Quinten Hann
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Quinten Hann | |
---|---|
Born | 4 June 1977 |
Nationality | Australian |
Professional | 1995 – 2006 |
Highest ranking | 14 (2002 – 2004) |
Career winnings | £427,275[1] |
Highest break | 142 (1997) |
Best ranking finish | Last 16: World Snooker Championship (2002, 2003) |
Quinten Hann (born 4 June 1977) is a former Australian professional snooker player who now plays professional pool. He was the 1999 WEPF World Eight-ball Champion. Prior to his eight-year ban[2] in February 2006, he was one of the more temperamental players on the snooker circuit.
[edit] Snooker career
Hann was ranked in the top 16 for two seasons (2002-2003 and 2003-2004), ranked at #14 for both seasons. He has reached the quarter-finals of four ranking tournaments.
He missed several ranking events after breaking his wrist and collar bone whilst motorcycle racing in 1999.[3] He also broke his foot in a parachute jump in 2000, and was forced to play shoeless in the UK Championship.
Renowned for his volatile temper, Hann incurred the wrath of several other players throughout the course of his career. The first notable incidence of this occurred during the second round of the 2001 Grand Prix, where Hann repeatedly made offensive gestures towards both the spectators and his opponent, Anthony Hamilton. The latter showed no visible annoyance during the match itself, and went on to defeat Hann 5-3. In the post-match interview, however, the normally mild-mannered Hamilton was furious with his opponent, accusing him of bad sportsmanship and complaining not only about his behaviour towards the spectators but also his tactics. A number of times during the match Hann smashed the cue ball into the pack of reds at the beginning of each frame, spreading the reds over the table and consequently making breakbuilding difficult for both players, a tactic which was described by BBC commentator Clive Everton as bringing the sport into disrepute.[4] Although Hann later apologised to Hamilton for his behaviour in the match, he nevertheless continued to use this tactic to slow down faster opponents over the next couple of years.
More recently, in the 2004 World Championships, he was rebuked for making threatening comments to Andy Hicks[5] when he lost 10 – 4 to the unseeded outsider. After Hann had made offensive gestures and remarks throughout the match, Hicks commented at the end that the result would put Hann outside the top 16 (which it did). Following the acrimony over this defeat Hann challenged Hicks to a fight.[6] In the event fellow snooker player Mark King stood in for Hicks at a charity boxing match with Hann which the latter won.[7] Hann also fought Dublin GAA player, Johnny Magee, in a charity boxing match in Dublin in September 2004 after Hann suggested that Gaelic footballers were not as robust as Australia rules footballers; but he had his nose broken, with Magee winning in three rounds.[3]
In the 2005 World Championship Hann was forced to play with a new cue after his original cue was lost after the China Open earlier that year.[8] The original cue was eventually retrieved just before the World Championship but was found to be damaged and was therefore not usable. Having borrowed a friend's cue, he decided against practising, and instead went out drinking.[8] He played his first round match against Peter Ebdon hungover, and rather predictably lost the match by 10 frames to 2. When asked about the defeat to Ebdon, Hann said: "I played poorly, but to be honest, that wasn't because of the cue. I was planning to go out the night before the match, drink a couple of beers. When I found out my cue was missing, a couple of beers became a lot of beers." The fact that the first session was a morning session made it worse.
[edit] Departure from snooker
Hann is known in snooker for his "bad-boy" image, and in 2002 he was tried in the UK for allegedly raping a woman while both were intoxicated, but was acquitted.[9]
Hann was cleared of two further sex attacks on two women in 2005. The women accused Hann of behaving like a "crazed animal" and said that they thought they were going to die. One of them claimed that he repeatedly struck her, an accusation that Hann strongly denied explaining that his mother had taught him to never raise a hand to a woman.[10] Ultimately the case turned on the credibility of his accuser, which was undermined when it was admitted she had lied consistantly under oath throughout the trial.[11]
The day after his acquittal The Sun newspaper alleged that Hann had agreed to lose his opening match against Ken Doherty at the China Open in return for large amounts of money.[12] The story was held back so it would not prejudice the outcome of Hann's trial. A hearing at the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association was convened after the WPBSA panel was shown transcripts of video and audio footage of the meetings which took place between Hann and the undercover Sun journalists in March and April 2005.
On Tuesday 14th February 2006 he resigned from the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association, just a couple of days before he was due to attend the hearing. Hann did not attend and was found guilty in his absence. The newspaper did not go through with any agreement, but by agreeing to lose the game Hann was in breach of rule 2.8, which states "a member shall not directly or indirectly solicit, attempt to solicit or accept any payment or any form of remuneration of benefit in exchange for influencing the outcome of any game of snooker or billiards."
Hann was banned from snooker for 8 years and also fined £10,000.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ World Snooker profile
- ^ a b BBC: "Guilty Hann given eight-year ban", article on Hann's match-fixing and subsequent eight-year ban.
- ^ a b "Hann's controversial career seems over", article summarising Hann's life.
- ^ BBC: "High, wide and Hann-some", article discussing Hann's personality
- ^ BBC: "Bad-tempered Hann exits", Hann's loss in the 2004 World Championships.
- ^ BBC: "Hannbags at dawn", Hann challenging Andy Hicks to a boxing match during the 2004 World Championships.
- ^ BBC: "Hann triumphs in Pot Whack", Hann winning the boxing match with Mark King.
- ^ a b "Crucible Diary - Day Five", day five of the 2005 World Championship including Hann's borrowed cue and hangover.
- ^ BBC: "Snooker player cleared of rape", article on Hann's rape allegations. Dated 2 July 2002.
- ^ BBC:"Snooker ace cleared of sex attack", article detailing further sex attackers. Dated 9 Mar 2005.
- ^ BBC:"Snooker ace cleared of sex attack", article detailing further sex attackers. Dated 9 Mar 2005.
- ^ BBC: "Hann to face 'match-fixing' probe", Hann's match-fixing allegations.