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Walter Donaldson (snooker player)

Walter Weir Wilson Donaldson (2 February 1907 – 24 May 1973) was a Scottish professional snooker and billiards player. He contested eight consecutive world championship finals against Fred Davis from 1947 to 1954, and won the title in 1947 and 1950. Donaldson was known for his long potting and his consistency when playing, and had an aversion to the use of side. In 2012, he was inducted posthumously into the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association's World Snooker Hall of Fame.

Walter Donaldson
Born(1907-02-02)2 February 1907
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died24 May 1973(1973-05-24) (aged 66)
Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire, England
Sport country Scotland
Professional1923–1960
Tournament wins
World Champion1947, 1950

Donaldson became a professional player shortly after winning the under-16's British Junior English Billiards Championship in 1922 and won the Scottish professional billiards title six times. He first competed in the World Snooker Championship in 1933, but after a heavy defeat by Joe Davis did not enter again until 1939. After serving in the Fourth Indian Division during World War II, Donaldson entered the 1946 World Championship, where he lost to Davis in his first match. As a player that did not reach the championship final, he was eligible to enter the 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament, which he won. Following Joe Davis's retirement from the World Championship in 1946, Donaldson practised intensively and won the 1947 Championship by defeating Fred Davis in the final. Davis won the following two championships, with Donaldson taking the next and then being runner-up to Davis for the next four years. Donaldson then retired from World Championship competition, although he continued to play in the News of the World Snooker Tournament until 1959.

Early life Edit

Walter Weir Wilson Donaldson was born in Edinburgh, on 2 February 1907,[1][2][3] the son of a billiard hall manager.[1][2][3] The family moved to Coatbridge when Donaldson was five.[4] His father coached him in English billiards from age five, having constructed a 1 foot (30 cm) platform around one of the billiard tables so that the younger Donaldson could reach the table to play.[4][5][6] Donaldson told an interviewer for The Billiard Player in 1939 that starting to play at a young age was a common feature among many professional players, as "when a kiddie is brought up like that, the game gets fairly into his bones, and he has much more chance than other people of becoming a good player".[7] His father also trained Margaret Lennan, who became the unofficial "British Isles Champion" of women's billiards in 1928.[4] Donaldson won the under-16 division of the British Junior English Billiards Championship in 1922 at the age of 15,[8] and turned professional the following year.[9]

Career Edit

Early professional career Edit

Donaldson moved to Rotherham in South Yorkshire, where he managed a billiard hall, and travelled to Glasgow to win the Scottish professional billiards and snooker championships in the 1928/1929 season.[10] He later became the owner of a billiard hall in New Ollerton, Nottinghamshire.[10][11] He first entered the World Snooker Championship in 1933 defeating Willie Leigh 13 frames to 11 before losing 1–13 in the semi-finals to Joe Davis.[12] In 1939, Donaldson said he realised from watching Davis "annihilate" him that "there was far more in the game than I had ever dreamt of".[7] He did not participate in the championship again until 1939.[12] His six-year absence has been attributed to a commitment to practise and improve his standard of play following the resounding defeat by Davis.[1][13] In 1939, he defeated Herbert Holt and Dickie Laws in the qualifying competition, both 18–13, then Claude Falkiner 21–10 in the first round, before losing 15–16 to Sidney Smith in the quarter-finals.[14] He finished fourth of seven players in the 1939/1940 Daily Mail Gold Cup.[15] The BBC World Service radio station broadcast part of his match against Fred Davis.[16]

Donaldson spoke about his playing philosophy in 1939, saying he avoided playing risky shots because he believed matches were typically lost by one player making errors: "It isn't so much that one man wins the game but that the other man loses it."[17]: 16  Asked by the interviewer for hints for The Billiard Player's readers to help them improve their standard of play, Donaldson advised against the use of side as "it spoils the shot in at least 90 per cent of cases when it's applied by any but a first class player. And generally it really isn't necessary."[17]: 18  He also said he had claimed the title of Scottish snooker champion because despite issuing an invitation to any challenger to play for that title, no-one had taken up the challenge.[7]

In the 1940 World Championship, he eliminated Holt 24–7 in the first round; Joe Davis then defeated him 9–22 in the semi-final.[14] The championship was suspended for the remainder of World War II.[12] Donaldson was called up in 1940,[18] and served in Canada, North Africa, Greece and Italy as a sergeant in the Royal Corps of Signals attached to the Fourth Indian Division, which was an original component of the Eighth Army when it was formed in September 1941.[10][19][20]

The championship resumed in 1946, with Joe Davis winning again, including a 21–10 victory over Donaldson in the quarter-finals.[14] The professional players that did not reach the 1946 final were invited to participate in the 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament.[21] Donaldson won, some six months after being demobilised, by defeating Alec Brown 20–11 in the final.[18][22] Following his 1946 World Championship win, Davis retired from the event.[23] In November 1946, Donaldson compiled what would have been a new world record for the highest break, 142, against John Pulman, but as the billiard table being used was not of the standard type required for a record, it was not recognised as such.[24]

World championship finals and later professional career Edit

Donaldson practised intensively in preparation for the 1947 World Snooker Championship, using a billiard table in a neighbour's attic.[1] He defeated Stanley Newman 46–25 and then eliminated Horace Lindrum 39–32 to reach the final.[1][14] Building refurbishment delays postponed the final, held at Leicester Square Hall, for several weeks. Donaldson used the time to continue practising.[25] In a two-week final over 145 frames against Fred Davis, Donaldson led 4–2 after the first session and 7–5 after the second,[26] later extending his lead to sixteen frames at 35–19. After this, Davis won six successive frames to reduce the lead to 35–25.[27] Donaldson secured victory at 73–49 and finished the match at 82–63.[1][28] His tactics during the championship involved compiling breaks of around 30 to 50 points, and playing safety rather than attempting difficult pots.[1] Davis became frustrated with the lack of scoring chances Donaldson left for him, and missed a number of difficult pot attempts allowing Donaldson chances to win frames.[1] There were three century breaks during the match's 145 frames, all made by Davis.[1] Joe Davis commented after the match that, "Donaldson's long potting at present is the equal of anything seen in snooker history," whilst Fred Davis said "he is playing the best snooker I have ever seen".[18] In his book Talking Snooker, first published in 1979, Fred Davis reflected that he had probably been "perhaps overconfident" and also had not expected Donaldson's standard to have improved so much as a result of his many hours of practice.[29] This was the first of eight consecutive finals, from 1947 to 1954, featuring the two players.[1]

Two wins by Joe Davis in challenge matches against Donaldson after the 1947 championship reinforced the public perception that the 15-time champion Davis was still the best player.[1] Donaldson took a playing break of several months on medical advice, having been diagnosed with conjunctivitis after experiencing headaches.[25] In the 1948 World Snooker Championship, held only six months after the 1947 tournament,[1] Donaldson reached the final with wins against Kingsley Kennerley and Albert Brown.[14] Fred Davis won 84–61 against Donaldson, having reached a winning margin at 73–52.[12] In Talking Snooker, Davis wrote that he had consciously used the same risk-averse tactics that had paid off for Donaldson in 1947.[29] At the 1948 Sunday Empire News Tournament, which was a round-robin event with handicaps applied,[a] Donaldson finished fourth of five players.[30]

In the 1949 World Snooker Championship final, Fred Davis won 80–65 against Donaldson,[14] having taken a winning lead of 73–58 on the previous day. The score had been 63–58 before Davis won 10 frames in a row to take the title.[31] Donaldson made the highest break of the tournament with 115 on the last day of his semi-final match against Pulman.[32][33] In the handicapped[b] 1949/1950 News of the World Snooker Tournament, Donaldson won only two of his seven round-robin matches and placed seventh out of the eight participants.[35]

Donaldson defeated Kennerley and Albert Brown to reach the 1950 world final against Fred Davis.[14] the final was played over 97 frames.[14] Davis led 8–4 after the first day,[36] but after two more days Donaldson levelled the match at 18–18, including winning five of the last six that day.[37] He took a four-frame lead the following day,[38] and maintained it for several days,[39][40] eventually extending it to six frames at 45–39 on the penultimate day.[41] Donaldson's victory was confirmed on the last day when the score was 49–32, with the match ending at 51–46.[42] Almost 3,000 spectators watched one session of the match in Blackpool.[43] The Billiard Player magazine attributed Donaldson's success to his strong safety play and a below-par performance from Davis.[42] The highest break Donaldson achieved during the match was 80, with Davis's highest break 79.[44] A column in the Manchester Evening News, after the final, commented that, "So afraid were Fred Davis and Walter Donaldson ... of making any rash move which would cost them a frame that play was painfully slow at times."[45]

With only one win from seven matches in the 1950/1951 News of the World Snooker Tournament, Donaldson finished joint-last.[46] Donaldson and Fred Davis played the 1951 world final in Blackpool, again over 97 frames, in front of a record crowd for a World Snooker Championship match. From 6–6, Davis moved into a 12–6 lead, reaching a winning margin at 49–36 before the match concluded 58–39.[47] Donaldson won half of his matches at the 1951/1952 News of the World Snooker Tournament, leading to a sixth-place ranking out of the nine players.[48]

Following a dispute between the Professional Billiards Players' Association (PBPA) and the Billiards Association and Control Council (BA&CC), which derived partly from the PBPA members feeling that the BA&CC was taking too large a share of the income from tournaments, most professional players boycotted the 1952 World Snooker Championship and competed instead in their own 1952 World Professional Match-play Championship. As this event included most of the leading players, the public perceived it as the real world championship.[44] The World Professional Match-play Championships are now accepted by snooker historians as part of the World Snooker Championship series.[1] The 1952 World Professional Match-play Championship final featured Fred Davis and Donaldson and was contested across 73 frames. Davis won six of the eight frames in their first session, and led 7–5 after the first day. Donaldson had compiled a break of 104.[49] Donaldson recorded another century break of 106 in the twentieth frame, but Davis increased his lead over him to 14–10 by the end of the second day.[50] On the third day, Davis achieved a break of 140, a new World Championship record, and Donaldson made a 111. Davis finished the day 21–15 ahead.[51] After another day's play, Davis was 29–19 ahead,[52] after which Donaldson won eight of the next twelve frames.[53] Davis won the title, finishing the last day at 38–35.[54]

The 1952/1953 News of the World Snooker Tournament finished in January 1953, with Donaldson's three wins in eight matches enough to see him finish third.[55] The 1953 World Professional Match-play Championship final in March saw Donaldson and Davis even at 6–6 after the first day of the 71-frame match. Donaldson took a 13–11 lead after day two, despite a break of 107 by Davis.[56][57] Donaldson was ahead 20–16 after day three, but Davis tied the match at 24–24 after the fourth day which included a century of 102.[58] Davis led 28–26, but Donaldson took a 31–29 lead at the end of the fifth day.[59] The match was again level at 33–33 after the final afternoon session, before Davis won 37–34.[60]

Donaldson placed seventh in the 1953/1954 News of the World Snooker Tournament, having lost five of his eight matches.[61] In the 1954 World Professional Match-play Championship, Fred Davis and Donaldson met in their eighth successive final. It was the most one-sided of the finals, with Davis leading 33–15 after four days in the 71-frame contest. Even before losing the match, Donaldson said he would not enter the World Championship again because he could not give enough time to the practice he felt was necessary.[62] Davis secured victory by winning the first three frames on the fifth day to lead 36–15.[63] The final score was 45–26 with Donaldson making a break of 121 on the final day.[64]

After the 1954 World Match-play final, Donaldson announced that he would not be playing in any future World Snooker Championships, as he wanted to focus more on the management of his smallholding, although he stated his intention to continue to play in other tournaments and in exhibition matches.[65][66] With three wins at the 1954/1955 News of the World Snooker Tournament, he failed to gain a high placing.[67] He finished third in 1955/1956,[68] and last in 1956/1957.[69] Donaldson inflicted Fred Davis's only defeat in the 1957/1958 News of the World Snooker Tournament (21–16), before finishing third of five players in the final table.[70] Earlier in the same tournament he defeated Joe Davis, also by 21–16, but had received a 14-point start. He did, however, make the highest break of the season, 141.[71] He finished bottom of four players in the 1958 News of the World Snooker Tournament table, with one win in nine matches.[72] In 1960, he retired completely from competitive play.[25]

Retirement and legacy Edit

Donaldson was married to Ida, whom he met whilst working in Rotherham in the 1920s.[25] After retiring from the sport, he converted his snooker room into a cowshed, breaking up the slates from his billiard table to make a path,[1][13][73] and preferred to play bowls rather than snooker.[74] In 1971, he stood as a Conservative Party candidate for the Newport Pagnell Urban District council and was elected.[75] He died in an ambulance on his way to hospital after suffering a heart attack at his home in Newport Pagnell, Buckinghamshire, on 24 May 1973.[3][6][25]

He was considered one of the greatest long potters of all time,[9] and a very consistent player, partly due to his avoidance of the use of side.[13] Joe Davis wrote of Donaldson in 1948 that:[76]

"He pots with great accuracy, and that cool leisurely style of his will take a lot of breaking down. Many players who watch Donaldson go away vowing to copy his square 'two-eyed' stance, but the chief merits of his style are the closeness to his body of both arms and the quiet, slow, easy-looking rhythm of his action."

Fred Davis praised Donaldson's potting ability and described him as a "fierce competitor" although "very limited technically".[29] In noting that Fred Davis and Donaldson dominated the game of snooker for several years, Lindrum described their "new approach" to snooker of "extensive safety tactics", recalling that the pair once shared 32 strokes on a single yellow ball, and suggesting that although safety play demanded skill, "if safety had continued to be used without regard to audience appreciation, it may eventually have brought about a sharp decline in popularity".[77]

Donaldson's obituary in Snooker Scene highlighted his "imperturbability" as a playing strength and claimed "his long potting was the best the game has ever seen", whilst noting that his aversion to applying side was probably the reason that he did not achieve more century breaks, as it limited his positional play.[6] The 2005 book Masters of the Baize describes Donaldson as "one of the most underrated [world professional snooker] champions", who "redefined the standards of long potting",[1] while a 1989 book by Ian Morrison describes him as "the first great Scottish snooker professional".[78] In 2012, Donaldson was inducted into the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association's World Snooker Hall of Fame.[79]

Career finals Edit

Snooker (4 titles) Edit

Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Ref.
Winner 1. 1932 Billiard Professionals' Association Championship[c]   AE Bridgewater (ENG) 4–3 [81]
Winner 2. 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament   Alec Brown (SCO) 20–11 [22]
Winner 3. 1947 World Snooker Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 82–63 [14]
Runner-up 1. 1948 World Snooker Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 61–84 [14]
Runner-up 2. 1949 World Snooker Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 65–80 [14]
Winner 4. 1950 World Snooker Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 51–46 [14]
Runner-up 3. 1951 World Snooker Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 39–58 [14]
Runner-up 4. 1952 World Professional Match-play Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 35–38 [54]
Runner-up 5. 1953 World Professional Match-play Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 34–37 [60]
Runner-up 6. 1954 World Professional Match-play Championship   Fred Davis (ENG) 26–45 [64]

English billiards (8 titles) Edit

Outcome Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Ref.
Winner 1922 British Junior English Billiards Championship (Under-16) Harold Renaut 1,000–686 [8][82]
Winner 1929 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7,000–5,124 [11][83]
Winner 1930 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7,000–6,505 [84]
Winner 1931 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Willie Smith 7,847–5,048 [85]
Winner 1932 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7,335–4,150 [86]
Winner 1932 Billiards Professionals' Association Championship[c] L.W. Bateman 2,500–2,486 [87]
Winner 1934 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship W. Hefferman 7,000–3,434 [88]
Winner 1938 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Harry Stokes 7,000–5,336 [89]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ For this tournament there was an "open" handicap where a player with a lower handicap would concede a number of points in each frame based on the difference in handicap ratings. There was an additional "sealed" frame handicap that was unknown to the players and applied to the scores after the conclusion of the match.[30]
  2. ^ The News of the World tournaments from 1949 to 1958 were played with an "open" handicap where a player with a lower handicap would concede a number of points in each frame based on the difference in handicap ratings.[34]
  3. ^ a b BPA tournaments did not attract the leading players.[80]

References Edit

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External links Edit

walter, donaldson, snooker, player, walter, weir, wilson, donaldson, february, 1907, 1973, scottish, professional, snooker, billiards, player, contested, eight, consecutive, world, championship, finals, against, fred, davis, from, 1947, 1954, title, 1947, 1950. Walter Weir Wilson Donaldson 2 February 1907 24 May 1973 was a Scottish professional snooker and billiards player He contested eight consecutive world championship finals against Fred Davis from 1947 to 1954 and won the title in 1947 and 1950 Donaldson was known for his long potting and his consistency when playing and had an aversion to the use of side In 2012 he was inducted posthumously into the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association s World Snooker Hall of Fame Walter DonaldsonBorn 1907 02 02 2 February 1907Edinburgh ScotlandDied24 May 1973 1973 05 24 aged 66 Newport Pagnell Buckinghamshire EnglandSport country ScotlandProfessional1923 1960Tournament winsWorld Champion1947 1950Donaldson became a professional player shortly after winning the under 16 s British Junior English Billiards Championship in 1922 and won the Scottish professional billiards title six times He first competed in the World Snooker Championship in 1933 but after a heavy defeat by Joe Davis did not enter again until 1939 After serving in the Fourth Indian Division during World War II Donaldson entered the 1946 World Championship where he lost to Davis in his first match As a player that did not reach the championship final he was eligible to enter the 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament which he won Following Joe Davis s retirement from the World Championship in 1946 Donaldson practised intensively and won the 1947 Championship by defeating Fred Davis in the final Davis won the following two championships with Donaldson taking the next and then being runner up to Davis for the next four years Donaldson then retired from World Championship competition although he continued to play in the News of the World Snooker Tournament until 1959 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early professional career 2 2 World championship finals and later professional career 3 Retirement and legacy 4 Career finals 4 1 Snooker 4 titles 4 2 English billiards 8 titles 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditWalter Weir Wilson Donaldson was born in Edinburgh on 2 February 1907 1 2 3 the son of a billiard hall manager 1 2 3 The family moved to Coatbridge when Donaldson was five 4 His father coached him in English billiards from age five having constructed a 1 foot 30 cm platform around one of the billiard tables so that the younger Donaldson could reach the table to play 4 5 6 Donaldson told an interviewer for The Billiard Player in 1939 that starting to play at a young age was a common feature among many professional players as when a kiddie is brought up like that the game gets fairly into his bones and he has much more chance than other people of becoming a good player 7 His father also trained Margaret Lennan who became the unofficial British Isles Champion of women s billiards in 1928 4 Donaldson won the under 16 division of the British Junior English Billiards Championship in 1922 at the age of 15 8 and turned professional the following year 9 Career EditEarly professional career Edit Donaldson moved to Rotherham in South Yorkshire where he managed a billiard hall and travelled to Glasgow to win the Scottish professional billiards and snooker championships in the 1928 1929 season 10 He later became the owner of a billiard hall in New Ollerton Nottinghamshire 10 11 He first entered the World Snooker Championship in 1933 defeating Willie Leigh 13 frames to 11 before losing 1 13 in the semi finals to Joe Davis 12 In 1939 Donaldson said he realised from watching Davis annihilate him that there was far more in the game than I had ever dreamt of 7 He did not participate in the championship again until 1939 12 His six year absence has been attributed to a commitment to practise and improve his standard of play following the resounding defeat by Davis 1 13 In 1939 he defeated Herbert Holt and Dickie Laws in the qualifying competition both 18 13 then Claude Falkiner 21 10 in the first round before losing 15 16 to Sidney Smith in the quarter finals 14 He finished fourth of seven players in the 1939 1940 Daily Mail Gold Cup 15 The BBC World Service radio station broadcast part of his match against Fred Davis 16 Donaldson spoke about his playing philosophy in 1939 saying he avoided playing risky shots because he believed matches were typically lost by one player making errors It isn t so much that one man wins the game but that the other man loses it 17 16 Asked by the interviewer for hints for The Billiard Player s readers to help them improve their standard of play Donaldson advised against the use of side as it spoils the shot in at least 90 per cent of cases when it s applied by any but a first class player And generally it really isn t necessary 17 18 He also said he had claimed the title of Scottish snooker champion because despite issuing an invitation to any challenger to play for that title no one had taken up the challenge 7 In the 1940 World Championship he eliminated Holt 24 7 in the first round Joe Davis then defeated him 9 22 in the semi final 14 The championship was suspended for the remainder of World War II 12 Donaldson was called up in 1940 18 and served in Canada North Africa Greece and Italy as a sergeant in the Royal Corps of Signals attached to the Fourth Indian Division which was an original component of the Eighth Army when it was formed in September 1941 10 19 20 The championship resumed in 1946 with Joe Davis winning again including a 21 10 victory over Donaldson in the quarter finals 14 The professional players that did not reach the 1946 final were invited to participate in the 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament 21 Donaldson won some six months after being demobilised by defeating Alec Brown 20 11 in the final 18 22 Following his 1946 World Championship win Davis retired from the event 23 In November 1946 Donaldson compiled what would have been a new world record for the highest break 142 against John Pulman but as the billiard table being used was not of the standard type required for a record it was not recognised as such 24 World championship finals and later professional career Edit Donaldson practised intensively in preparation for the 1947 World Snooker Championship using a billiard table in a neighbour s attic 1 He defeated Stanley Newman 46 25 and then eliminated Horace Lindrum 39 32 to reach the final 1 14 Building refurbishment delays postponed the final held at Leicester Square Hall for several weeks Donaldson used the time to continue practising 25 In a two week final over 145 frames against Fred Davis Donaldson led 4 2 after the first session and 7 5 after the second 26 later extending his lead to sixteen frames at 35 19 After this Davis won six successive frames to reduce the lead to 35 25 27 Donaldson secured victory at 73 49 and finished the match at 82 63 1 28 His tactics during the championship involved compiling breaks of around 30 to 50 points and playing safety rather than attempting difficult pots 1 Davis became frustrated with the lack of scoring chances Donaldson left for him and missed a number of difficult pot attempts allowing Donaldson chances to win frames 1 There were three century breaks during the match s 145 frames all made by Davis 1 Joe Davis commented after the match that Donaldson s long potting at present is the equal of anything seen in snooker history whilst Fred Davis said he is playing the best snooker I have ever seen 18 In his book Talking Snooker first published in 1979 Fred Davis reflected that he had probably been perhaps overconfident and also had not expected Donaldson s standard to have improved so much as a result of his many hours of practice 29 This was the first of eight consecutive finals from 1947 to 1954 featuring the two players 1 Two wins by Joe Davis in challenge matches against Donaldson after the 1947 championship reinforced the public perception that the 15 time champion Davis was still the best player 1 Donaldson took a playing break of several months on medical advice having been diagnosed with conjunctivitis after experiencing headaches 25 In the 1948 World Snooker Championship held only six months after the 1947 tournament 1 Donaldson reached the final with wins against Kingsley Kennerley and Albert Brown 14 Fred Davis won 84 61 against Donaldson having reached a winning margin at 73 52 12 In Talking Snooker Davis wrote that he had consciously used the same risk averse tactics that had paid off for Donaldson in 1947 29 At the 1948 Sunday Empire News Tournament which was a round robin event with handicaps applied a Donaldson finished fourth of five players 30 In the 1949 World Snooker Championship final Fred Davis won 80 65 against Donaldson 14 having taken a winning lead of 73 58 on the previous day The score had been 63 58 before Davis won 10 frames in a row to take the title 31 Donaldson made the highest break of the tournament with 115 on the last day of his semi final match against Pulman 32 33 In the handicapped b 1949 1950 News of the World Snooker Tournament Donaldson won only two of his seven round robin matches and placed seventh out of the eight participants 35 Donaldson defeated Kennerley and Albert Brown to reach the 1950 world final against Fred Davis 14 the final was played over 97 frames 14 Davis led 8 4 after the first day 36 but after two more days Donaldson levelled the match at 18 18 including winning five of the last six that day 37 He took a four frame lead the following day 38 and maintained it for several days 39 40 eventually extending it to six frames at 45 39 on the penultimate day 41 Donaldson s victory was confirmed on the last day when the score was 49 32 with the match ending at 51 46 42 Almost 3 000 spectators watched one session of the match in Blackpool 43 The Billiard Player magazine attributed Donaldson s success to his strong safety play and a below par performance from Davis 42 The highest break Donaldson achieved during the match was 80 with Davis s highest break 79 44 A column in the Manchester Evening News after the final commented that So afraid were Fred Davis and Walter Donaldson of making any rash move which would cost them a frame that play was painfully slow at times 45 With only one win from seven matches in the 1950 1951 News of the World Snooker Tournament Donaldson finished joint last 46 Donaldson and Fred Davis played the 1951 world final in Blackpool again over 97 frames in front of a record crowd for a World Snooker Championship match From 6 6 Davis moved into a 12 6 lead reaching a winning margin at 49 36 before the match concluded 58 39 47 Donaldson won half of his matches at the 1951 1952 News of the World Snooker Tournament leading to a sixth place ranking out of the nine players 48 Following a dispute between the Professional Billiards Players Association PBPA and the Billiards Association and Control Council BA amp CC which derived partly from the PBPA members feeling that the BA amp CC was taking too large a share of the income from tournaments most professional players boycotted the 1952 World Snooker Championship and competed instead in their own 1952 World Professional Match play Championship As this event included most of the leading players the public perceived it as the real world championship 44 The World Professional Match play Championships are now accepted by snooker historians as part of the World Snooker Championship series 1 The 1952 World Professional Match play Championship final featured Fred Davis and Donaldson and was contested across 73 frames Davis won six of the eight frames in their first session and led 7 5 after the first day Donaldson had compiled a break of 104 49 Donaldson recorded another century break of 106 in the twentieth frame but Davis increased his lead over him to 14 10 by the end of the second day 50 On the third day Davis achieved a break of 140 a new World Championship record and Donaldson made a 111 Davis finished the day 21 15 ahead 51 After another day s play Davis was 29 19 ahead 52 after which Donaldson won eight of the next twelve frames 53 Davis won the title finishing the last day at 38 35 54 The 1952 1953 News of the World Snooker Tournament finished in January 1953 with Donaldson s three wins in eight matches enough to see him finish third 55 The 1953 World Professional Match play Championship final in March saw Donaldson and Davis even at 6 6 after the first day of the 71 frame match Donaldson took a 13 11 lead after day two despite a break of 107 by Davis 56 57 Donaldson was ahead 20 16 after day three but Davis tied the match at 24 24 after the fourth day which included a century of 102 58 Davis led 28 26 but Donaldson took a 31 29 lead at the end of the fifth day 59 The match was again level at 33 33 after the final afternoon session before Davis won 37 34 60 Donaldson placed seventh in the 1953 1954 News of the World Snooker Tournament having lost five of his eight matches 61 In the 1954 World Professional Match play Championship Fred Davis and Donaldson met in their eighth successive final It was the most one sided of the finals with Davis leading 33 15 after four days in the 71 frame contest Even before losing the match Donaldson said he would not enter the World Championship again because he could not give enough time to the practice he felt was necessary 62 Davis secured victory by winning the first three frames on the fifth day to lead 36 15 63 The final score was 45 26 with Donaldson making a break of 121 on the final day 64 After the 1954 World Match play final Donaldson announced that he would not be playing in any future World Snooker Championships as he wanted to focus more on the management of his smallholding although he stated his intention to continue to play in other tournaments and in exhibition matches 65 66 With three wins at the 1954 1955 News of the World Snooker Tournament he failed to gain a high placing 67 He finished third in 1955 1956 68 and last in 1956 1957 69 Donaldson inflicted Fred Davis s only defeat in the 1957 1958 News of the World Snooker Tournament 21 16 before finishing third of five players in the final table 70 Earlier in the same tournament he defeated Joe Davis also by 21 16 but had received a 14 point start He did however make the highest break of the season 141 71 He finished bottom of four players in the 1958 News of the World Snooker Tournament table with one win in nine matches 72 In 1960 he retired completely from competitive play 25 Retirement and legacy EditDonaldson was married to Ida whom he met whilst working in Rotherham in the 1920s 25 After retiring from the sport he converted his snooker room into a cowshed breaking up the slates from his billiard table to make a path 1 13 73 and preferred to play bowls rather than snooker 74 In 1971 he stood as a Conservative Party candidate for the Newport Pagnell Urban District council and was elected 75 He died in an ambulance on his way to hospital after suffering a heart attack at his home in Newport Pagnell Buckinghamshire on 24 May 1973 3 6 25 He was considered one of the greatest long potters of all time 9 and a very consistent player partly due to his avoidance of the use of side 13 Joe Davis wrote of Donaldson in 1948 that 76 He pots with great accuracy and that cool leisurely style of his will take a lot of breaking down Many players who watch Donaldson go away vowing to copy his square two eyed stance but the chief merits of his style are the closeness to his body of both arms and the quiet slow easy looking rhythm of his action Fred Davis praised Donaldson s potting ability and described him as a fierce competitor although very limited technically 29 In noting that Fred Davis and Donaldson dominated the game of snooker for several years Lindrum described their new approach to snooker of extensive safety tactics recalling that the pair once shared 32 strokes on a single yellow ball and suggesting that although safety play demanded skill if safety had continued to be used without regard to audience appreciation it may eventually have brought about a sharp decline in popularity 77 Donaldson s obituary in Snooker Scene highlighted his imperturbability as a playing strength and claimed his long potting was the best the game has ever seen whilst noting that his aversion to applying side was probably the reason that he did not achieve more century breaks as it limited his positional play 6 The 2005 book Masters of the Baize describes Donaldson as one of the most underrated world professional snooker champions who redefined the standards of long potting 1 while a 1989 book by Ian Morrison describes him as the first great Scottish snooker professional 78 In 2012 Donaldson was inducted into the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association s World Snooker Hall of Fame 79 Career finals EditSnooker 4 titles Edit Outcome No Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Ref Winner 1 1932 Billiard Professionals Association Championship c nbsp AE Bridgewater ENG 4 3 81 Winner 2 1946 Albany Club Professional Snooker Tournament nbsp Alec Brown SCO 20 11 22 Winner 3 1947 World Snooker Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 82 63 14 Runner up 1 1948 World Snooker Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 61 84 14 Runner up 2 1949 World Snooker Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 65 80 14 Winner 4 1950 World Snooker Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 51 46 14 Runner up 3 1951 World Snooker Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 39 58 14 Runner up 4 1952 World Professional Match play Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 35 38 54 Runner up 5 1953 World Professional Match play Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 34 37 60 Runner up 6 1954 World Professional Match play Championship nbsp Fred Davis ENG 26 45 64 English billiards 8 titles Edit Outcome Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Ref Winner 1922 British Junior English Billiards Championship Under 16 Harold Renaut 1 000 686 8 82 Winner 1929 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7 000 5 124 11 83 Winner 1930 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7 000 6 505 84 Winner 1931 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Willie Smith 7 847 5 048 85 Winner 1932 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Alexander Taylor 7 335 4 150 86 Winner 1932 Billiards Professionals Association Championship c L W Bateman 2 500 2 486 87 Winner 1934 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship W Hefferman 7 000 3 434 88 Winner 1938 Scottish Professional Billiards Championship Harry Stokes 7 000 5 336 89 Notes Edit For this tournament there was an open handicap where a player with a lower handicap would concede a number of points in each frame based on the difference in handicap ratings There was an additional sealed frame handicap that was unknown to the players and applied to the scores after the conclusion of the match 30 The News of the World tournaments from 1949 to 1958 were played with an open handicap where a player with a lower handicap would concede a number of points in each frame based on the difference in handicap ratings 34 a b BPA tournaments did not attract the leading players 80 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Williams Luke Gadsby Paul 2005 Walter Donaldson Masters of the Baize Edinburgh Mainstream Publishing pp 27 32 ISBN 1840188723 a b Matthews Ian Buchanan Peter 1995 The All Time Greats of British and Irish Sport Enfield Guinness Publishing pp 125 126 ISBN 0851126782 a b c Find a will UK Government Archived from the original on 22 January 2020 Retrieved 19 November 2015 a b c Warned against billiards career Coatbridge Express 29 October 1947 p 4 Girl Billiards Player Hull Daily Mail 6 September 1930 p 4 a b c Obituary Walter Donaldson Snooker Scene Everton s News Agency July 1973 p 3 a b c Lewis Harold November 1939 A typical Scottish invasion The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council pp 8 10 a b Under 16 Champions English Amateur Billiards Association 18 October 2013 Archived from the original on 16 September 2019 Retrieved 29 June 2020 a b Morrison Ian 1986 The Hamlyn Encyclopedia of Snooker Twickenham Hamlyn Publishing Group p 30 ISBN 0600501922 a b c Fred Davis Walter Donaldson World title for which The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council July 1947 p 6 a b Professional champion coming north Falkirk Herald 3 September 1932 p 13 a b c d Kobylecky John 2019 The Complete International Directory of Snooker Players 1927 to 2018 Kobyhadrian Books pp 267 268 ISBN 9780993143311 a b c Everton Clive 1985 Snooker The Records Enfield Guinness Superlatives Ltd p 53 ISBN 0851124488 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Everton Clive 1985 Snooker The Records Enfield Guinness Superlatives Ltd pp 54 55 ISBN 0851124488 Snooker The Times 12 February 1940 p 2 Broadcasting The Times 1 February 1940 p 15 a b Lewis Harold December 1939 Walter Donaldson is telling us how we beat ourselves at snooker The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council pp 14 18 a b c World snooker champion Donaldson The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council November 1947 p 3 Sports gossip Hull Daily Mail 14 October 1947 p 4 A Brief History Of The Eighth Army And The Desert War iwm org uk Imperial War Museum Archived from the original on 4 March 2022 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Snooker consolation Shields Daily News 29 June 1946 p 7 a b Untitled article Dundee Courier 21 September 1946 p 4 Nauright John Zipp Sarah 3 January 2020 Routledge Handbook of Global Sport Abingdon Taylor amp Francis p 277 ISBN 9781317500476 Archived from the original on 5 September 2020 Snooker break of 142 not a record Western Daily Press 21 November 1946 p 4 a b c d e Lowe Ted Butler Frank 1984 Between frames London A amp C Black pp 96 99 ISBN 0713624469 Davis behind in snooker final Western Daily Press 4 October 1947 p 2 Fred Davis rallies Dundee Courier 18 October 1947 p 4 New snooker champion The Mercury 27 October 1947 Archived from the original on 29 April 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2012 a b c Davis Fred 1983 Talking Snooker 2nd ed London A amp C Black pp 18 19 ISBN 0713624094 a b Morrison Ian December 1985 History of a tournament the Empire News tournament Pot Black Mirus UK p 40 Snooker title for Fred Davis Nottingham Evening Post 7 May 1949 Retrieved 21 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive 2004 Embassy World Championship Information Global Snooker Centre Archived from the original on 8 December 2004 Retrieved 7 May 2012 Snooker and billiards The Glasgow Herald 4 April 1949 p 2 Archived from the original on 30 April 2021 Morrison Ian 1989 Snooker records facts and champions Enfield Guinness Superlatives Ltd p 82 ISBN 0851123643 Davis surprises himself Western Daily Press 23 January 1950 Retrieved 25 December 2015 via British Newspaper Archive World snooker championship The Scotsman 11 March 1950 p 4 Donaldson draws level in late rally Aberdeen Press and Journal 14 March 1950 p 4 Donaldson takes lead in snooker final Aberdeen Press and Journal 15 March 1950 p 4 Donaldson holds lead Bradford Observer 16 March 1950 p 8 Donaldson holds lead Bradford Observer 17 March 1950 p 6 Donaldson six up Sheffield Daily Telegraph 18 March 1950 p 8 a b Donaldson recaptures the title The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council April 1950 pp 3 6 Blackpool snooker venture is success Manchester Evening News 18 March 1950 p 4 a b Everton Clive 1986 The History of Snooker and Billiards Haywards Heath Partridge Press pp 59 60 ISBN 1852250135 Mr Manchester s diary snooker Manchester Evening News 10 March 1950 p 3 Alec Brown s great triumph The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council February 1951 p 8 World s professional snooker championship The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council April 1951 pp 3 4 Professional Snooker The Times 21 January 1952 p 4 Fred Davis gains an early lead Birmingham Daily Gazette 11 March 1952 p 6 Fred Davis four frames ahead Bradford Observer 12 March 1952 p 8 Fred Davis beats his brother s record Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 13 March 1952 p 3 Fred Davis now ten frames ahead Bradford Observer 14 March 1952 p 6 Donaldson reduces gap Bradford Observer 15 March 1952 p 6 a b Leeds billiards player in title semi final Bradford Observer 16 March 1952 p 6 Professional Snooker The Times 19 January 1953 p 9 Donaldson and Davis level Dundee Courier 24 March 1953 p 6 Retrieved 23 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Fred Davis Dundee Courier 25 March 1953 p 2 Retrieved 23 March 2016 via British Newspaper Archive Snooker The Glasgow Herald 27 March 1953 p 9 Archived from the original on 26 April 2016 Professional snooker The Times 28 March 1953 p 4 a b Professional snooker The Times 30 March 1953 p 2 Professional play The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council February 1954 p 9 Snooker and Billiards The Glasgow Herald 5 March 1954 p 4 Archived from the original on 30 April 2021 F Davis Retains World Snooker Championship The Times 6 March 1954 p 4 a b Snooker and Billiards The Glasgow Herald 8 March 1954 p 4 Archived from the original on 19 August 2020 Donaldson gives up world snooker Daily Herald 10 May 1954 p 7 Donaldson not to play for world title Birmingham Daily Post 10 May 1954 p 19 Professional results The Billiard Player The Billiards Association and Control Council February 1955 p 12 News of the World 1500 snooker tournament The Billiard Player The Billiards Association and Control Council March 1956 p 11 News of the World 1500 professional snooker tournament The Billiard Player The Billiards Association and Control Council March 1957 p 15 Fred Davis wins The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council April 1958 p 7 News of the World snooker tournament The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council December 1957 p 5 Full scores and breaks of 1 500 News of the World professional snooker tournament The Billiard Player Billiards Association and Control Council December 1958 p 5 Reid Alasdair 14 April 2003 Snooker The unknown potter The Herald Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 19 November 2015 Walter Donaldson dies Bucks Standard and Milton Keynes Observer No 5975 1 June 1973 p 1 Labour gains in North Bucks elections Bucks Standard and Milton Keynes Observer No 5871 14 May 1971 p 1 Davis Joe February 1948 Joe Davis writes Tattersall s Club Magazine Vol 20 no 12 Tattersall s Club Sydney Retrieved 18 June 2021 via archive org Lindrum Horace 1974 Horace Lindrum s Snooker Billiards and Pool Dee Why West Australia Paul Hamlyn Pty p 79 ISBN 0727101056 Morrison Ian 1989 Snooker records facts and champions Enfield Guinness Superlatives Ltd p 43 ISBN 0851123643 Luca Brecel rookie of the year Snooker Scene Everton s News Agency June 2012 p 33 Untitled article Edinburgh Evening News 2 March 1932 p 13 Untitled article Daily Herald 2 March 1932 p 14 Billiards genius of 15 Halifax Evening Courier 17 June 1922 p 4 Title for Donaldson The Scotsman 15 April 1929 p 4 Scottish professional championship The Scotsman 19 May 1930 p 14 Scottish professional championship The Scotsman 26 January 1931 p 14 Taylor reserves his best display for last session Aberdeen Press and Journal 22 February 1932 p 5 Thorn A Stanley April 1932 Notes from headquarters The Billiard Player W G Clifford pp 2 2 Walter Donaldson retains Scottish championship title Aberdeen Press and Journal 8 January 1934 p 5 W Donaldson secures Scottish title The Scotsman 11 April 1938 p 3 External links EditWalter Donaldson at the World Snooker Tour Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter Donaldson snooker player amp oldid 1160986178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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