Before moving to the United States to join the more glamorous pool circuit, Allison Fisher earned her respect as the top player on the women's snooker circuit.
Ronnie O'Sullivan came to the 1996 Benson and Hedges Masters as the reigning champion. In his first round match he was up against Nigel Bond. After nearly 75 minutes of play, they were evenly poised at 4-4. This is what happened next.
Stephen Hendry leaves half a chance from his safety shot and that's all Ronnie O'Sullivan needs to clinch his first world ranking tournament. He makes a match winning break of 85 without showing any sign of nerves. Ronnie gets a tremendous reception from the crowd.
After having shown a lot of fighting quality to claw his way back in to the match from 3-0 and 7-5 down, Ronnie O'Sullivan puts the icing on the cake by making a 147 maximum break to beat Mark Selby on the deciding frame and advance to the final.
This is Ronnie O'Sullivan's eighth 147 in professional competition, equalling Stephen Hendry's record.
In 1993 Stephen Hendry was playing some of the best snooker of his life. In his UK Championship semi-final against John Parrott, he compiled 5 century breaks in 8 frames and won comfortably by 9 frames to 3 against the then world number 2.
In the final he went on to play young prodigy Ronnie O'Sullivan.
In 1992, Jimmy White won the Grand Prix at the Hexagon Theatre in Reading in a nail-biting final against a young Ken Doherty.
The final minutes of the frame, where Ken was playing for snookers, were cut so that the clip would stay within the limit of 10 minutes.
This is me solving the 5x5x5 cube in 2 minutes 8.54 seconds during the first round of the 2004 European Championship in Amsterdam, which was the world record at the time.
After the prize ceremony of the US Nationals and Open 2008, we had some fun trying to make a checkerboard pattern on the cube in a jar that I won. Luckily Joshua Satterfield came to the rescue...