Michael Wild

Michael Wild

Born (1981-03-27) 27 March 1981
Sport country  England
Professional 2003/04, 2015–
Highest ranking 99
Current ranking 103 (as of 31 October 2016)
Career winnings £15,289[1]
Highest break 138 (2003 UK Champiomnship, 2008 PIOS – Event 4)[1]
Century breaks 19[1]
Best ranking finish Last 48 (2012 Australian Goldfields Open)[1]

Michael Wild (born 27 March 1981) is a professional English snooker player.

Career

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, Wild competed in the Challenge Tour and International Open Series events, without much success until the 2002/2003 season, when he reached the last 16 at Challenge Tour events 1 and 2; these performances were sufficient for him to earn a place on the sport's main tour, which he took up in 2003.

Wild's first season as a professional brought little success itself, his best finish a run to the last 80 in the British Open, where he beat Kristjan Helgason and Munraj Pal, before losing to Mike Dunn.[2] He won only £3,850 prize money during the season and, finishing it ranked 121st, fell off the tour.

Several years of attempting to qualify again for the main tour through the International Open Series followed; during the 2005/2006 season, he reached the semi-finals in Event 1 - losing 1–5 to Martin Gould - and the quarter-finals in Event 3, where Liu Song beat him 5–2. Another semi-final came in 2007, before Wild recorded his first run to the final of a tournament, in Event 4 of that year's series. There his opponents included Robert Stephen and David Grace, but in the final, he lost 3–6 to Matthew Couch.

With the advent of the Players Tour Championship in the 2010/11 season, Wild found form after another lean period, recording two last-64 finishes - in Event 2 and EPTC1, where he lost 2–4 to Dave Harold and 1–4 to Ricky Walden respectively. He entered Q-School in 2011 and reached the quarter-finals of the second event, but, leading David Morris 3–1 and requiring only one more win to return to the tour, eventually lost 3–4.[3]

Having fared better in Q-School the following year, Wild was invited to play in several ranking events in 2012/13 season as a top-up amateur, and competed in his first such event in eight years at the 2012 Wuxi Classic qualifying stage. He was drawn to play Craig Steadman and led 2–0, but could not prevent a 3–5 defeat. In the 2012 Australian Goldfields Open, he came within one win of reaching the televised stages in Bendigo, beating Daniel Wells 5–0, Simon Bedford 5–2 and six-time World Champion Steve Davis 5–0, but lost in the final round 0–5 to Ken Doherty.

Wild enjoyed further success at the 2012 Paul Hunter Classic, where he defeated Jordan Brown, Marcus Campbell and Scott Donaldson before being eliminated in the last 16, losing 3–4 to Doherty.[4] The two would meet in another two matches during the season, both of these also resulting in 4–3 victories for Doherty - in the 2012 Scottish Open and the Munich Open.

In 2015, Wild won the EBSA European Snooker Championship, beating Jamie Rhys Clarke 7–4 in the final, to win back his place on the main tour after twelve years away.[5]

In his first season back on the tour, Wild produced the finest performance of his career in whitewashing former world number one Judd Trump 6–0 in the 2015 International Championship qualifying round,[6] but lost all seven of his matches thereafter - 0–6 to Sanderson Lam in the next qualifying round, by the same scoreline to Dominic Dale in the UK Championship, 3–5 to Anthony McGill in the German Masters, 3–4 to Jimmy Robertson in the Welsh Open, 2–4 to Mark King in the Gdynia Open, 2–5 to Tom Ford in the China Open and 6–10 - having trailed 0–9 - to Michael Holt in the World Championship. As a result, he ended the season ranked 110th.

He recorded his first victory of the 2016/2017 season in the 2016 European Masters, defeating Cao Yupeng 4–3 from 1–3 behind, and followed this with a similar deciding-frame win over Jamie Jones from 0–3 behind, to reach the televised stages of a ranking tournament for the first time in his career.

Performance and rankings timeline

Tournament 1997/
98
1998/
99
1999/
00
2000/
01
2001/
02
2002/
03
2003/
04
2004/
05
2010/
11
2011/
12
2012/
13
2013/
14
Ranking[7][nb 1] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 2] UR[nb 3] 121[nb 2] UR[nb 4] UR[nb 4] UR[nb 4] UR[nb 4]
Ranking tournaments
Wuxi Classic Tournament Not Held Non-Ranking Event LQ A
Australian Goldfields Open Tournament Not Held A LQ A
UK Championship A A A A A A LQ A A A A A
Welsh Open A A A A A A LQ A A A A A
Players Championship Grand Final[nb 5] Tournament Not Held DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ
China Open[nb 6] NR A A A A Not Held A A A LQ A
World Championship LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ A A A A
Non-ranking tournaments
The Masters LQ A A A LQ LQ LQ A A A A A
Former ranking tournaments
Players Championship[nb 7] A A A A A A LQ Tournament Not Held MR Not Held
British Open A A A A A A LQ Tournament Not Held
Irish Masters Non-Ranking Event A A LQ A Tournament Not Held
European Open[nb 8] Not Held A LQ A Tournament Not Held
World Open[nb 9] A A A A A A LQ A A A LQ A
Performance Table Legend
LQ lost in the qualifying draw #R lost in the early rounds of the tournament
(WR = Wildcard round, RR = Round robin)
QF lost in the quarter-finals
SF lost in the semi-finals F lost in the final W won the tournament
DNQ did not qualify for the tournament A did not participate in the tournament WD withdrew from the tournament
NH / Not Held means an event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Event means an event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Event means an event is/was a ranking event.
MR / Minor-Ranking Event means an event is/was a minor-ranking event.
  1. From the 2010/2011 season it shows the ranking at the beginning of the season.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 He was not on the Main Tour.
  3. New players on the Main Tour do not have a ranking
  4. 1 2 3 4 He was an amateur.
  5. The event ran under the name Players Tour Championship Grand Finals (2010/2011–2012/2013)
  6. The event ran under the name China International (1998/1999)
  7. The event ran under the name Scottish Open (1997/1998–2002/2003 and 2012/2013)
  8. The event ran under the name Irish Open (1998/1999) Malta Cup (2004/2005)
  9. The event ran under the names Grand Prix (1997/1998–2000/2001 and 2004/2005) and LG Cup (2001/2002–2003/2004)

Career finals

Amateur finals: 2 (1 title, 1 runner-up)

Outcome Year Championship Opponent in the final Score
Runner-up 2007 PIOS 2007/2008 - Event 4 England Matthew Couch 3–6
Winner 2015 EBSA European Amateur Championship Wales Jamie Rhys Clarke 7–4

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.