Irish Amateur Championship (snooker)

Irish Amateur Championship
Tournament information
Venue Ivy Room
Location Carlow
Country Ireland
Established 1927
Organisation(s) Republic Of Ireland Billiards & Snooker Association
Format Amateur event
Recent edition 2014
Current champion(s) Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden

The Irish Amateur Championship (occasionally known as the Irish National Championship) is an annual snooker competition played in Ireland and is the highest ranking amateur event in Ireland.

The competition was first established back in 1927 which was won by T.H. Fayrey. The championship is currently held by Martin McCrudden who has won the tournament 4 times and is now the most successful player in the modern era.

Many former champions have gone on to play on the world tour such as Colm Gilcreest, David Morris, Vincent Muldoon, Brendan O'Donoghue, Rodney Goggins and most noticeably Ken Doherty who won the compition in 1987 and 1989 and would go on to become the only former champion to win the World Snooker Championship in 1997 ending Stephen Hendry's run of 5 consecutive World Championship wins.

Currently only former champions Ken Doherty and David Morris are currently playing on the world tour.

Winners

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

[1][2]

Year Winner Runner-up Final score
Amateur event
1988 Republic of Ireland John Buckley Republic of Ireland Stephen Murphy 8–7
1989 Republic of Ireland Ken Doherty Republic of Ireland Anthony O'Connor 8–5
1990 Republic of Ireland Stephen O'Connor Republic of Ireland Richie McHugh 8–7
1991 Republic of Ireland Jason Watson Republic of Ireland Joe Canny 8–5
1992 Republic of Ireland Jason Watson Republic of Ireland Douglas Hogan 8–3
1993 Republic of Ireland Colm Gilcreest Republic of Ireland Jason Watson 8–7
1994 Republic of Ireland Mick Kane Republic of Ireland Tom Gleeson 8–4
1995 Republic of Ireland Tom Gleeson Republic of Ireland Paul Ennis 8–5
1996 Republic of Ireland Joe Canny Republic of Ireland Shay Clinton 8–1
1997 Republic of Ireland TJ Dowling Republic of Ireland Garry Hardiman 8–6
1998 Republic of Ireland TJ Dowling Republic of Ireland Douglas Hogan 8–3
1999 Republic of Ireland Joe Canny Republic of Ireland Stanley Murphy 8–3
2000 Republic of Ireland Rodney Goggins Republic of Ireland Garry Hardiman 8–7
2001[3] Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden Republic of Ireland Brendan O'Donoghue 8–5
2002 Republic of Ireland Jason Watson Republic of Ireland Tom Gleeson 8–2
2003 Republic of Ireland Brendan O'Donoghue Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden 8–5
2004 Republic of Ireland David Morris Republic of Ireland Rodney Goggins 8–4
2005 Republic of Ireland David Morris Republic of Ireland Brendan O'Donoghue 8–2
2006 Republic of Ireland David Morris Republic of Ireland Brendan O'Donoghue 8–2
2007 Republic of Ireland Vincent Muldoon Republic of Ireland John Torpey 8–2
2008 Republic of Ireland Vincent Muldoon Republic of Ireland Garry Hardiman 8–4
2009 Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden Republic of Ireland David Hogan 8–6
2010 Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden Republic of Ireland Vincent Muldoon 8–6
2011[4] Republic of Ireland Jason Devaney Republic of Ireland David Hogan 8–6
2012[5] Republic of Ireland Vincent Muldoon Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden 10–5
2013[6] Republic of Ireland Michael Judge Republic of Ireland Robert Redmond 8–5
2014[7] Republic of Ireland Martin McCrudden Republic of Ireland Michael Judge 7–3

References

  1. "Irish Amateur Championship History". ribsa.ie. Republic Of Ireland Billiards & Snooker Association. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  2. May 2014 "Rep. of Irl. Snooker C/Ship.". Cork Billiards & Snooker. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
  3. "McCrudden takes snooker championship title". RTE. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  4. "Devaney creates Irish snooker history". RTE. Retrieved 23 May 2011.
  5. "Muldoon Wraps up Season with Irish Championship". snookerhq.com. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  6. "Irish Scene: Judge Wins National Championship". snookerhq.com. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  7. "McCrudden Lands Fourth National Title". snookerhq.com. Retrieved 25 May 2014.