• Live
    • Audio Only
  • google plus
  • facebook
  • twitter
News > Sport

Look out Men! Hong Kong's Number 1 Snooker Ng Takes Aim

  • Hong Kong’s Ng On-yee, the women’s world snooker champion

    Hong Kong’s Ng On-yee, the women’s world snooker champion | Photo: Reuters

Published 12 March 2018
Opinion

Ng On-yee is one of four snooker players from the southern Chinese city of Hong Kong who occupies spots in the women's world top 15.

Snooker world champion Ng On-yee has already made history — last month she became the first Asian to top the women's world rankings.

RELATED:
17 Years After Being Booed, Serena Books Venus at Indian Wells

Now, the Hong Kong pioneer, who embarks on her world title defense in Malta this week, wants to change the image of the male-dominated game and encourage more women to follow in her footsteps.

Instantly recognizable with large round-rimmed spectacles, Ng, 27, is coy about her achievement, describing her ascent to number one last month as "a surprise" as she only found out from her coach, Wayne Griffiths.

The milestone came after a record 2017 when she won her second world championship and six other titles. But Ng has no intention of stopping there — now she is striving to make a mark on the men's circuit.

Ng became the first Asian woman to be invited to the men's world championship in 2016 and, although she lost in the first qualifying round, she still saw it as a valuable learning experience.

She is keen to dispel the image of snooker as a male-dominated sport saying that physical strength does not matter. "It is a mind game," Ng told AFP. "To play the best game is to forget about winning and losing and try to apply what I've learnt from my daily training."

In February, she finally overtook long-standing world number one England's Reanne Evans — who had held the top spot for a decade — after reaching the quarter-finals of the British Championships.

"Reaching number one is one step, maintaining the ranking is another," Ng said, pointing out the narrow points gap separating the top players. "I try not to focus too much on it, because whether I'm the world number one or not, it shouldn't affect my game," she explained.

Snooker's popularity is also exploding in neighboring mainland China, which now hosts half a dozen men's world ranking events with the country's Ding Junhui — current world number four — being the first Asian to reach world number one, in 2016.

Ng will defend her ranking and title when the women's world championship begins in Malta on Wednesday.

Hong Kong's best-known men's player remains veteran Marco Fu — one of Ng's idols. He is ranked 10th in the world and a former world championship semi-finalist, who has been sidelined by a medical issue.

Ng says 40-year-old Fu is an inspiration adding that she sent a message urging him to rest after hearing he had undergone surgery for retinal degeneration in his left eye.

Her own trademark glasses are due to astigmatism in both eyes and she says the round lenses help her perfect her aim from a variety of angles.

Ng spent her early years running around the snooker hall her parents managed in the working-class Hong Kong district of Sham Shui Po, stacked with high-rise buildings and known for its bustling street market. Ng always felt at home there and enjoyed watching her father, who was an amateur competitor, play.

Her strict eight-hour a day training schedule covers break-building, shot selection and fitness at the Hong Kong Sports Institute, although Ng still finds time to play with her dad at his snooker club.

Ng says it was a difficult transition from teen student to professional. She gave up school at age 17 to pursue what she calls a "different path."

"Sometimes I felt quite empty when speaking to some of my friends, especially with the topics outside of snooker," she told AFP. But with the support and understanding of her peer group, she managed to adapt.

Ng returned to studying last year to complete an advanced accounting diploma, but says snooker is still her priority.

She sees herself as an ambassador for the women's sport.

"Hopefully I can let people know snooker is a healthy sport and ladies can also play snooker — even with glasses."

Comment
0
Comments
Post with no comments.