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Reardon made breaks of 66, 59, 54, 50, 79, 36, and 68 on his way to whitewashing Higgins. [2] Steve Davis won the event, beating Ray Reardon 9–4 in the final. [5] Davis took a 4–0 lead with breaks of 53, 68, 40 and 58. Reardon won the next two frames, compiling breaks of 64 and 44 in the fifth frame, and 51 in the sixth frame.
Higgins won 4–0 against Ray Reardon in one semi final, [4] and Spencer defeated Graham Miles 4–0 in the other. [5] Higgins won the first frame of the final, after Spencer missed an easy pink, and Spencer won the second frame. In the third, Higgins made breaks of 37 and 28 to win. The fourth frame saw both players miss changes to win, with ...
The 1976 Canadian Club Masters was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament, which took place in the Northern Snooker Centre in Leeds, England. [2]Alex Higgins won the tournament, defeating Ray Reardon 6–4 in the final.
Ray Reardon defeated Jimmy White 10–5 in the final, to win the first prize of £5,000 and his first ranking tournament win since the 1978 World Championship. [3] [4] Reardon became the oldest winner of a ranking event at the age of 50 years and 14 days. As of 2025, he remains as the oldest winner of a ranking event.
Ray Reardon (WAL) Eddie Charlton (AUS) 38–32 1972–73: City Exhibition Hall, Manchester: 1974 Ray Reardon (WAL) Graham Miles (ENG) 22–12 1973–74: Belle Vue, Manchester: 1975 Ray Reardon (WAL) Eddie Charlton (AUS) 31–30 1974–75: Nunawading Basketball Centre, Melbourne, Australia 1976 Ray Reardon (WAL) Alex Higgins (NIR) 27–16
Conan O’Brien is mourning the loss of both of his parents in less than a week. The former late-night talk show host’s mother, Ruth Reardon O’Brien, died at her Brookline, Massachusetts, home ...
Reardon finished on top of the group table. [2] In the final, Higgins won the first frame, making a break of 47, and Reardon won the next making a break of 45. Higgins won the next to lead 3–1. Reardon won the fifth frame, but Higgins achieved victory by winning the sixth frame with a break of 70 and going on to take the match 5–3. [2]
The son of Ben and Cynthia Reardon, [2] he was born on 8 October 1932 in the coal mining community of Tredegar in Monmouthshire, Wales. [3] When eight years old, he was introduced to a version of snooker by his uncle, and at ten he was practising cue sports twice-weekly at Tredegar Workmen's Institute as well as on a scaled-down billiard table at home.