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Tom Ford (snooker player)

Former English professional snooker player


Former English professional snooker player

FieldValue
nameTom Ford
imageTom Ford PHC 2016-1.jpg
captionFord at the 2016 Paul Hunter Classic
birth_date
birth_placeLeicester, England
Sport country
Professional2001–02, 2003–present
High ranking13 (May 2024)
Official maximums5
Ranking wins1
Minor wins2

Tom Ford (born 17 August 1983) is an English professional snooker player from Leicester. Turning professional in 2001, Ford won his first ranking event at the 2024 Snooker Shoot Out. Ford has reached three further ranking finals - the 2016 Paul Hunter Classic, the 2023 German Masters and the 2023 International Championship.

Ford has compiled five maximum breaks in competitive play, and over 300 breaks.

Career

Early years

As a junior, Ford played against Mark Selby frequently. He began his professional career by playing the Challenge Tour in 2001, at the time the second-level professional tour. His first quarter-final came at the 2005 Malta Cup where he beat Ken Doherty, but eventually lost to Stephen Hendry. In the 2007 Grand Prix, he made a 147 against Steve Davis, after having just come out of hospital suffering from gastroenteritis, but still missed out on the last 16, eventually finishing 3rd in his group. He secured the high break and maximum prize, but this event was not televised. In the last 32 of the 2007 Northern Ireland Trophy he held Ronnie O'Sullivan to 4–4, before missing the final blue, allowing O'Sullivan to clinch the frame. Ford made his World Championship debut in 2010, after beating Judd Trump 10–3 in the final qualifying round. He played Mark Allen in the first round, where he lost 4–10.

2010/2011

Early in the season Ford won his first professional title, Event 3 of the Players Tour Championship, beating Jack Lisowski 4–0 in the final while working with sports mentor Matt Andrews. Ford failed to qualify for the main draws of both the Shanghai Masters and the World Open, but did beat Tony Drago and Gerard Greene to reach the Last 32 of the UK Championship. He was drawn against Mark Allen and lost 5–9. Ford did not qualify for the final stages of any other ranking event for the season after losing 8–10 to Liu Chuang in Round 4 of qualifying for the World Championship.

2011/2012

The first world ranking event of the season was the inaugural Australian Goldfields Open, where Ford reached the final stages by beating Gerard Greene. He then beat world number 15 Jamie Cope 5–3 before being whitewashed 0–5 by eventual winner Stuart Bingham in the last 16. He made it through to his third successive UK Championship main draw where he played former world champion Neil Robertson, but was comfortably beaten 1–6. Ford won his second PTC title at Event 11 in December by defeating Martin Gould 4–3. He finished twelfth in the Order of Merit to qualify for the 2012 Finals, where he lost to Mark Davis 1–4 in the last 24. He then qualified for the wildcard round of the German Masters with a 5–0 whitewash of Anthony Hamilton and beat Irishman Philip Arnold 5–1 to reach the last 32, where he met Mark Allen. Ford held a 3–0 lead, but went on to lose the match 4–5. He qualified for the Welsh Open and beat Graeme Dott 4–2 in the opening round, before losing to Stephen Lee 1–4. Ford also reached the second round of the World Open, thanks to the withdrawal of Ronnie O'Sullivan, but exited the tournament in a final frame decider versus Mark King. He then lost to Lee again, this time in the first round of the China Open, before failing to qualify for the World Championship after being edged out 9–10 by Cao Yupeng. Ford finished the season ranked world number 26, meaning he had risen eight places during the year.

2012/2013

Ford qualified for six ranking events during the 2012–13 season. Out of those he lost in the first round in three and in the second round of both the Australian Goldfields Open and Welsh Open to Shaun Murphy 1–5 and Ken Doherty 3–4 respectively. He couldn't qualify for the Players Tour Championship Finals through the Order of Merit as he finished 46th, but he did play in all three of the new Asian PTC's. His best result came in the Third Event, where he lost 3–4 in the semi-finals to Stuart Bingham. Ford finished sixth on the Asian Order of Merit, inside the top eight who qualified for the Finals. It was at the Finals that Ford had his best run in a ranking event of his career. He saw off Martin Gould 4–2, Jack Lisowski 4–3 and Marco Fu 4–1 to advance to the semi-finals. His nerves showed early on against Neil Robertson as he fell 0–3 down, but composed himself to level at 3–3. Ford had three chances to win the deciding frame, but left Robertson a chance when escaping a snooker to lose 3–4. Ford ended the season ranked world number 24.

2013/2014

At the 2013 Australian Goldfields Open Ford reached the quarter-finals of a ranking event for the third time in his career by beating Ryan Day and Barry Hawkins, before losing 3–5 to Robert Milkins. He won through to the second round of both the Indian Open and Welsh Open but was eliminated by Stephen Maguire and James Wattana respectively. Ford defeated James Cahill 10–6, Luca Brecel 10–1 and Matthew Stevens 10–8 to qualify for the World Championship for the second time. He rallied from 6–2 down in the first round against Judd Trump to level at 8–8, before losing two successive frames to exit the tournament.

2014/2015

Ford qualified for the Australian Goldfields Open for the fourth year in a row and lost 3–5 to John Higgins in the first round. He had five defeats in a row after this until beating Barry Pinches 6–4 in the opening round of the UK Championship, his first win in the event after six prior losses. Ford was beaten 3–6 by Joel Walker in the second round. He had a resurgence of form at the Asian Tour event, the Xuzhou Open by knocking out five players to reach the semi-finals, where he lost the last two frames in a 3–4 defeat to Joe Perry. Ford entered the qualifying rounds of the World Championship needing wins to ensure his survival on the tour as he was close to ending the season outside the top 64 in the world rankings. He did so by seeing off Andrew Norman 10–2 and David Gilbert 10–8 to meet Matthew Selt in the final round, where he lost 8–10. Ford ended up 59th in the world rankings, a drop of 27 places during the year.

2015/2016

Ford began the 2015–16 season by reaching the third final carrying ranking points of his career after overcoming the likes of Joe Perry, Matthew Selt and Ben Woollaston at the Riga Open. Ford won the first frame against Barry Hawkins, but could not capture another to be beaten 1–4. At the UK Championship, he defeated Scott Donaldson 6–1 and then beat Mark Williams for the first time by recovering from 3–5 down to win 6–5. He followed that up by easing past Kyren Wilson 6–1, but accused his opponent Liang Wenbo of boring him off the table in the fourth round after it was Ford who lost 5–6 having been 5–3 up. Ford failed to build upon this during the rest of the season as he could not get beyond the second round of any ranking event. However, he was able to build on his world ranking to finish as the world number 43, an increase of 16 spots during the year.

2016/2017

A 4–1 victory over Jamie Jones at the Paul Hunter Classic saw Ford reach the second ranking event semi-final of his career and he beat Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 4–2, closing the match with a 136 break. In Ford's first ranking event final he was 2–2 with Mark Selby, before his fellow Leicester player knocked in two 50 plus breaks to defeat Ford 4–2. At the English Open he beat Rory McLeod, Marco Fu and Joe Swail all by 4–2 scorelines, before losing 1–4 to John Higgins. Ford qualified for the German Masters by ousting Judd Trump 5–1 and then made a 147 in a first round 5–2 win over Peter Ebdon. He saw off Mark King 5–2, but then lost 2–5 to Ali Carter in the quarter-finals. Ford qualified for his third World Championship courtesy of victories over Jamie Bodle, Chris Wakelin and Hossein Vafaei. From holding a narrow 2–1 advantage over Barry Hawkins in the first round, Ford was eliminated 3–10.

2020-Present

At the 2022 UK Championship, Ford reached the semi-final where he lost 36 to Ding Junhui. Ford beat Ricky Walden 106 in the first round of the 2024 World Championship, but was then defeated 713 by Judd Trump in the second round. In December 2024, Ford won his first ranking tournament with victory in the Snooker Shoot Out. After beating Wu Yize in the semi-final, he defeated Liam Graham in the final.

Performance and rankings timeline

Tournament[2000/
01](2000-01-snooker-season)[2001/
02](2001-02-snooker-season)[2002/
03](2002-03-snooker-season)[2003/
04](2003-04-snooker-season)[2004/
05](2004-05-snooker-season)[2005/
06](2005-06-snooker-season)[2006/
07](2006-07-snooker-season)[2007/
08](2007-08-snooker-season)[2008/
09](2008-09-snooker-season)[2009/
10](2009-10-snooker-season)[2010/
11](2010-11-snooker-season)[2011/
12](2011-12-snooker-season)[2012/
13](2012-13-snooker-season)[2013/
14](2013-14-snooker-season)[2014/
15](2014-15-snooker-season)[2015/
16](2015-16-snooker-season)[2016/
17](2016-17-snooker-season)[2017/
18](2017-18-snooker-season)[2018/
19](2018-19-snooker-season)[2019/
20](2019-20-snooker-season)[2020/
21](2020-21-snooker-season)[2021/
22](2021-22-snooker-season)[2022/
23](2022-23-snooker-season)[2023/
24](2023-24-snooker-season)[2024/
25](2024-25-snooker-season)[2025/
26](2025-26-snooker-season)
RankingIt shows the ranking at the beginning of the seasonHe was an amateurNew players don't have a ranking74514450484941342624325943333227242230221319
Ranking tournaments
Championship LeagueTournament Not HeldNon-Ranking Event2R3RRRAWD3R
Saudi Arabia MastersTournament Not Held5R3R
Wuhan OpenTournament Not HeldQFLQ3R
English OpenTournament Not Held4R2R1RSF3R2RLQ1R1R2R
British OpenALQA2RLQTournament Not Held1RLQQFLQWD
Xi'an Grand PrixTournament Not Held1RLQ
Northern Ireland OpenTournament Not Held2R2R3R1R2RWD3R1R2RQF
International ChampionshipTournament Not HeldLQLQLQ1R2R2R2RQFNot HeldFLQ1R
UK ChampionshipALQALQ1RLQLQLQLQ1R1R1R1R1R2R4R1R2RSF1R1R2RSF2RLQLQ
Shoot OutTournament Not HeldNon-Ranking Event1R4R2R1R1R1RQF1R**W**4R
Scottish OpenThe event was called the Players Championship (2003/2004)ALQALQTournament Not HeldMRNot Held1R4R1R3R2R2RLQQFQF1R
German MastersTournament Not HeldLQ1RLQ1RLQAQF1RLQ1RSF2RF3R3R2R
World Grand PrixTournament Not HeldNR2R1RDNQ2RSFDNQQF1R2R1RDNQ
Players ChampionshipThe event was called the Players Tour Championship Grand Final (2010/2011–2015/2016)Tournament Not Held1R1RSFDNQDNQ1RDNQDNQDNQDNQDNQDNQ1R1RDNQ
Welsh OpenALQALQ1RLQLQLQLQ1RLQ2R2R2R1R2R1R2R2R2RQFLQLQ3R3R
World OpenThe event was called the Grand Prix (2000/2001 and 2004/2005–2009/2010) and the LG Cup (2001/2002–2003/2004)ALQALQLQ1RRRRRLQLQLQ2RLQ1RNot Held2R1R1RLQNot Held1RQF
Tour ChampionshipTournament Not HeldDNQDNQDNQDNQDNQ1RDNQ
World ChampionshipLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQ1RLQLQLQ1RLQLQ1RLQLQ1RLQLQLQ2RLQ
Non-ranking tournaments
Shanghai MastersTournament Not HeldRanking EventAANot HeldA1RA
Champion of ChampionsTournament Not HeldAAAAAAAAAAAA1R
The MastersALQLQLQALQLQLQAWDAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Championship LeagueTournament Not HeldAAAARRRRRRAAARRRRRR2RRRRRRRRRRR
Former ranking tournaments
Thailand MastersALQNRNot HeldNRTournament Not Held
Irish MastersNon-RankingALQLQNHNRTournament Not Held
Northern Ireland TrophyTournament Not HeldNRLQ2RLQTournament Not Held
Bahrain ChampionshipTournament Not HeldLQTournament Not Held
Wuxi ClassicThe event ran under the name Jiangsu Classic (2008/2009–2009/2010)Tournament Not HeldNon-Ranking Event1RLQLQTournament Not Held
Australian Goldfields OpenTournament Not Held2R2RQF1RLQTournament Not Held
Shanghai MastersTournament Not HeldLQ1RLQLQLQ1RLQLQ1RLQ1RNon-RankingNot HeldNon-Ranking
Paul Hunter ClassicThe event was called the Grand Prix Fürth (2004/2005) and the Fürth German Open (2005/2006–2006/2007)Tournament Not HeldPro-am EventMinor-Ranking EventF4R3RNRTournament Not Held
Indian OpenTournament Not Held2R1RNHLQ1R1RTournament Not Held
China OpenALQAA1RLQWRLQLQLQLQ1RLQLQLQ1RLQQFLQTournament Not Held
Riga MastersThe event was called the Riga Open (2014/2015–2015/2016)Tournament Not HeldMinor-Rank1R1RLQ2RTournament Not Held
China ChampionshipTournament Not HeldNR3R2R1RTournament Not Held
WST Pro SeriesTournament Not HeldRRTournament Not Held
Turkish MastersTournament Not Held2RTournament Not Held
Gibraltar OpenTournament Not HeldMR2R2R2R4R3R4RTournament Not Held
WST ClassicTournament Not Held1RNot Held
European MastersThe event was called the Malta Cup (2004/2005–2007/2008)NHLQALQQFLQ2RNRTournament Not Held2RLQLQLQ4RQFLQ2RNot Held
Former non-ranking tournaments
Masters Qualifying EventThe event was called the Benson & Hedges Championship (2000/2001–2002/2003)ALQLQLQNH1R2R1RA1RTournament Not Held
General CupThe event was called the General Cup International (2004/2005–2011/2012)Tournament Not HeldATournament Not HeldANHRRAAAATournament Not Held
Shoot OutTournament Not Held2RSF1R2R3R2RRanking Event
Six-red World ChampionshipThe event was called the Six-red Snooker International (2008/2009) and the Six-red World Grand Prix (2009/2010)Tournament Not Held2RAANH3RAAAARRQFANot HeldSFNot Held
Haining OpenTournament Not HeldMinor-Rank4RFAANHAANot Held
Performance Table Legend
LQ
SF
DNQ
PA / Pro-am Eventmeans an event is/was a pro-am event.

Career finals

Ranking finals: 4 (1 title)

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Runner-up1.2016Paul Hunter ClassicENG Mark Selby2–4
Runner-up2.2023German MastersENG Ali Carter3–10
Runner-up3.2023International ChampionshipCHN Zhang Anda6–10
Winner1.2024Snooker Shoot OutSCO Liam Graham1–0

Minor-ranking finals: 3 (2 titles)

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Winner1.2010Players Tour Championship – Event 3ENG Jack Lisowski4–0
Winner2.2011Players Tour Championship – Event 11ENG Martin Gould4–3
Runner-up1.2015Riga OpenENG Barry Hawkins1–4

Non-ranking finals: 2

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Runner-up1.2002Challenge Tour - Event 1ENG Chris Melling2–6
Runner-up2.2017Haining OpenENG Mark Selby1–5

Pro-am finals: 1 (1 title)

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Winner1.2007Austrian OpenENG Stephen Lee5–4

Amateur finals: 2 (2 titles)

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Winner1.1997English Under-15 ChampionshipENG Stuart Roper4–0
Winner2.2001English Under-18 ChampionshipENG Judd Trump5–1

References

References

  1. (14 October 2007). "Ford leaves hospital and hits 147". [[BBC]].
  2. (13 August 2010). "Focused Tom Ford wins first professional title".
  3. "UK Championship scores".
  4. "Tom Ford vs. Liu Chuang".
  5. "2011 Australian Goldfields Open".
  6. "UK Championship 2011 scores".
  7. "Ford beats Gould in PTC 11 final". [[Yahoo! News]].
  8. "PTC Order of Merit after PTC12". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
  9. "Tom Ford 2011/2012". Snooker.org.
  10. (3 February 2012). "Mark Allen fights back for German Masters win over Tom Ford".
  11. (15 April 2012). "Chinese duo qualify for Crucible". [[Eurosport]].
  12. "Official World Ranking List for the 2012/2013 Season".
  13. "Tom Ford 2012/2013". Snooker.org.
  14. "Order of Merit 2012/2013". Snooker.org.
  15. "Asian Order of Merit after APTC3". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association]].
  16. "Robertson Survives Ford Fight-Back". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
  17. "Official World Snooker Ranking List for the 2013/2014 Season". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
  18. "Tom Ford 2013/2014". Snooker.org.
  19. "Welsh snooker stars Mark Williams and Matthew Stevens miss out on World Championships". Wales Online.
  20. (23 April 2014). "World Snooker Championship: Judd Trump survives fightback from Tom Ford". [[Sky Sports]].
  21. "Tom Ford 2014/2015". Snooker.org.
  22. (26 November 2014). "UK Championship snooker: Leicester's Tom Ford beats Barry Pinches in first round at York". [[Leicester Mercury]].
  23. (16 April 2015). "Snooker: Mark Selby to open World Championship title defence against Norway's Kurt Maflin". [[Leicester Mercury]].
  24. "World Rankings After 2015 World Championship". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
  25. (2 August 2015). "Hawkins Rules in Riga". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
  26. Steve Carroll. (28 November 2015). "UK Championship: John Higgins through, but two-time champ Mark Williams crashes out at the York Barbican". [[The Press (York)]].
  27. Owen Phillips. (2 December 2015). "UK Championship: Tom Ford starts to hit his best form".
  28. Owen Phillips. (3 December 2015). "UK Championship: Tom Ford accuses Liang Wenbo of being boring".
  29. "Tom Ford 2015/2016". Snooker.org.
  30. "Historic Seedings After 2016 World Championship". Snooker.org.
  31. "Tom Ford 2016/2017". Snooker.org.
  32. (March 2018). "Mark Selby takes bragging rights in Paul Hunter Classic by beating Tom Ford in all-Leicester final". [[Leicester Mercury]].
  33. (March 2018). "Leicester's Tom Ford hits maximum 147 break against Peter Ebdon at German Masters snooker". Leicester Mercury.
  34. (12 April 2017). "O'Brien Wins Record Two-Hour Frame". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
  35. (March 2018). "Leicester's Tom Ford bows out to Barry Hawkins in first round of snooker World Championship". Leicester Mercury.
  36. (19 November 2022). "Ding Junhui reaches UK Championship final with victory over Tom Ford in York".
  37. (22 April 2024). "Walden suffers as Wallasey strives for success at World Snooker Championship".
  38. (27 April 2024). "Trump beats Ford as Maguire builds thumping lead".
  39. "Snooker Shoot Out 2024: Tom Ford beats Liam Graham to win maiden title in Leicester - 'I've won two games all season'".
  40. "Country Page - England". Global Snooker Centre.
  41. "English Under 18 Final". [[World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association.
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