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John Spencer Passes Away |
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John Spencer, one of snooker's all-time greats, died on 11th July 2006 at the age of 71. The three-times world champion passed away at a hospice in Bolton after a three-year battle against stomach cancer. |


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John (My Uncle) was born 18/06/1935 in Radcliffe, Lancashire brother of Peter, Edna, Joyce & Robert (My Dad). John started playing snooker aged 15 and within a very short time was compiling century breaks. After doing his national service he did not pick up a cue again seriously until 1963 and he entered the English Amateur Championship going all the way to the final only to lose to Ray Reardon. That was in 1964 and he reached the final again the next year but in 1966 he beat Marcus Owen to win the title. He then travelled to Karachi for the world amateur championships where he was runner-up, losing to Marcus’ older brother, Gary. He then turned professional along with Gary and Ray Reardon who became the first new professionals since 1951. The revival had begun. Together with his great friend and rival, Ray Reardon, John Spencer dominated the game for ten years from 1969 when he won the first of the newly reorganised world championships. He was one of the first players to perfect the ‘deep screw’ shot and to use a two-piece cue World Professional Snooker Champion - 3 times; 1969, 1970(Nov), 1977. The first ever B & H Irish Masters also went to John in 1978. Three Pot Black titles also came his way.
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