1985 World Snooker Championship final

The 1985 World Snooker Championship final, also known as the black ball final, was a snooker match played on the weekend of 27–28 April 1985 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England. The match, which was the final of the 1985 World Snooker Championship, was between defending world champion Steve Davis and 1979 runner-up Dennis Taylor. It was Davis' fourth appearance in a final, and Taylor's second. The best-of-35-frame match was split into four sessions. Davis won every frame in the first session to lead 7–0, but only led 9–7 and 13–11 after the second and third sessions. Taylor was never ahead in the match, but tied the match at 17–17. The deciding frame culminated over several shots on the final ball – the black. Taylor potted the ball to win his only world championship. Media outlets reported this as a major shock; Davis had been widely predicted to win the match, having won three of the previous four world championships.

Statistics prior to the final:
Statistic Steve Davis Dennis Taylor
Photo
Pictured in 2010
Pictured in 2004
Nationality English Northern Irish
Best Finish Winner in 1981, 1983 and 1984 Runner-up in 1979
World ranking 1 11
Referee Referee: John Williams

The final took place during the eighth year of the BBC's daily coverage of the championship, and climaxed in the early hours of Monday 29 April. It was viewed by 18.5 million people in the United Kingdom, which as of 2021 remains a record viewing figure for BBC2, and as of 2020 is still the record for a post-midnight audience for any British television channel. The total match time of 14 hours and 50 minutes is the longest ever recorded for a best-of-35 frames match.

The match is one of the most famous snooker matches of all time and part of the reason for the surge in the sport's popularity in the 1980s and 1990s. The match contained no century breaks, the only final at the venue not to receive one. Two hour-long BBC documentaries: When Snooker Ruled the World from 2002 and Davis v Taylor: The '85 Black Ball Final made in 2010 commemorated the event. The final frame was released in full on home video as "The Greatest Snooker Final of All Time". The post-match single word responses to the press from Davis would later be used as a basis for a reoccurring character for television show Spitting Image.

Background

The World Snooker Championship is a professional snooker tournament; first held in 1927, and becoming an annual event in 1969.[1][2][3] The 1985 World Snooker Championship final was the culmination of the last world ranking event of the 1984–85 snooker season. The tournament featured a 32-participant main draw, with 16 seeded players and 16 players from a pre-tournament qualification competition.[4] Matches at the event were played as over a series of frames, with the final held as the best-of-35 frames over four sessions.[5][6] The final was broadcast on the BBC for the eighth year in a row,[7] with the winner receiving £60,000 (equivalent to £183,126 in 2019), the highest prize for a snooker event to that date.[8]

Road to the final

Steve Davis, ranked as the world number one, overcame Neal Foulds 10–8 in the opening round in what was Davis's closest match until the final.[9] He then played David Taylor in the second round, holding at least a three-frame lead throughout much of the match, and eventually won 13–4 after winning seven frames out of eight.[9][10] Davis trailed for the first time at the event in the quarter-finals, as he played Terry Griffiths. Griffiths won the first four frames, but Davis won the next four to tie the match 4–4.[11] With the scores even, Davis won six of the next eight to lead 10–6 after the second session and eventually won 13–6.[12][13] In the semi-final, Davis required just three of the four scheduled sessions to overcome Ray Reardon 16–5.[14][15]

Dennis Taylor, ranked 11,[16] led Silvino Francisco 8–1 in the opening session, and won the match 10–2.[17][18] In the second round, Taylor played Eddie Charlton where he won 13–6.[19] Taylor played Cliff Thorburn in the quarter-finals, in a match full of slow play.[11] He led 10–5 after an over nine-hour second session, but won the first three frames in the final session to win 13–5.[13] In the semi-final Taylor lost the first two frames against Tony Knowles, but won 16 of the next 19 to win 16–5, the same score line as Davis.[15][20]

Previous round scores[19]
Round Steve Davis Dennis Taylor
Opponent Result Opponent Result
First round  Neal Foulds (England) 10–8  Silvino Francisco (South Africa) 10–2
Second round  David Taylor (England) 13–4  Eddie Charlton (Australia) 13–6
Quarter-finals  Terry Griffiths (Wales) 13–6  Cliff Thorburn (Canada) 13–6
Semi-finals  Ray Reardon (Wales) 16–5  Tony Knowles (England) 16–5

Match report

The final was played on 27–28 April 1985 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England.[21] Davis went into the tournament as the defending champion.[22] The two players had met twelve months earlier in the semi-finals of the 1984 World Championship, with Davis winning 16–9.[23][24] Davis was competing in his fourth world championship final, having reached the final and won in 1981, 1983 and 1984.[22] Taylor was contesting his second final, having lost to Terry Griffiths 16–24 in 1979.[25][26]

Taylor started the 1985 final with a break of 50, but Davis gained a firm advantage by whitewashing Taylor in the first session and also winning the first frame of the second session to lead 8–0.[21] However, Taylor won the ninth frame on the pink ball after Davis missed a pot on the green ball.[27] Davis lost six of the next seven frames, as Taylor produced the highest break of the final, a 98, to trail 7–9 overnight.[21][28] Davis won two of the first three frames on the second day, to lead 11–8, before Taylor tied the match at 11–11.[21][28] Davis took both of the next two frames on the final black ball to lead 13–11.[21] Taylor, however, won four of the next six again drew level at 15–15.[28] Davis won the next two frames to regain the lead at 17–15.[28] Taylor then won a closely fought 33rd frame, followed by a 57 break in frame 34, to level the match at 17–17 and force a deciding frame.[21]

The final frame

The 35th frame was the last of the final, and lasted 68 minutes.[21][28] Davis led 62–44, with only the last four coloured balls on the table, worth 22 points.[28] Taylor potted the brown ball along much of the length of the table, and then the blue ball with a slowly played cut. He then pocketed the pink ball from the side cushion.[29] This left Taylor trailing 59–62 with only the black ball, worth seven points, remaining.[29]

Taylor attempted a double into the left middle pocket. The shot missed, but the ball rebounded to a safe position at the top of the table. Davis then played a safety shot, putting the black near the middle of the baulk cushion and leaving the cue ball near the right-hand cushion, a little above the corner pocket.[27] In response, Taylor again attempted to double the black ball, this time into the top-left corner pocket. The black missed but eventually landed above the left middle pocket to a safe position.[27]

Davis's next attempt double-kissed and left Taylor with a middle-distance pot to the corner pocket.[27] However, Taylor missed the pot, which commentator Jim Meadowcroft described as "biggest shot of his life".[30] This left Davis a thin cut shot in the top left corner. He missed the shot, and left the black in a potable position into the same pocket. Taylor made his way to the table and potted the black to win the match.[27] The final finished at 12:23 a.m. on 29 April 1985.[27][29]

After potting the ball, Taylor held his cue stick above his head, and waggled his finger in celebration.[21] In a post match interview with David Vine, Davis commented that the loss was "all there in black and white",[27] while Taylor commented that the match was "the greatest that [Taylor] had been involved with".[31] Taylor cited defeating Thorburn, whom he described as the "hardest player in the world", and Davis, whom he described as the "best player in the world".[31] Taylor, however, claimed that he was "the best in the world this year."[31]

Match statistics

The scores for the match are shown below. Scores in parentheses denote player breaks, while frames won are denoted by bold text and .[8][32][33]

Final: (Best of 35 frames) Crucible Theatre, Sheffield, 27 & 28 April. Referee: John Williams[34]
Steve Davis (1)
 England
17–18 Dennis Taylor (11)
 Northern Ireland
Players Session 1: 7–0
Frame 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Davis 88 93 (87) 49 65 95 (55) 85 (66) 83 (58) N/A N/A N/A N/A
Taylor 50 (50) 0 2 38 1 6 20 N/A N/A N/A N/A
Players Session 2: 2–7 (9–7)
Frame 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Davis 121 (64, 57) 49 76 (57) 48 27 19 1 0 48 N/A N/A
Taylor 0 59 27 63 75 (61) 99 (98) 71 (70) 100 (56) 77 N/A N/A
Players Session 3: 4–4 (13–11)
Frame 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Davis 25 72 66 45 2 1 64 58 N/A N/A N/A
Taylor 68 (53) 43 58 80 73 (57) 80 (55) 56 46 N/A N/A N/A
Players Session 4: 4–7 (17–18)
Frame 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Davis 86 (86) 43 78 (66) 29 4 29 66 81 47 24 62
Taylor 13 82 (61) 17 84 (70) 72 (57) 83 (79) 6 0 75 71 (57) 66
87 Highest break 98
0 Century breaks 0
12 50+ breaks 10
Dennis Taylor wins the 1985 Embassy World Snooker Championship


= Winner of frame

Legacy

The final is often considered one of the most famous snooker matches of all time by players and fans.[35][36][37] The match holds several records. The final is the longest match ever held over the length of 35 frames at 14 hours and 50 minutes.[21] The concluding moments of the final were watched by 18.5 million viewers, as of 2020 the most ever in the United Kingdom for a broadcast after midnight and for any BBC2 programme.[16][21] Davis also lost the following year's final to Joe Johnson 12–18.[38] He would, however, win the subsequent three championships between 1987 and 1989, winning the event six times in total.[39] Davis and Taylor met on one further occasion, in the quarter-final of the 1991 World Snooker Championship, with Davis winning comfortably 13–7.[40] Taylor never reached the final again,[39] but did win the Masters in 1987, again producing a comeback, this time against Alex Higgins.[41]

On his return to Northern Ireland, Taylor received a victory parade in a Land Rover across his home town of Coalisland in front of 10,000 people.[42] He was loaned mayoral robes on the day of the parade, and was accompanied by his wife and three children.[42] He later signed a five-year contract with promoter Barry Hearn as his manager.[43] The media described Davis as a "bad loser" for his silence and one-word responses to questions from David Vine at a press conference following the event.[9][16] This was later used as the basis for a recurring character on television show Spitting Image, based on Davis.[9]

Some months after the 1985 World Championship, a special programme was recorded in which both players watched the entire frame and discussed it shot by shot.[44] For the penultimate shot, where Davis missed the a cut into the corner pocket, he stated "I was saying to myself, don't hit it thick" and "that's how you bottle it, by hitting it thick." He summarised: "although I missed the black, it wasn't that shot which lost the match. There were other shots earlier in the frame." In particular, Davis mentions how close he was to being able to pot a pink which he suggested changed the course of the match.[44] The programme was later released on DVD as "The Greatest Snooker Final of All Time" by Retro Videos. The black-ball finish was voted the ninth greatest sporting moment of all time in a 2002 Channel 4 poll.[45][46]

During the 2010 World Championship, Taylor and Davis 're-created' the final frame of the 1985 final. Performed in a distinctly irreverent manner, the "rerun" was noticeable for the fact that in attempting to replicate the missed shots on the final black, they instead ended up potting it on all but one attempt. The one attempt on the black they missed was the shot Taylor potted in the 1985 match to win the championship.[47] BBC Two aired a one-hour documentary on the final, Davis v Taylor: The '85 Black Ball Final, presented by Colin Murray, after the conclusion of the coverage of the 2010 final.[48]

References

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