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Bai Yulu

Bai Yulu (Chinese: 白雨露; born 10 July 2003) is a Chinese professional snooker player who competes both on the World Women's Snooker Tour and the main World Snooker Tour. She is a two-time World Women's Champion and a former women's world number one.


Column 1Column 2Column 3Column 4
Bai in 2025
(2003-07-10) 10 July 2003Weinan, China
China
2024–present
World Snooker Tour: 88 (July 2025)World Women's Snooker: 1
104 (as of 5 May 2026)
Last 48 (2024 UK Championship)
2025 ChengduSix-red singles
2025 ChengduSix-red singles

Bai Yulu (Chinese: 白雨露; born 10 July 2003) is a Chinese professional snooker player who competes both on the World Women's Snooker Tour and the main World Snooker Tour. She is a two-time World Women's Champion and a former women's world number one.

A former world junior champion, Bai made her debut on the World Women's Snooker tour at the 2023 World Women's Snooker Championship, where she finished runner-up to Baipat Siripaporn. She defeated Mink Nutcharut to win the 2024 final, becoming the first World Women's Champion from mainland China. She defeated Nutcharut again in the 2025 final to retain her title, becoming the seventh multiple World Women's Champion. She is also a two-time winner of the UK Women's Snooker Championship, having claimed the title in 2024 and 2025. She reached number one in the women's world rankings for the first time in January 2026, becoming the third Asian player to attain that position. She has won a total of eight ranking titles on the World Women's Snooker Tour.

As the reigning World Women's Champion, Bai received a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season. In the 2024 UK Championship qualifiers, she became the first female player to win three matches at a professional ranking event. At the 2025 International Championship, she made a 145 break, the highest ever recorded by a female player in professional competition.

Bai Yulu was born in Weinan, Shaanxi. Her parents went to work in Dongguan, Guangdong when she was a child. After she started school, she moved to Dongguan to live with her parents.

At 15, Bai won the 2018 Asian Women's Snooker Invitational Championship in Hong Kong, defeating Ng On-yee in the final. Bai won the women's 2019 IBSF World Under-21 Snooker Championship in Qingdao with a 4–0 victory over Mink Nutcharut in the final. She celebrated her 16th birthday during the tournament. She reached the quarter-finals of the 2019 IBSF Women's World Snooker Championship, making the three highest breaks of the event: 91, 81 and 78. Accompanied by her mother, as she was unable as a 16-year-old to travel alone, she competed in the 2019 Hong Kong World Women's Masters, where she lost 1–4 to Rebecca Kenna in the final.

In 2023, she made her World Women's Snooker Tour debut at the World Women's Snooker Championship in Bangkok, Thailand. She made a 127 break in her group match against Amee Kamani, the highest break in the tournament's history, surpassing Kelly Fisher's 125 at the 2003 event. She defeated 12-time champion Reanne Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, but lost the final 3–6 to Baipat Siripaporn. She won her first women's ranking title at the British Women's Open, defeating Evans 4–3 in the final. She also captured the titles of Asian Women's Championship and IBSF World Women's Snooker Championship in the same year.

The 2024 World Women's Snooker Championship was the first edition of the tournament to be staged in China. After coming from 0–3 behind to defeat Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, Bai secured her first women's world title with a 6–5 victory over Mink in the final. Her 122 break in the final was the highest of the tournament and the highest ever made in a women's world final. Winning the world women's title secured Bai a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season. She also won the concurrent 2024 World Women's Under-21 Snooker Championship, defeating Narucha Phoemphul 3–0 in the final.

Bai became the first woman since Kelly Fisher in 1999 to win back-to-back matches at a ranking event when she defeated Farakh Ajaib and then Jamie Jones in the qualifying rounds for the 2024 UK Championship. She then became the first female player to register three wins at a ranking event by beating Scott Donaldson in the next round in a match which went to a final frame decider. Bai lost in the fourth round to Jack Lisowski 6‍–‍1, falling just short of making the televised stages.

At the 2025 World Women's Snooker Championship, Bai won her second consecutive world title. She defeated Mink 6‍–‍4 in the final, and became the seventh woman to win multiple world titles. In August, Bai competed at the World Games in the women's six red event rather than entering the 2025 Saudi Arabia Snooker Masters. She won the event by defeating Narucha Phoemphul of Thailand 2–0 in the final.

In January 2026, she won the WSF Women's Championship held in Sofia to reach the number one spot in the world women's rankings for the first time in her career.

Tournament2023/242024/252025/26
Ranking88
Ranking tournaments
Championship LeagueAWDRR
Saudi Arabia MastersNH1RA
Wuhan OpenLQLQLQ
English OpenALQLQ
British OpenALQ1R
Xi'an Grand PrixNHLQLQ
Northern Ireland OpenALQLQ
International ChampionshipLQLQLQ
UK ChampionshipALQLQ
Shoot OutA2R2R
Scottish OpenALQLQ
German MastersALQLQ
World Grand PrixDNQDNQDNQ
Players ChampionshipDNQDNQDNQ
Welsh OpenAWDLQ
World OpenALQLQ
Tour ChampionshipDNQDNQDNQ
World ChampionshipLQLQLQ
Non-ranking tournaments
Shanghai Masters1RDNQDNQ
Champion of ChampionsDNQ1R1R
Performance Table Legend
LQlost in the qualifying draw#Rlost in the early rounds of the tournament(WR = Wildcard round, RR = Round robin)QFlost in the quarter-finals
SFlost in the semi-finalsFlost in the finalWwon the tournament
DNQdid not qualify for the tournamentAdid not participate in the tournamentWDwithdrew from the tournament
Column 1Column 2
NH / Not Heldmeans an event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was a ranking event.
MR / Minor-Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was a minor-ranking event.
Tournament2022/232023/242024/252025/26
Current tournaments
UK ChampionshipAFWW
Australian OpenAAAA
Niche Cues OpenNot HeldW
Irish OpenNot HeldW
WSF Women's ChampionshipNot HeldFW
Belgian OpenAAASF
British OpenWAQFF
World ChampionshipFWWQF
Former tournaments
Albanian OpenNHSFNot Held
MastersAASFNH
US OpenAAANH
Performance Table Legend
LQlost in the qualifying draw#Rlost in the early rounds of the tournament(WR = Wildcard round, RR = Round robin)QFlost in the quarter-finals
SFlost in the semi-finalsFlost in the finalWwon the tournament
DNQdid not qualify for the tournamentAdid not participate in the tournamentWDwithdrew from the tournament
Column 1Column 2
NH / Not Heldmeans an event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Eventmeans an event is/was a ranking event.
Legend
Women's World Championship (2–1)
Women's UK Championship (2–1)
Others (4–2)
OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScoreRef.
Runner-up1.2023Women's World ChampionshipBaipat Siripaporn (THA)3–6
Winner1.2023Women's British OpenReanne Evans (ENG)4–3
Runner-up2.2023Women's UK ChampionshipReanne Evans (ENG)1–4
Winner2.2024Women's World ChampionshipMink Nutcharut (THA)6–5
Winner3.2024Women's UK ChampionshipReanne Evans (ENG)4–0
Runner-up3.2025WSF Women’s ChampionshipMink Nutcharut (THA)3–4
Winner4.2025Women's World ChampionshipMink Nutcharut (THA)6–4
Winner5.2025Women's UK ChampionshipNg On-yee (HKG)4–2
Winner6.2025Niche Cues Women’s OpenNg On-yee (HKG)5–1
Winner7.2025Irish Women’s OpenMink Nutcharut (THA)4–2
Winner8.2026WSF Women’s ChampionshipNg On-yee (HKG)4–0
Runner-up4.2026Women's British OpenNg On-yee (HKG)2–4
OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScoreRef.
Runner-up1.2018IBSF World Under-21 Women's ChampionshipMink Nutcharut (THA)2–4
Runner-up2.2019ACBS Asian Women's ChampionshipNg On-yee (HKG)2–3
Winner1.2019IBSF World Under-21 Women's ChampionshipMink Nutcharut (THA)4–0
Winner2.2023ACBS Asian Women's ChampionshipPanchaya Channoi (THA)3–0
Winner3.2023IBSF Women's World ChampionshipNg On-yee (HKG)4–0
Winner4.2025World Games Women's Six-red SnookerNarucha Phoemphul (THA)2–0
  • Bai Yulu at World Women's Snooker
  • Bai Yulu at WPBSA
  • Bai Yulu at the World Snooker Tour
  • Bai Yulu at Snooker.org
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