Sky's the limit for cueist Mink
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Sky's the limit for cueist Mink

WOMEN OF THE YEAR 2022: Young Mink on cue for bigger thingsMink aims to beat men at their game

Nutcharut Wongharuthai competes in a tournament this month.
Nutcharut Wongharuthai competes in a tournament this month.

Twelve years ago, nobody would have believed that the skinny little girl sitting in a quiet corner of a Saraburi snooker club would one day become a world-beater.

Nutcharut Wongharuthai's meteoric rise to the top in women's snooker is a story that has fascinated many.

The only reason that Nutcharut, better known among Thai sports fans by her nickname "Mink", picked up a snooker cue in the first place was that she had nothing else to do as she waited for her mother to finish her job at a snooker club in Saraburi province, some 100 kilometres from Bangkok.

Years of effort since then finally paid off in Sheffield, England, just last month when Nutcharut came through an extraordinary final against the experienced Belgian Wendy Jans to become the first Thai to win the World Women's Snooker Championship.

The 22-year-old Thai player potted the final black to seal a dramatic victory after producing a stunning fightback from 5-3 down to take the match in the deciding frame for a 6-5 victory.

"I am very happy to win the title for myself and Thailand," she said.

Nutcharut later met Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha at Government House.

The prime minister thanked the player for giving Thais happiness while the country is being hit by several problems.

"You created a good story for Thais during this difficult time," Gen Prayut told the cueist.

Nutcharut made it to the Feb 15 final after a quarter-final victory over three-time world champion Ng On Yee of Hong Kong and a convincing win over Rebecca Kenna of England in the semi-finals.

Nutcharut Wongharuthai poses with the trophy after winning the World Women's Snooker Championship. 

Jans' victims on the way to the final included 12-time winner and defending champion Reanne Evans of England in the quarter-finals.

The monetary reward for Nutcharat's efforts in Sheffield was the paltry sum of £6,000 (approximately 260,000 baht) -- a world away from the Players Championship final on the men's tour a day earlier, in which Neil Robertson pocketed some £125,000.

Her final victory sealed a place for Nutcharut on the World Snooker Main Tour pro circuit for two years, starting next season.

This gives her the opportunity to prove that she is capable of competing with the star names of the sport dominated by men.

"Snooker is for everybody … and now that I can finally play against men, I'm determined to raise my level to be as good as them," she said.

"These next two years are a great opportunity to show what I can do."

Nutcharut's great promise has been plain to see. Three years ago Nutcharut finished runner-up in the last women's world final played before the coronavirus pandemic battered all sporting events.

She became the only female player to make a maximum 147 in 2019, recently reached the quarter-finals of a qualifying tour event, beating several male players en route, and won the women's British Open in January.

Born and raised in Saraburi, Nutcharut's early life was a struggle and she had to hang around after school at the snooker club where her mother worked as a cashier.

The dreariness she endured in the cigarette smoke-filled hall turned out to be a blessing in disguise.

The club was owned by Atthasit Mahitthi, a former top Thai snooker player also known as "Big Saraburi", who started coaching Nutcharut just to help her kill time.

From that humble beginning, Nutcharut has blossomed into one of the finest female snooker players the world has ever seen.

Although she lost in the finals of the recently concluded world amateur and Asian championships in Doha, much is expected from her when she starts playing on the lucrative world professional tour later this year.

BIO DATA

  • Nutcharut ‘Mink’ Wongharuthai
  • Age: 22

ACHIVEMENTS

  • 2017: Wins 6-red snooker title at Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games
  • 2018: Wins World Women’s U21 Championship
  • 2020: Wins IBSF World Women’s 6-red Championship
  • 2019: Wins IBSF World Women’s 6-red Championship, Australian Women’s Open Championship
  • 2022: Wins Women’s British Open, World Women’s Snooker Championship
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