Born |
Glasgow, Scotland |
June 27, 1984
---|---|
Sport country | Scotland |
Nickname | hotshot |
Professional | 2006/2007, 2008/2009 |
Highest ranking | 82(2008/2009) |
Career winnings | £5,980 |
Highest break | 147 |
Best ranking finish | Last 64 (three times) |
Tournament wins | |
Non-ranking | European under 19 champion |
Robert Stephen (born 27 June 1984 in Glasgow) is a Scottish former professional snooker player.
He first qualified for the main tour for the 2006/2007 season having topped the Scottish rankings the year before. During the 2008/2009 season, he reached the last 64 at the Shanghai Masters and the Bahrain Championship.
Stephen first played competitive snooker in 2003, entering three Challenge Tour events and qualifying for the World Championship; he progressed to the last 32 at one tournament, where Chris Norbury beat him 5–0, but lost his opening World Championship match 3–5 to Troy Shaw.
Having gained a place on the professional tour through the Scottish rankings, Stephen made his début in the 2006 Northern Ireland Trophy, where he lost 0–5 to Liang Wenbo. He recorded his first wins as a professional in his qualifying group for the 2006 Grand Prix, beating both Lee Page and Mark Joyce 3–0, but did not qualify for the tournament itself.
At the 2007 Welsh Open, he made his first competitive century break, a 115, in the process of defeating Tian Pengfei 5–2; he lost his next match by the same scoreline to Stuart Pettman. In the 2007 World Championship, Stephen was drawn against Alfie Burden in the last 96, but lost 9–10, and fell off the tour as the world number 91 at the season's end.
During the 2007/2008 season, Stephen played in the Pontin's International Open Series in an attempt to win back his place, reaching the semi-final of Event Three, where Michael King beat him 5–4. His performances were sufficient for him to return to the main tour for the 2008/2009 season.
Stephen's second season as a professional brought more success than his first, with runs to the last 64 at the Bahrain Championship, the Shanghai Masters and the China Open. In the Shanghai Masters, he defeated Scott MacKenzie 5–2 and Paul Davies by the same scoreline, but lost 1–5 to Michael Holt, while his progress in Bahrain, encompassing victories over David Grace and Andrew Norman, was ended by a 3–5 loss to Robert Milkins. In the China Open, John Parrott overcame him 5–3.