The 1994 Women's World Snooker Championship was a women's snooker tournament played in the United Kingdom and India in 1994 and was that year's edition of the Women's World Snooker Championship first held in 1976. The early rounds were played at the Cue Sports Snooker Club in Raunds, Northamptonshire and the quarter-finals onwards were played at the Meridien Hotel, New Delhi. Defending champion Allison Fisher beat Stacey Hillyard 7âÂÂ3 in the final to take the title, her seventh and last Women's World Snooker Championship win.
The initial rounds of the tournament, up to the fourth round (last 16) were held at the Cue Sports Snooker Club in Raunds, Northamptonshire. Of the top eight seeds, Allison Fisher, Karen Corr, Stacey Hillyard, Tessa Davidson and Kim Shaw qualified for the quarter-finals, whilst Ann-Marie Farren, Mandy Fisher and Lynette Horsburgh failed to get through. In the last 16 round, Farren was beaten 2âÂÂ4 by Kelly Fisher after leading 2âÂÂ0, Mandy Fisher lost 1âÂÂ4 to Sarah Smith, and Horsburgh was defeated 1âÂÂ4 by Sharon Dickson. Hillyard compiled the highest break of the competition, 108, in her third-round match against Gaye Jones. Defending champion Allison Fisher won 4âÂÂ0 against both Valerie Dalgliesh and Julie Gillespie.
From the quarter-finals onwards, matches were held at the Meridien Hotel, New Delhi, the first time that the championship was held outside of the United Kingdom. The quarter-finals onwards were televised by Indian national television, and on Sky in the United Kingdom.
For the third match in succession in the tournament, Allison Fisher achieved a whitewash of her opponent, beating Sarah Smith 5âÂÂ0 whilst making four breaks over 30 to lead 4âÂÂ0 and then compiling a in the final . Hillyard also had a 5âÂÂ0 win, making four breaks over 30 in defeating Shaw. Davidson was 1âÂÂ3 down to Kelly Fisher but then leveled at 3âÂÂ3 and went ahead at 4âÂÂ3. After Fisher won the eighth frame, Davidson took the decider with the aid of a 44 break. Corr was 1âÂÂ3 down to Dickson before winning four frames in a row to win 5âÂÂ3.
Allison Fisher took a 3âÂÂ1 lead against Davidson, then lost two of the next three to make it 4âÂÂ3. Although Fisher won the next two frames and the match, she described it as "one of the toughest matches I've ever been involved in." Hillyard reached her sixth world championship final with a 6âÂÂ3 win over Corr.
In the first session, Fisher won the opening frame, but was then 2âÂÂ1 and 3âÂÂ2 behind. She drew level at 3âÂÂ3 with a break of 102 in the sixth frame.
In the second session, Fisher won all four frames, including the tenth on a to gain her seventh world snooker title in nine years. and the last time that she won the championship. The match featured breaks over 30 in nine of the ten frames was seen as closer than the result suggested It was the seventh and last time that Fisher won the title.
Source: Snooker Scene Winner (Allison Fisher): ã7,500 Runner-up (Stacey Hillyard): ã2,500 Losing semi-finalists: ã1,000 Losing quarter-finalists: ã500 Fourth round losers: ã250 Third round losers: ã100 Second Round losers: ã75 First Round losers: ã50 Highest Break (Stacey Hillyard, 108): ã400
Source: Snooker Scene
Source: Snooker Scene