As sport’s global shutdown threatens to scupper the World Snooker Championship for the first time in the 43-year Crucible era, attention necessarily switches to one of its all-time greats.
Alex Higgins would have celebrated his 71st birthday on Wednesday, and few will forget the impact the flamboyant “Hurricane” had in rocketing it into a new and extraordinarily popular TV age.
Higgins, who won two world titles a decade apart in 1972 and 1982, died in July 2010 at the age of 61, after a prolonged battle with illness. Stars gathered at his funeral in Belfast and showered him with compliments.
“Alex was one of the real inspirations behind me getting into snooker,” recalled Ronnie O’Sullivan. “He is a true legend and should be forever remembered as being the finest-ever snooker player.”
Higgins scuffled his way up from the Belfast streets and introduced his swashbuckling style and notorious volatile temperament to a sport renowned for its waist-coated decorum and smoke-filled gentlemen’s clubs.
By then snooker was very much a permanent TV fixture, and images of a tearful Higgins beckoning his young daughter Lauren into his arms beamed around the world and emphasised a star quality which would ultimately transcend his sport.
Higgins fought back from 7-0 down to edge Steve Davis in the 1983 UK final, but by the time Davis and Dennis Taylor were battling out their black-ball final in front of 18.5 million TV viewers two years later, the man who had attracted a sizeable proportion of them to the sport had started his sad decline.
Higgins’ days as a chain-smoking gunslinger were numbered. He squandered millions of pounds of prize money and his final years were spent fighting throat cancer and hustling for money to feed his betting habit.
The ‘Hurricane’ finally blew out on July 24, 2010. But those who flocked the streets of Belfast preferred to remember one of their own who had stunned the sporting world in his own, irrepressible fashion.
Recalling a tumultuous decade in which snooker was dragged into the households of half the nation, Higgins’ former personal assistant Will Robinson recalled: “There’s two things that made snooker what it is today. One is colour television, and the other is Alex Higgins.”