the same points.*
Honourable Mentions
One immediate obvious omission is Paul Hunter (12 points), who deserves a special honourable mention as someone who did rank consistently highly on the list in previous years.
The Leeds potter’s devastating death from illness just a few days short of his 28th birthday in 2006 brought a premature end to what had been a promising career on the baize.
Had Hunter been given more time, he likely wouldn’t have even featured here anyway, as the three-time Masters winner was widely tipped as a future world champion in the making.
The likes of Doug Mountjoy (12), Stephen Lee (11), and James Wattana (11) are other notable names to narrowly miss out.
Let’s, then, take a look at the top ten players who have never won a World Snooker Championship.
10. Tony Knowles – 13 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 0 = 0 | Ranking x 2 = 2 | WN2 = 2 |
SF x 3 = 6 | Masters x 0 = 0 | |
QF x 2 = 2 | Other: 1+ = 1 | TOTAL: 13 |
Kyren Wilson was originally in this statistical selection when first devised last year, but the Kettering cueist quickly rectified that with his success at the 2024 World Championship.
Replacing him in the top ten list of players who have never won a world snooker title is Tony Knowles.
First turning professional in 1980, the Bolton heartthrob featured frequently on the back pages of newspapers for his displays on the baize and equally as often on the front page for his exploits off of it.
Knowles was a prominent contender on the main tour right throughout the decade and reached three World Championship semi-finals between 1983 and 1986.
He won the very first tournament other than a World Championship to boast ranking status – the 1982 International Open where he beat David Taylor in the final.
Knowles was never able to win one of the game’s most prestigious prizes, but his overall consistency around this time did reward him with a world ranking high of number two during the 1984/85 campaign.
He additionally won the World Team Classic with English teammates Steve Davis and Tony Meo in 1983, and these days Knowles can still be seen competing at Q School and on the World Seniors Snooker Tour.
9. Alan McManus – 13 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 0 = 0 | Ranking x 2 = 2 | WN6 = 0 |
SF x 3 = 6 | Masters x 1 = 2 | |
QF x 2 = 2 | Other: 1+ = 1 | TOTAL: 13 |
Alan McManus tallies the same number of points as Tony Knowles but pips the Englishman as a result of a slightly superior World Championship record (more second round appearances).
McManus never featured on the original top ten list, therefore representing an interesting inclusion using the revised format.
The Scot’s best years were undoubtedly during the 1990s, which he spent ranked mostly inside the world’s top eight.
Two semi-final appearances at the World Championship came early on in his career in 1992 and 1993, before he stunned Stephen Hendry to win the Masters in 1994.
A two-time ranking event winner, McManus had a reputation as being among the best of the rest during that era – frequently losing in the semi-finals of tournaments and unable to get his hands on much silverware.
While his form declined in the mid-2000s, the Glaswegian did enjoy a Crucible renaissance in 2016 when he reached the semi-finals as a qualifier.
Now retired, McManus has turned his attention to punditry and commentary duties.
For the full 2025 World Snooker Championship draw, results, and schedule, click here.
8. Barry Hawkins – 18 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 1 = 3 | Ranking x 4 = 4 | WN4 = 0 |
SF x 4 = 8 | Masters x 0 = 0 | |
QF x 1 = 1 | Other: 5+ = 2 | TOTAL: 18 |
In many respects, the career of Barry Hawkins has been a tale of two halves.
The Hawk always had the talent, but he rarely replicated that on the main stage until into the second part of his career.
Indeed, the Englishman lost in the first round at the Crucible in his first five attempts between 2006 and 2010.
However, in 2012 Hawkins took advantage of a weakened field to capture his maiden ranking event title at the Australian Open, thus setting into motion a remarkable transformation in fortune for the now 46 year-old.
In that season’s World Championship, Hawkins produced the snooker of his career to reach the final, where he put up a commendable challenge in defeat to an unstoppable Ronnie O’Sullivan.
Hawkins subsequently reached the semi-finals another four times in five years, proving that his 2013 run was no fluke.
Although he has never lifted any of the triple crown trophies – completing the set of runner-up prizes at this season’s UK Championship – Hawkins has become a regular fixture among the higher echelons of the rankings.
7. Stephen Maguire – 20 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 0 = 0 | Ranking x 6 = 6 | WN2 = 2 |
SF x 2 = 4 | Masters x 0 = 0 | |
QF x 6 = 6 | Other: 5+ = 2 | TOTAL: 20 |
Stephen Maguire burst onto the scene in 2004 by winning the European Open before completely dismantling the UK Championship field to collect his one and only Triple Crown title.
These performances led Ronnie O’Sullivan to suggest at the time that Maguire could dominate the sport for the next decade.
Ironically, though, a series of high-profile defeats against the Rocket would set Maguire back and his potential has arguably been unfulfilled.
Maguire once claimed that he wanted to win in Sheffield before his 30th birthday. Now aged 44, that date has long since passed for the gritty Glaswegian.
The six-time ranking event winner has just two semi-final appearances at the Crucible to his name, a disappointing return considering the pedigree he once boasted.
Maguire has made 20 appearances at the Crucible and entered this year’s edition with some form after reaching the Welsh Open final, but he bowed out tamely in the qualifiers.
6. Ali Carter – 20 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 2 = 6 | Ranking x 6 = 6 | WN2 = 2 |
SF x 1 = 2 | Masters x 0 = 0 | |
QF x 3 = 3 | Other: 1+ = 1 | TOTAL: 20 |
Ali Carter’s career has been one of highs and lows, both on the baize and away from it.
The 45 year-old has been ranked as high as number two in the world, but he probably hasn’t garnered enough silverware to be considered alongside the greats or even nearly-greats.
Nonetheless, if it wasn’t for Ronnie O’Sullivan in 2008 and 2012, Carter could be a one or even two-time champion of the world.
The Captain, a five-time ranking event winner, is rarely shy of voicing his opinions and that kind of dogged mentality has served him well in the past.
Many would have felt as though his best years were behind him, but he has been able to regularly add to his trophy cabinet again in recent seasons.
Carter won the season-opening Championship League Snooker this term to take his career ranking tally to six, but he lost to O’Sullivan again in Sheffield this year.
For the full 2025 World Snooker Championship draw, results, and schedule, click here.
5. Matthew Stevens – 22 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 2 = 6 | Ranking x 1 = 1 | WN4 = 0 |
SF x 4 = 8 | Masters x 1 = 2 | |
QF x 3 = 3 | Other: 5+ = 2 | TOTAL: 22 |
Some people may forget just how good Matthew Stevens was around the turn of the millennium – in all the majors but particularly at the World Championship.
The Welshman exuded a swagger that showcased a wealth of talent at his disposal, but for whatever reason he could not translate this into sustained success.
Now 47, Stevens’ best years are behind him, but providing some consolation is the fact that two of his biggest victories came in the majors – the 2000 Masters and 2003 UK Championship.
That he couldn’t add a World Championship was down to a combination of unusually inspired play from his opponents and his own inability to get the job done.
He came closest in 2000 and 2005 when he held large leads over countryman Mark Williams and qualifier Shaun Murphy respectively, only to surrender in both finals 18-16.
Stevens lost to Wu Yize 10-9 on Judgement Day this year, and it seems highly unlikely at this stage that he’s ever going to escape from this group of bridesmaids.
4. Eddie Charlton – 25 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 2 = 6 | Ranking x 0 = 0 | WN3 = 1 |
SF x 6 = 12 | Masters x 0 = 0 | |
QF x 3 = 3 | Other: 10+ = 3 | TOTAL: 25 |
‘Steady Eddie’ is fourth in this list of players who never won a World Snooker Championship.
Eddie Charlton thrived in an era when snooker was just beginning its meteoric rise in the mainstream media.
The game was not open to as many players at that time, and it is questionable how well somebody of Charlton’s ability could have fared alongside today’s generation.
Yet, one can only play who is put in front of them, and Charlton’s consistency in the game at that time, and especially at the World Championship, speaks for itself.
In 1968, Charlton lost to John Pulman in a World Championship challenge match that won’t be counted here as it was before the modern era when knockout formats were adopted.
From 1969, he reached the semi-finals or better on eight occasions, contesting the final in 1973 and 1975.
While it took 61 frames to decide the latter, when he narrowly lost to Ray Reardon 31-30, the Australian’s greatest success in snooker actually came in the single-frame Pot Black tournament, which he prevailed in three times.
Charlton also has the unique recognition of moving up in the official world rankings list even after he had died, which, you know, is a pretty impressive achievement by itself.
3. Mark Allen – 26 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 0 = 0 | Ranking x 11 = 11 | WN1 = 3 |
SF x 2 = 4 | Masters x 1 = 2 | |
QF x 3 = 3 | Other: 10+ = 3 | TOTAL: 26 |
There is no escaping the fact that Mark Allen’s World Championship record is disappointing, the Pistol rising one place to third on this list in 2025.
After making a semi-final appearance at the Crucible in 2009, it took Allen another 14 years until he returned to the single table setup.
Only five quarter-final runs in total is a poor return for a player of his calibre, someone who has accumulated 11 ranking titles over the course of his career.
A former Masters and UK Championship winner, the Pistol finished the 2023/24 campaign as the sport’s world number one – becoming only the second player to boast the status without having won in Sheffield.
Allen produced a moment to remember with his unbelievable 147 maximum break against Chris Wakelin in the second round this year.
But losing 13-6 to the qualifier from England, it was another campaign that ended in disappointment for the Antrim man.
For the full 2025 World Snooker Championship draw, results, and schedule, click here.
2. Ding Junhui – 33 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 1 = 3 | Ranking x 15 = 15 | WN1 = 3 |
SF x 2 = 4 | Masters x 1 = 2 | |
QF x 3 = 3 | Other: 10+ = 3 | TOTAL: 33 |
For many, Ding Junhui ranks at the very top of the list when it comes to players who have never won the World Snooker Championship.
With 15 ranking event titles in total as well as a victory in the 2011 Masters, Ding is quite obviously the real deal, and it’s quite amazing that his enormous potential remains unfulfilled.
With the weight of expectation from tens of millions of Chinese fans on his shoulders, Ding’s frequent struggles with pressure have been understandable.
But by capturing three trophies in his homeland during the 2013/14 campaign, he seemed to have released an aura of invincibility.
A nightmare couple of seasons after that brought reality back into the equation, not least when he was forced to attend Ponds Forge to qualify for the World Championship in 2016 after dropping out of the top 16 in the world rankings.
But qualify with ease he did, duly embarking on his best ever run at the Crucible by reaching the final before being narrowly defeated 18-14 in a wonderful showdown with Mark Selby.
In recent years, the Chinese number one’s main problem has continued to be with consistency, although he did manage to break a five-year duck in ranking events this term with victory at the International Championship.
At 38, Ding still has some time on his side but will watch from the sidelines as countryman Zhao Xintong attempts to become the first player from China to win a world snooker title this weekend.
The player at number one on this list will testify that time doesn’t always yield the predicted accolades.
1. Jimmy White – 48 points
World Championship | Titles | Highest Ranking |
F x 6 = 18 | Ranking x 10 = 10 | WN2 = 2 |
SF x 4 = 8 | Masters x 1 = 2 | |
QF x 5 = 5 | Other: 10+ = 3 | TOTAL: 48 |
Burdened with being attributed the best player who never won the World Championship is of course Jimmy White, the People’s Champion.
Not many are unaware of the story of the Whirlwind, one of the most popular British sportsmen of all time. White’s career has been a glorious one.
He was the world amateur champion in 1980 before proceeding to collect ten ranking event titles and a bucket load of invitationals, including the Masters on home turf in London.
However, his legacy will forever be tainted by his unfortunate record at the Crucible. Six finals, six defeats.
That he put himself into position to contest this many – five in a row between 1990 and 1994 – is testament to how good a player he was.
Yet a mixture of bad fortune and poor preparation led to him never adding the holy grail to his glittering collection of accolades.
Some hurt more than others. He was the favourite to beat John Parrott in 1991 but never recovered from losing the opening seven frames, and the following year he was 14-8 up on regular rival Stephen Hendry, only to lose the next ten frames in a row.
Perhaps most agonising was his last notable chance in 1994, when on his birthday he missed a routine black off the spot in the decider at 17-17 to allow Hendry, the bane of his career for a fourth time, in for another crushing defeat.
White, always gracious, joked in the immediate aftermath that the Scot was “beginning to annoy me.”
Having just turned 63 and forever adored by his legion of fans, White still believes in his ability to mix it with the best in the world.
But he was defeated in the qualifiers again this year and he has failed to make it back to snooker’s mecca in every edition since 2006.
Featured photo credit: WST
I do enjoy this traditional roundup of the best none world champions and the transition to a statistical method certainly sums up the merits of the men. The “top 3” look nailed on by whatever method you would choose to use. Mark Allen may indeed end up remaining as a resident on this list unfortunately for him. To me he increasingly looks uncomfortable at the world championships, rather like Neil Robertson, with the obvious distinction that the thunder from down under did the business early in his career.
I don’t mind either format but in terms of a matter of opinion, Paul Hunter is easily inside the top ten. He won more Triple Crown events than anyone other than Ding that hasn’t won the world title. What he achieved in a tragically short career stands up pretty well when measured against a ten year period of the players featured.
My Top 10:
10. Eddie Charlton
9. Doug Mountjoy
8. Stephen Maguire
7. Barry Hawkins
6. Ali Carter
5. Paul Hunter
4. Matthew Stevens
3. Mark Allen
2. Ding Junhui
1. Jimmy White.
Mountjoy also won three Triple Crown events but the quality of their era has to be factored in, hence Charlton’s lower position compared to his number four placing in the Snooker HQ list. He also never won any really big events to with his impressive consistency at the worlds.