Waratthanun Sukritthanes (; born 5 December 1993) is a snooker player from Thailand. She was the 2018 IBSF World Snooker Championship Women's Champion, and was the runner-up in 2017.
Sukritthanes reached the 2017 IBSF World Snooker Championship Women's final, losing 2âÂÂ5 to Wendy Jans, who won the tournament for the sixth consecutive time (and seventh overall). Sukritthanes won all of her four group matches 3âÂÂ0, then beat Arantxa Sanchis 4âÂÂ2 and Nutcharut Wongharuthai 4âÂÂ0 to reach the final, where she lost the first two to Jans before levelling at 2âÂÂ2 Jans then took three frames in a row to win the title.
In the 2018 ISBF Championship, Sukritthanes again came through the group stage without conceding a frame, winning her three matches 3âÂÂ0, and topping the qualifying table ahead of Ng On-yee, the only other player not to have lost a frame. She then won past Arantxa Sanchis 4âÂÂ2, Anastasia Nechaeva 4âÂÂ0 and Amee Kamani 4âÂÂ2 to set up a rematch of the previous year's final against Wendy Jans. In the final, Sukritthanes won the first frame. Jans then won the next two before Sukritthanes took four in a row, with breaks of 30 and 56 to win the final frame, and thereby the match and tournament.
She competed in the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games 6-reds competition, winning silver after losing to Nutcharut Wongharuthai in the final.
From 2017 to 2019, Sukritthanes reached the quarter finals of the World Women's Snooker Championship each year. In both 2017 and 2018, she won all of her qualifying group matches. In the quarter-finals, she lost 3âÂÂ4 to eventual champion Ng On-yee in 2017, and 2âÂÂ4 to Rebecca Kenna in 2018. In 2019 it was Reanne Evans who beat Sukritthanes 4âÂÂ2 in the last eight. Evans went on to win her twelfth title.
In 2018 she was a semi-finalist in both the World Women's 10-Red Championship, winning three matches 3âÂÂ0 before losing 1âÂÂ3 to Reanne Evans, and the 6-red championship, where Ng On-yee beat her 3âÂÂ2. Sukritthanes went a stage further in the 2019 6-reds tournament, but again lost to On-yee, this time 3âÂÂ1, in the final.
In June 2019, she partnered Baipat Siripaporn to win the first Women's Snooker World Cup.
She began the 2019âÂÂ20 season ranked 15th.