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Feature: Zhao Xintong's historic world title reshapes future of snookerBy Yue Wenwan, Zheng Zhi, Zhang Wei and Wang Haoming (Xinhua) 08:59, May 08, 2025
Zhao Xintong celebrates with the trophy after beating Mark Williams to win the 2025 World Snooker Championship in Sheffield, United Kingdom, May 5, 2025. (Photo by Zhai Zheng/Xinhua)
Zhao Xintong's historic victory as the first Asian to win the World Snooker Championship marks a new era for Chinese snooker, reflecting decades of growth, investment, and increasing global influence in the sport.
BEIJING, May 7 (Xinhua) -- In a moment that will reverberate far beyond the walls of the Crucible Theatre, China's Zhao Xintong etched his name into sporting history by becoming the first Asian to win the World Snooker Championship.
With a commanding victory over three-time world champion Mark Williams, 28-year-old Zhao not only claimed his first world title, but also redefined the global landscape of a sport long dominated by British players.
"I can't believe it. It's like a dream," said Zhao, his voice trembling as he raised the Chinese national flag beside the table.
Just months earlier, Zhao had rejoined competitive events as an amateur following a 20-month suspension for his involvement in match-fixing. His success at the Crucible was more than a win. It was a moment of arrival for himself, for Chinese snooker, and for the global game.
Zhao Xintong in action during the final, May 5, 2025. (Photo by Zhai Zheng/Xinhua)
A MILESTONE FOR ASIA
Zhao's win marks the first time in snooker's modern history since 1969 that the world title has been won by an Asian player. He becomes the fourth champion from outside the United Kingdom and Ireland, following Canada's Cliff Thorburn (1980), Neil Robertson of Australia (2010), and Belgium's Luca Brecel (2023).
Yet Zhao's victory added symbolic weight: it is the culmination of China's decades-long effort to develop snooker from a niche interest to a national movement.
"I once said, 'I'm glad to see that the threshold I shattered back then has become a runway for everyone.' Today someone has finally crossed the finish line on that runway," wrote Chinese icon Ding Junhui, who reached the World Championship final in 2016.
"He has achieved the dream that generations of Chinese snooker players have shared," Ding added.
Zhao's triumph echoed another landmark moment for Chinese snooker two decades ago. In the 2005 China Open final, Ding, then just 18 and playing as a wildcard, stunned the snooker world by defeating legend Stephen Hendry to claim China's first ranking title.
Ding Junhui goes for a long pot against Stephen Hendry during the 2005 China Open final at the Haidian Stadium in Beijing, April 3, 2005. (Xinhua Photo/Bi Mingming)
However, the sport itself faced a turning point. At that time, snooker was struggling in its traditional heartland. A European Union ban on tobacco advertising had stripped the sport of long-time sponsors, and its unpredictable match durations made broadcasting inconvenient. By the 2005-06 season, the snooker calendar had shrunk to just six ranking events.
At that critical juncture, China's interest in the game, backed by a vast population, emerging media market and surging youth participation, proved to be a lifeline. Ding's victory helped ignite a snooker boom in China that would change the sport's future.
In the 2024-25 season, snooker has nearly 20 ranking tournaments, a dramatic revival made possible, in large part, by China's sustained investment and growing influence.
Once there was only Ding as an elite Chinese player; now there is a whole generation. A record 10 Chinese players qualified for the main draw at this year's World Championship, six of whom reached the last 16. Moreover, nine Chinese players are currently ranked inside the world's top 32.
Si Jiahui in action against David Gilbert in the first round of the 2025 World Snooker Championship, April 22, 2025. (Photo by Zhai Zheng/Xinhua)
This depth of talent is no accident. Over the past two decades, China has invested heavily in snooker infrastructure from grassroots clubs to elite academies. In cities like Dongguan, Guangzhou and Beijing, children learn the sport in specialized training centers, guided by a growing network of coaches, many of them trained overseas.
"Snooker used to be seen as just a hobby," said Huang Zhufeng, head of the World Snooker Academy's Guangdong branch. "Now it's a real career path -- a sport the country is proud of."
FROM CHINA TO WORLD
As the talent pool expanded, so did the calendar. China now hosts nearly one-third of professional ranking events each season, far more than any other country outside the U.K..