Kuwait Times

Yan Bingtao: China snooker prodigy whose family risked it all

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SHANGHAI: Yan Bingtao has risen from a poor working-class background and playing to support his cancer-stricken mother to become China’s latest sporting prodigy. The 20-year-old snooker star stunned four-time world champion John Higgins 108 to claim the prestigiou­s Masters title on Sunday at England’s Milton Keynes, becoming the tournament’s youngest winner in 26 years.

It was world number 11 Yan’s first major title and he is just a year older than Ronnie O’Sullivan was in 1995 when he won the Masters at 19, also beating Higgins. “I’ll be very surprised if he doesn’t win at least one or two world titles,” O’Sullivan, a six-time world champion, told Eurosport.

Nicknamed “The Chinese Tiger”, Yan’s roaring triumph in his Masters debut is the culminatio­n of a long struggle which at times seemed destined to end in a heartbreak­ing whimper. He was born in Zibo, in China’s eastern province of Shandong, on February 16, 2000 and his first taste of holding a cue was on a rickety outdoor billiards table when he was seven years old.

“I remember that it was uneven, there were leaves in the corners and the white ball went in a strange way,” the state-run People’s Daily quoted him as saying last year. But Yan had talent and hoping that his boy had a future in the sport, his father Yan Dong quit his job at a pharmaceut­ical factory.

Against the advice of friends and family, the pair left home and Yan quit school aged eight or nine so they could pursue his

snooker dreams in Beijing. “To save money my father and I rented a room in the suburbs with just a bed and desk, costing 280 yuan ($45) a month,” Yan said, comments that were widely regurgitat­ed following his Masters feat.

They could not afford heating and it was so cold that they wore their coats indoors, Yan once told Chinese media. Father and son struggled to make ends meet and they admitted defeat, returning home to Zibo.

According to some accounts, the family sold most of their possession­s to fund Yan’s career. In 2013 they were plunged into crisis when Yan’s mother, the family breadwinne­r, was diagnosed with rectal cancer and needed an operation. Earning the money to fund his mother’s recovery motivated him to enter “more and more” tournament­s, the People’s Daily said.

‘Never give up’

At 13, with his reputation on the rise, Yan began competing as a wildcard at profession­al events. A year later, in 2014, Yan became the youngest winner of the World Amateur Snooker Championsh­ip. He has been on a sharp upward trajectory since, turning profession­al in 2015, moving to England to further his career and capturing his first ranking title in Riga, Latvia in 2019.

Sheffield-based Yan collected £250,000 ($340,000) with his Masters triumph — the biggest payday of his fledgling career — and is widely praised for his dedication and hard work. He is prime among a number of upcoming Chinese players and touted in domestic media as the successor to 33-year-old Ding Junhui, who has long been the country’s best player and an inspiratio­n to Yan.

 ?? — AFP ?? BANGALORE: This file photo taken on November 29, 2014 shows China’s Yan Bingtao playing a shot against Pakistan cueist Mohammad Sajjad during the men’s finals of the IBSF World Snooker Championsh­ip in Bangalore, India.
— AFP BANGALORE: This file photo taken on November 29, 2014 shows China’s Yan Bingtao playing a shot against Pakistan cueist Mohammad Sajjad during the men’s finals of the IBSF World Snooker Championsh­ip in Bangalore, India.

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