Graeme Dott

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Graeme Dott
Graeme Dott.JPG
Graeme Dott at the 2011 German Masters.
Born (1977-05-12) 12 May 1977 (age 47)
Larkhall, Scotland
Sport country  Scotland
Nickname The Pocket Dynamo[1][2]
The Pocket Rocket[3]
Dott the Pot[2]
Pot the Lot Dott[2]
Professional 1994–
Highest ranking 2 (2007/08)
Current ranking 24 (as of 2 May 2016)
Career winnings £1,972,350[4]
Highest break 147 (1999 British Open)
Century breaks 176[5]
Tournament wins
Ranking 2
Non-ranking 1
World Champion 2006
graemedottcoaching.com

Graeme Dott (born 12 May 1977) is a Scottish professional snooker player and snooker coach from Larkhall. He turned professional in 1994 and first entered the top 16 in 2001. He has won two ranking titles, the 2006 World Snooker Championship and the 2007 China Open, and was runner-up in the World Championships of 2004 and 2010. He reached number 2 in the world rankings in 2007, but a subsequent episode of clinical depression seriously affected his form, causing him to drop to number 28 for the 2009/2010 season. He then recovered his form, regained his top-16 ranking, and reached a third World Championship final. In 2011, he published his autobiography, Frame of Mind: The Autobiography of the World Snooker Champion.

Career

Early career

After winning the UK Under-19 Championship in 1992 and Scottish Amateur Championship in 1993, Dott turned professional in 1994. He slowly climbed the rankings, reaching the top sixteen in 2001, where he remained until 2009. Early successes included reaching the quarter-final of the 1996 Welsh Open and qualifying for the World Championship for the first time in 1997. Dott was a runner-up in the 1999 Scottish Open, the 2001 British Open, the 2004 World Championship and the 2005 Malta Cup. He scored his only competitive 147 break in the 1999 British Open.

2006 World Championship victory

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Dott started his campaign with an easy 10–3 victory over former champion John Parrott, before beating veteran Nigel Bond 13–9 in the second round. His quarter-final match was against Australia's Neil Robertson, and after leading 12–8, he was pegged back to 12–12, before edging through the deciding frame, winning the tie 13–12. In the semi-finals he faced former two-time champion Ronnie O'Sullivan in a rematch of the 2004 final. At 8–8 after the second session of four sessions, O'Sullivan failed to win a single frame in the third session and Dott dominated play to win easily 17–11.

Dott faced Peter Ebdon in the final for the £200,000 prize. He began the last session of the match leading 15–7, but Ebdon won six successive frames to reduce his deficit to two frames. Dott eventually won by 18 frames to 14,[6] after winning some vital frames with marvellous clearances. It was the longest final ever and was, at the time, the latest to finish (John Higgins's victory over Mark Selby the following year now holds the record). The previous record holder was the classic final frame last black ball finish 1985 final between Englishman Steve Davis and Northern Irishman Dennis Taylor, which finished at 12:19 a.m. (GMT). The Dott-Ebdon match finished half an hour later, this despite featuring three fewer frames, reflecting the slow overall pace of the match. The average frame length was such that both afternoon sessions only had six frames, instead of the usual eight. Moreover, at just over 74 minutes, the 27th frame was the then longest in the history of the World Championship (until 2009), even beating the 70-minute mark of the previous record set by Canadian Cliff Thorburn and Welshman Doug Mountjoy.

The victory over Ebdon took his ranking up to number 6 for 2006/07 season, a career high at the time.

Post-title career

Dott shone in the 2006 UK Championship as well, reaching the semi-finals, where he lost 7–9 to Stephen Hendry (who he had never beaten in a ranking tournament)[7] after having led 7–5. Dott briefly became the provisional world number one in the rankings system after overcoming Jamie Cope 9–5 to win the 2007 China Open, his second ranking tournament win.[8] Prior to this, he disliked going to China, not helped by a disastrous match in 2002.[9] However, going into the 2007 World Championship as defending champion, he suffered a shock 7–10 defeat in the first round to Ian McCulloch[10] in the opening match of the tournament, which dented his prospects of remaining no. 1. Newly crowned world champion John Higgins overtook him. The loss against McCulloch also maintained the "Crucible Curse", as Dott became the seventeenth consecutive first-time champion to lose his title the very next year.

The 2007/2008 season was more of a struggle for Dott,[11] who described his late-2007 form as "hopeless... nowhere near to playing a good enough standard".[12] His season started promisingly, as he reached the semi-finals of the season-opening 2007 Shanghai Masters, where he defeated Michael Holt 5–4, tournament favourite Ding Junhui 5–1 and Stephen Lee 5–4 before losing his semi-final against Ryan Day 2–6, to close the gap on World No. 1 John Higgins, who went out in the second round; however, Dott then won no further matches that season; a run of 12 consecutive defeats, including all 5 group matches in the 2007 Grand Prix, started from October 2007 onwards. In the 2007 UK Championship he was eliminated in the first round, 7–9, by unseeded Dave Harold, while in the Masters he lost 5–6 to eventual runner-up Stephen Lee for the third successive year.[13] Another first-round elimination followed in the 2008 Malta Cup, this time to Mark Williams. In the 2008 Welsh Open he lost his opening match against Michael Judge 4–5. In frame 7, when leading 4–2, he missed the pack completely with his break-off after miscuing, and also failed to hit the bunch on his next shot after being snookered. Dott announced that he could miss out on the 2008 World Championship, due to personal reasons, and according to his manager he had been suffering from depression.[citation needed] However, Dott did eventually participate in the tournament, but was eliminated in the first round for the second year in a row, losing 7–10 to Joe Perry,[14] subsequently sliding to No. 13 in the new world rankings, and finishing the season outside the top 32 in the one-year rankings.

Things did not improve in the early part of 2008/2009, when a broken left arm sustained while playing football forced him to pull out of the 2008 Shanghai Masters[15] and 2008 Grand Prix.

Dott did win the Berlin leg of the World Series of Snooker,[16] but withdrew from the Moscow event two days before it began, due to his wife preparing to give birth.[17] He reached the second round of the 2009 World Championship for the first time since winning the title in 2006, but lost to Mark Selby 10–13, dropping him out of the top 16.

In the 2010 World Championship Dott produced an unlikely run to his third World final in six years. Dott had not had much success in the 2009/2010 season going into the World Championship, with only one ranking last 16 finish, in the 2010 Welsh Open; however, a newly inspired Dott convincingly knocked out Peter Ebdon in the first round 10–5. He then thrashed fellow Scot Stephen Maguire 13–6 in the second round and for the first time since winning the title in 2006 advanced to the quarter-finals where he recovered from 10–12 behind to see off Mark Allen 13–12. In his 17–14 defeat of Mark Selby in the semi-final he scored the second 146 clearance in the 83-year history of the World Championship (Mark Allen had hit the first days earlier in his match with Dott). Dott was eventually defeated in the final 13–18 by Neil Robertson, who had never beaten Dott previously – ironically after Dott had defeated Ebdon for the first time in winning his own title in 2006. Despite having to settle for runner-up spot, Dott's efforts were ultimately rewarded with a return to the Top 16 for 2010/2011.[18]

Dott returned a year later with a strong campaign at the World Championship beating Mark King and Ali Carter before losing to in-form Judd Trump in the quarter-finals.[19] He finished the 2010/2011 season ranked world number 10.[20]

2011/2012 season

Dott missed the first ranking event of the 2011/2012 season, the Australian Goldfields Open due a neck injury.[21] He took part in the remaining seven ranking tournaments, being knocked out in the first round in the Shanghai Masters and Welsh Open and losing in the last 16 of the UK Championship, German Masters and the China Open. Dott's best run of the season came at the World Open, where he beat Barry Hawkins and Marcus Campbell, before losing 1–5 to Stephen Lee in the quarter-finals.[22] He also reached the quarter-finals of the Masters, but was defeated by John Higgins 3–6.[23]

Dott lost 2–4 to Ben Woollaston in the final of Event 3 of the minor-ranking Players Tour Championship, after earlier overcoming Ronnie O'Sullivan, Stephen Hendry and John Higgins.[24] He also reached three semi-finals, having played in 11 of the 12 events throughout the season. Those results meant that Dott finished 7th on the PTC Order of Merit and therefore qualified to the last 16 of the Finals, where he lost 2–4 to Joe Perry.[25][26] Dott played in the first ever professional snooker tournament to be staged in South America, the non-ranking Brazil Masters, and reached the final only to be whitewashed 0–5 by Shaun Murphy.[27] He also lost in the final of the Snooker Shoot-Out to Barry Hawkins, in a tournament where the winner of each round is decided by a 10-minute frame.[28]

Dott's season came to an unceremonious end at the World Championship as he suffered his heaviest ever defeat at the event. He lost to Joe Perry 1–10, stating after the match that it was the worst he had played as a professional.[29] Nevertheless, he maintained his place in the elite top 16 by finishing the season ranked world number 13.[30]

2012/2013 season

During the 2012/2013 season, Dott lost in the last 16 of the UK Championship (2–6 to Shaun Murphy), the German Masters (4–5 to Murphy), the Welsh Open (1–4 to Pankaj Advani), the World Open (0–5 to Neil Robertson), and the China Open (4–5 to Marcus Campbell). He reached the quarter-finals of the Wuxi Classic, where he lost 0–5 to Mark Davis, and the Shanghai Masters, where he lost 4–5 to Judd Trump.[31] Dott's best performance of the season came in the 2013 Masters, where he defeated Stephen Maguire 6–5 and Trump 6–1 to reach the semi-finals. Despite taking a 4–1 lead in his semi-final match, Dott lost 5–6 to eventual tournament winner Mark Selby.[32]

At the World Championship, Dott defeated Peter Ebdon 10–6 in a first-round match that lasted 7 hours 18 minutes, with an extra session added after the players failed to complete the match in the time allotted for the first two sessions. After the match, Dott criticised Ebdon's slow, deliberative style of play and called for a rule to limit the amount of time a player could spend over a shot.[33] Dott became the only Scottish player to reach the second round, after John Higgins, Stephen Maguire, Marcus Campbell, and Alan McManus all suffered first-round defeats. Facing Shaun Murphy in his second-round match, he trailed 2–6 after the first session. During the second session, he complained about receiving static shocks when he touched the table, and the players took their mid-session interval a frame early while the carpet was sprayed with water to address the problem.[34] Dott managed to level the match at 8–8 after the second session, but went on to lose 11–13.[35] His defeat meant that, for the first time since 1988, no Scottish player competed in the World Championship quarter-finals.[36]

2013/2014 season

Graeme Dott at the 2014 German Masters

Dott's 2013/2014 season did not get off to a good start, as he was whitewashed 5–0 by Jimmy Robertson in the last 64 of the season's first major ranking event, the 2013 Wuxi Classic.[37] More disappointing results followed, including losing 4–2 to Ratchayothin Yotharuck in the last 128 of the 2013 Indian Open, but Dott recovered to reach the semi-finals of the International Championship, where he lost 9–7 to eventual tournament winner Ding Junhui.[38] He reached the last 16 of the UK Championship, but was beaten 6–2 by Mark Selby.[39] Dott advanced to the quarter-finals of the World Open and reeled off four frames in a row to level his match versus Shaun Murphy, but the Englishman fluked the final black in the decider to beat defeat Dott 5–4.[40] At the China Open, he reached another quarter-final but lost 5–3 to world number one Neil Robertson.[41] Dott missed out on playing in the World Championship for the first time since 1999 this year as Kyren Wilson defeated him 10–7 in the final qualifying round.[42] Dott ended the season outside of the top 16 for the first time in six years as he was the world number 17.[43]

In July 2014, Dott started coaching snooker professionally to help encourage and influence the rising number of younger players within his native Scotland.[44]

2014/2015 season

Dott's first quarter-final appearance of the season came at the Shanghai Masters after he defeated Yan Bingtao 5–2 and Shaun Murphy 5–3, but he lost 5–2 to Ding Junhui.[45][46] He suffered a 6–1 first round loss to Craig Steadman at the International Championship, before whitewashing Robert Milkins 6–0 to face Neil Robertson in the fourth round of the UK Championship.[47] Dott went 5–0 up, only for Robertson to level at 5–5 and Dott won the decider to reach the quarter-finals of the event for the first time since 2006.[48] Dott said that he had reverted back to the way he played in 2010 with a more carefree approach to the game which he felt had helped his good form in the tournament.[49] In the quarter-finals he let a lead slip again and this time couldn't recover as Stuart Bingham came back from 4–1 down to defeat Dott 6–5.[50] At the inaugural World Grand Prix he came through a pair of deciding frames against John Higgins and Liang Wenbo, before losing 4–1 to Ronnie O'Sullivan in the quarter-finals.[51]

Personal life

In his 2011 autobiography Frame of Mind, Dott describes his childhood growing up in the run-down Easterhouse estate in Glasgow.[52] As a boy, he developed a strong relationship with Alex Lambie, a snooker club owner from Larkhall in Lanarkshire, who mentored Dott from the age of 12 and went on to manage his professional career. Dott has described Lambie as a "second father" to him.[53] In 1997, Dott began a relationship with Lambie's 16-year-old daughter Elaine.[54] The couple married in 2003 and had their first child, a son named Lewis, in 2004.[54]

In January 2006, Alex Lambie was diagnosed with terminal kidney cancer. Although he lived to see Dott win the World Championship in May of that year, he died on 16 December 2006, while Dott was playing in the 2006 UK Championship. Weeks afterward, Elaine, who was pregnant, had a cancer scare when doctors discovered potentially cancerous cysts on her ovaries. Although she turned out not to have cancer, she suffered a miscarriage while Dott was playing in the 2007 Masters.[55] After these experiences, Dott entered a severe depression, which affected his commitment to practice and his performance in matches.[54] He lost 15 professional matches in a row and slid down the rankings, dropping out of the top 16.[53][54] Medication subsequently helped him recover his place in the top 16, although he expects his battle with depression to be lifelong.[53] Dott and his wife had a second child, a daughter Lucy, born in November 2008.[54]

Dott supports Rangers[56] and paraded his World Championship trophy at Ibrox, their home ground, during half-time of Rangers' final league match against Hearts on 7 May 2006.

Performance and rankings timeline

Tournament 1994/
95
1995/
96
1996/
97
1997/
98
1998/
99
1999/
00
2000/
01
2001/
02
2002/
03
2003/
04
2004/
05
2005/
06
2006/
07
2007/
08
2008/
09
2009/
10
2010/
11
2011/
12
2012/
13
2013/
14
2014/
15
2015/
16
Ranking[57][nb 1] UR[nb 2] 190 58 33 30 25 19 14 12 13 15 13 6 2 13 28 13 10 13 12 17 18
Ranking tournaments
Shanghai Masters Not held SF WD 1R QF 1R QF 1R QF 1R
International Championship Not held 1R SF 1R 3R
UK Championship LQ LQ LQ 1R 2R 4R 6R 2R 3R 2R QF 2R SF 1R 2R 1R 2R 2R 2R 4R QF 2R
German Masters[nb 3] NH LQ LQ LQ NR Not held SF 2R 2R 2R LQ
Welsh Open 1R QF 1R 4R 1R 2R 1R SF 1R 2R 3R QF 3R 2R 2R 2R QF 1R 2R 3R 3R
World Grand Prix[nb 4] LQ LQ 1R 1R 1R 4R SF 3R 2R 2R 3R 1R RR RR WD LQ LQ QF 2R QF NR
Players Championship Grand Final[nb 5] Not held DNQ 2R 1R DNQ DNQ
China Open[nb 6] Not held NR LQ 1R 1R 1R Not held 1R 2R W 1R QF 1R 1R 2R 2R QF 2R
World Championship LQ LQ 1R LQ LQ 1R 1R 2R 2R F 1R W 1R 1R 2R F QF 1R 2R LQ 2R
Non-ranking tournaments
The Masters LQ LQ WD LQ LQ LQ LQ 1R 1R 1R 1R QF 1R 1R 1R A QF QF SF A A A
Championship League Not held A RR A RR A A RR A
Variant format tournaments
Six-red World Championship[nb 7] Not Held A A A NH 2R A 1R 1R
Shoot-Out Not Held 2R F 1R SF 2R
Former ranking tournaments
Dubai Classic[nb 8] 1R LQ LQ Not held
Malta Grand Prix Non-ranking LQ NR Not held
Thailand Masters[nb 9] LQ 1R 1R 2R LQ LQ LQ 1R NR Not held NR Not held
Scottish Open[nb 10] 1R 1R 1R 2R F SF 2R 2R 2R 3R Not held MR Not held
British Open LQ 2R 1R 2R 2R 4R 2R F 2R 2R 2R Not held
Irish Masters Non-ranking event 1R QF 1R NH NR Not held
Malta Cup[nb 11] LQ LQ LQ NH 2R Not held 2R 2R 2R F SF QF NR Not held
Northern Ireland Trophy Not held NR QF 2R 2R Not held
Bahrain Championship Not held 1R Not held
Wuxi Classic[nb 12] Not held Non-ranking QF 1R 2R NH
Indian Open Not Held LQ 3R NH
Former non-ranking tournaments
Scottish Masters A A A A LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ Not held
Northern Ireland Trophy Not held 1R Ranking Event Not held
Irish Masters A A A A A A A A Ranking Event NH QF Not held
Malta Cup[nb 11] Ranking Event NH R Not held Ranking Event RR Not held
Wuxi Classic[nb 12] Not held A A A QF Ranking Event
Brazil Masters Not Held F Not Held
Premier League[nb 13] A A A A A A A A A A A A SF A A A A A A Not held
World Grand Prix Not Held QF R
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. New players on the Main Tour don't have a ranking.
  3. The event was called the German Open (1995/1996–1997/1998)
  4. The event was called the Grand Prix (1994/1995–2000/2001 and 2004/2005–2009/2010), the LG Cup (2001/2002–2003/2004), the World Open (2010/2011) and the Haikou World Open (2011/2012–2013/2014)
  5. The event was called the Players Tour Championship Grand Finals (2010/2011–2012/2013)
  6. The event was called the China International (1997/1998–1998/1999)
  7. The event was called the Six-red Snooker International (2008/2009) and the Six-red World Grand Prix (2009/2010)
  8. The event was called the Thailand Classic (1995/1996) and the Asian Classic (1996/1997)
  9. The event was called the Thailand Open (1994/1995–1996/1997)
  10. The event was called the International Open (1994/1995–1997/1998) and the Players Championship (2003/2004)
  11. 11.0 11.1 The event was called the European Open (1994/1995–1996/1997 and 2001/2002–2003/2004) and the Irish Open (1998/1999)
  12. 12.0 12.1 The event was called the Jiangsu Classic (2008/2009–2009/2010)
  13. The event was called the European League (1994/1995–1996/1997)

Career finals

Ranking event finals: 7 (2 titles, 5 runner-ups)

Legend
World Championship (1–2)
UK Championship (0–0)
Other (1–3)
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score
Runner-up 1. 1999 Scottish Open Scotland Stephen Hendry 1–9
Runner-up 2. 2001 British Open Scotland John Higgins 6–9
Runner-up 3. 2004 World Snooker Championship England Ronnie O'Sullivan 8–18
Runner-up 4. 2005 Malta Cup Scotland Stephen Hendry 7–9
Winner 1. 2006 World Snooker Championship England Peter Ebdon 18–14
Winner 2. 2007 China Open England Jamie Cope 9–5
Runner-up 5. 2010 World Snooker Championship (2) Australia Neil Robertson 13–18

Minor-ranking event finals: 2 (2 runner-ups)

Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score
Runner-up 1. 2011 Sheffield Open England Ben Woollaston 2–4
Runner-up 2. 2013 FFB Open England Mark Selby 3–4

Non-ranking event finals: 3 (1 title, 2 runner-ups)

Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score
Winner 1. 2008 World Series of Snooker – Berlin England Shaun Murphy 6–1
Runner-up 1 2009 World Series of Snooker – Prague England Jimmy White 3–5
Runner-up 2. 2011 Brazil Masters England Shaun Murphy 0–5

Pro-am wins

Further reading

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References

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Sources

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External links

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