Bi Zhu Qing
Chinese pool player
Born | (1988-09-06) 6 September 1988 (age 35) |
---|---|
Sport country | China |
Pool games | Nine-Ball, Ten-ball |
Tournament wins | |
World Champion | Nine-Ball (2011) |
Bi Zhu Qing (born 6 September 1988) is a professional pool and snooker player from China. She is best known as the winner of the WPA World Nine-ball Championship in 2011.[1]
Biography
Bi started playing snooker in 2005, taking up pool three years later, and was a member of Chinese government supported training programmes designed to manufacture winners.[2]
At her first world championship in 2010, Bi was ranked 81st in the world and had no notable pool tournament wins, so her victory, including a 9–7 defeat of Chen Siming in the final, was a surprising result.[2]
Tournament results
- 2007 Asian Indoor Games – Women's Snooker Champion
- 2007 IBSF World Under-21 Snooker Champion[3][4]
- 2009 Asian Indoor Games Six-red snooker singles – silver medal
- 2009 East Asian Games six-red snooker singles – silver medal
- 2010 Asian Games – Women's six-red snooker singles – bronze medal
- 2010 Asian Games – Women's six-red snooker team – silver medal
- 2011 WPA Women's World Nine-ball Champion – beat Chen Siming 9–7 in the final.[5]
References
- ^ World Champions Archived 16 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine World Pool-Billiard Association. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- ^ a b Lerner, Ted. "Eastern Risings". Billiards Digest. No. November 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
- ^ Turner, Chris (31 August 2009). "On This Week – Snooker". Eurosport. Archived from the original on 10 August 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
- ^ Past Champions Archived 2 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine IBSF. Retrieved 16 August 2019
- ^ Lerner, Ted (26 September 2011). "Bi-G Thing in a Small Package". World Pool-Billiard Association website. Archived from the original on 10 August 2019. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
External links
- Bi Zhu Qing at azbilliards.com
- v
- t
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World pool champions
(men's)
- 1990: Earl Strickland
- 1991: Earl Strickland
- 1992: Johnny Archer
- 1993: Chao Fong-pang
- 1994: Takeshi Okumura
- 1995: Oliver Ortmann
- 1996: Ralf Souquet
- 1997: Johnny Archer
- 1998: Kunihiko Takahashi
- 1999: Efren Reyes & Nick Varner
- 2000: Chao Fong-pang
- 2001: Mika Immonen
- 2002: Earl Strickland
- 2003: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2004: Alex Pagulayan
- 2005: Wu Chia-ching
- 2006: Ronato Alcano
- 2007: Daryl Peach
- 2010: Francisco Bustamante
- 2011: Yukio Akakariyama
- 2012: Darren Appleton
- 2013: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2014: Niels Feijen
- 2015: Ko Pin-yi
- 2016: Albin Ouschan
- 2017: Carlo Biado
- 2018: Joshua Filler
- 2019: Fedor Gorst
- 2021: Albin Ouschan
- 2022: Shane Van Boening
- 2023: Francisco Sanchez Ruiz
- 2024: Fedor Gorst
(women's)
- 1990: Robin Bell
- 1991: Robin Bell
- 1992: Franziska Stark
- 1993: Loree Jon Jones
- 1994: Ewa Laurance
- 1995: Gerda Hofstätter
- 1996: Allison Fisher
- 1997: Allison Fisher
- 1998: Allison Fisher
- 1999: Liu Hsin-mei
- 2000: Julie Kelly
- 2001: Allison Fisher
- 2002: Liu Hsin-mei
- 2004: Kim Ga-young
- 2006: Kim Ga-young
- 2007: Pan Xiaoting
- 2008: Lin Yuan-chun
- 2009: Liu Shasha
- 2010: Fu Xiaofang
- 2011: Bi Zhu Qing
- 2012: Kelly Fisher
- 2013: Han Yu
- 2014: Liu Shasha
- 2015: Liu Shasha
- 2016: Han Yu
- 2017: Chen Siming
- 2018: Han Yu
- 2019: Kelly Fisher
(champions)
- 2004: Efren Reyes
- 2005: Wu Chia-ching
- 2007: Ronato Alcano
- 2008: Ralf Souquet
- 2010: Karl Boyes
- 2011: Dennis Orcollo
- 2012: Chang Jung-Lin
- 2022: Francisco Sanchez Ruiz
- 2008: Darren Appleton
- 2009: Mika Immonen
- 2011: Huidji See
- 2015: Ko Pin-yi
- 2019: Ko Ping-chung
- 2021: Eklent Kaçi
- 2022: Wojciech Szewczyk
- 2023: Eklent Kaçi
- 2024: Carlo Biado
- 2006: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2007: Oliver Ortmann
- 2008: Niels Feijen
- 2009: Stephan Cohen
- 2010: Oliver Ortmann
- 2011: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2012: John Schmidt
- 2013: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2014: Darren Appleton
- 2015: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2016: Mika Immonen
- 2017: Lee Vann Corteza
- 2018: Thorsten Hohmann
- 2019: Shane Van Boening
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