Everything about Pot Black totally explained
Pot Black was a
UK televised snooker tournament that played a large part in the popularisation of the modern game.
In the late 1960s the
BBC started broadcasting in colour, and were looking for programmes that could exploit this new technology. The game of snooker, with its rainbow of differently coloured balls, was suggested. The format of a knockout tournament, with weekly single-frame matches, was devised by BBC Birmingham producer Philip Lewis, and the programme first aired on
July 23,
1969, on
BBC2, presented by
Alan Weeks, with referee
Sydney Lee and match commentary by
"Whispering" Ted Lowe. The first tournament was won by
Ray Reardon.
Mark Williams holds the highest break record of 119.
The success of
Pot Black was immediate and phenomenal, and it became the second most popular programme on BBC2. The tournament featured a
round-robin tournament where the total number of points scored could often become crucial. Therefore matches always ended with the potting of the black ball, which is often not bothered with in multi-frame matches.
Pot Black's instantly recognisable theme tune was the ragtime classic
Black and White Rag, composed by
George Botsford and performed by
Winifred Atwell.
Original version
Pot Black ran from 1969 to 1986, by which time professional snooker, with its long matches, had become so popular that the single-frame matches (the finals were the best of 3 frames from 1978 to 1997) that
Pot Black offered seemed almost irrelevant.
Pot Black featured all the top players of its time, with many such as
Fred Davis,
Ray Reardon,
Graham Miles and
Alex Higgins becoming well-loved personalities.
Pot Black helped transform snooker from a minority sport with just a handful of professionals into one of the most popular sports in the UK, where every tournament is fiercely contested and the top players earn millions annually, but there's much nostalgia for the simpler, friendlier days of
Pot Black.
Pot Black is sometimes credited with producing one of the most memorable British sports quotes. Legendary commentator Ted Lowe, aware that not all viewers had colour televisions, said the player is "going for the yellow ball by the sidepocket - and for those in black and white, it's next to the blue.". However, this quote is more likely to have occurred during a live snooker match, and not during the pre-recorded
Pot Black - especially as it was featured on a '50 Years of ITV' special of
It'll Be Alright On The Night, and
Pot Black is a BBC show.
Revivals
It returned in 1991 being shown on
BBC1's afternoon schedule. In 1992, The show's bosses introduced a single "time-frame" tournament before returning to the normal format in 1993 before the series ended.
A junior version, called
Junior Pot Black, ran from 1981 to 1983 and that was also revived in 1991, for a single year. It was won by
Dean Reynolds,
John Parrott (twice) and
Ronnie O'Sullivan.
Pot Black also returned in 1997 as
Seniors Pot Black, featuring players who were over 40 at the time.
Joe Johnson won the series, having never taken part in the original series. Retired players
Ray Reardon,
John Spencer,
Perrie Mans,
Eddie Charlton and
Graham Miles took part as well as over 40 (at the time current professionals)
Dennis Taylor,
Cliff Thorburn,
Terry Griffiths,
Willie Thorne and Johnson.
A
Celebrity Pot Black was held on
15 July 2006 in aid of
Sport Relief. It was contested between the team of
Ronnie O'Sullivan and
Bradley Walsh and the team of
Steve Davis and
Vernon Kay. Steve Davis and Vernon Kay were the winners and became the first ever champions of
Celebrity Pot Black.
Dermot O'Leary hosted and
Michaela Tabb was the referee for the one frame match.
Current version
A one-day
Pot Black tournament was held on
October 29 2005, and broadcast on the
BBC sports programme
Grandstand. The invitational event featured eight players, namely
Ronnie O'Sullivan,
Stephen Hendry,
Stephen Maguire,
Matthew Stevens,
Paul Hunter,
John Higgins,
Jimmy White and
Shaun Murphy, with
Matthew Stevens beating
Shaun Murphy in the final.
The 2006 edition of
Pot Black took place at the
Royal Automobile Club in
Pall Mall,
London on
2 September 2006.
Mark J Williams beat
John Higgins and achieved the highest break in the history of the tournament with a 119 clearance in the final.
The
2007 Pot Black Cup was aired on Saturday
6 October 2007 at 1pm on
BBC One. It was won by
Ken Doherty (who beat
Shaun Murphy 71–36) making him the first
Irishman to win the competition.
Trivia
- There have only been six century breaks in the history of Pot Black. Eddie Charlton notched the first ever century and his 110 break stood as the record for many years until eclipsed by Shaun Murphy's 111 against Jimmy White in 2005. The highest break is now held by Mark Williams with his 119 in 2006.
- The original version of Pot Black only had two hosts, Alan Weeks and, towards the end of its run, David Icke. Subsequent revivals have been hosted by Eamonn Holmes (1991 and 1992), David Vine (1993 and 1997) and Hazel Irvine since 2005.
Winners
Media coverage
Pot Black currently gets shown on
BBC One.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Pot Black'.
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