1985 World Snooker champion Dennis Taylor set for Motherwell
With a packed Crucible Theatre audience and 18 million television viewers watching, the affable Northern Irishman pocketed the final black to see off Steve Davis 18-17 in a nail biting contest.
“Both of us had never been under that type of pressure before,” Taylor (71) told the Motherwell Times.
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Hide Ad“To go down to the last few balls and the last black after 17 days was something new for both of us, even though Steve was going for his third world title in a row.
“The pressure was just incredible at the end and I think it showed with Steve over cutting the black.
“It was the most severe pressure I’ve ever felt.
“I took ages on the shot and really didn’t grip the cue.
“I just let it be very loose in my hand.
“I had earlier had the first proper chance and made a complete mess of it but that last one was easier than the one that Steve missed.
“When it went in it was hard to describe. After trying for 13 years to win the world championship suddenly it was there.
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Hide Ad“To beat a player that dominated the game throughout the ’80s was quite a feeling.
“We didn’t realise that 35 years later people would still be talking about it.
“Steve says even though he lost that one it was great to be involved in a bit of snooker history that people remember more than any other game.”
Taylor won that final wearing the famous “goggles” glasses designed by Jack Carnham, a BBC commentator who was also a snooker professional but more of a billiards player.
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Hide AdTaylor said: “Jack’s family business when he was growing up was making spectacle frames.
“So I went and stayed with him and he made them by hand in 1983.
“He said: ‘You could get these made in a few hours’ but I said I wanted him to make them.
“He finished up making the pair that I won the world championship with.
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Hide Ad“I probably wouldn’t have won it without me wearing the – as they looked like – purely upside down glasses.
“There was a bit more to it than that.
“I started wearing those glasses about 18 months before winning the world title.
“I had pretty poor eyesight and I previously had tried contact lenses in 1979 and they were brilliant.
“In fact I should have won the world championship that year. I beat Steve Davis, Ray Reardon who was six-time champion and lost in the final to Terry Griffiths.
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Hide Ad“But I couldn’t get on with contact lenses so I knew that I definitely needed the glasses.
“If I take the glasses off now and try to play, the balls look like rugby balls!