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Nutcharut Wongharuthai was born on 7 November 1999, in Saraburi, Thailand, and grew up there. [1] [2] She is known as "Mink", and explained in a 2019 interview with Matt Huart for World Women's Snooker that "in Thailand we call each and everyone by their nickname because our traditional Thai names are too long and we don't have any Christian name like Western people.
After coming from 0–3 behind to defeat Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, [7] Bai defeated Mink Nutcharut 6–5 in the final, [8] winning the deciding frame on the last pink ball to secure her first women's world title.
Mink Nutcharut was the defending champion, having defeated Wendy Jans 6–5 in the 2022 final, [3] but she lost 2–5 to Siripaporn Nuanthakhamjam in the semi-finals. [4] Nuanthakhamjan defeated Bai Yulu 6–3 in the final to win her first women's world title. [ 5 ]
Bai Yulu beats world number one Mink Nutcharut in a thrilling final in China to win the World Women's Snooker Championship for the first time.
Ryan Day made his fourth professional maximum break in his qualifying match against Mink Nutcharut, which Day won 6–1. [7] [8] The 12th seed, Robert Milkins was beaten 4–6 by Marco Fu, [9] and the 24th seed, Joe Perry was beaten 3–6 by Dylan Emery. [10] Mark Williams made his 600th career century break in his whitewash win over Rebecca ...
Four teams participated in the tournament: Neil Robertson and Mink Nutcharut, Mark Selby and Rebecca Kenna, Luca Brecel and Reanne Evans, and Judd Trump and Baipat Siripaporn. The tournament was played as a round‑robin with four‑ frame matches, followed by a final between the top two teams, played as the best of seven frames. [1] [2]
The 2022 World Snooker Championship winner Ronnie O'Sullivan was paired with 12-time Women's World Snooker Championship winner Reanne Evans, 2019 World Snooker Championship winner Judd Trump with Ng On-yee, Mark Selby with Rebecca Kenna, and Neil Robertson with reigning women's world champion Mink Nutcharut. [9]
Mink Nutcharut lost 7–10 to Dechawat Poomjaeng, but made her first century break in professional competition, becoming the first woman since Kelly Fisher in 2002 to make a century in a World Championship match. [31] The following day, Ng On-yee made a 115 break, the highest by a woman in the event's history. [32]