Geet Sethi

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Geet Sethi bigraphy, stories - Indian billiards and snooker player

Geet Sethi : biography

17 April 1961 –

Geet Siriram Sethi (born April 17, 1961) of India is a professional player of English billiards who dominated the sport throughout much of the 1990s, and a notable amateur (ex-pro) snooker player. He is a six-time winner of the professional-level and a three-time winner of the amateur World Championships, and holder of two world records, in English billiards. He, along with Prakash Padukone, have co-founded Olympic Gold Quest which is a Foundation for the Promotion of Sports in India.

Awards and recognition

A major sporting hero in India, he is a recipient of India’s highest sporting award, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna for 1992–1993; both the Padma Shri and the Arjuna Award in 1986; and the K.K. Birla Award, 1993.

Titles

  • World Professional Billiards Champion: 1992, 1993, 1995, 1998, 2006
  • World Amateur Billiards Champion: 1985, 1987, 2001
  • Gold Medallist, 13th Asian Games, Bangkok 1998
  • Asian Billiards Champion: 1987
  • National Billiards Champion: 1982, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1997, 1998
  • National Snooker Champion: 1985, 1986, 1987 and 1988

Current Ventures

Currently he is promoting a venture called Olympic Gold Quest, committed to supporting Indian sportspersons with Olympic medal-winning potential.

Career

Born in Delhi to a Punjabi family and growing up in Ahmedabad, Sethi won his first major English billiards event in 1982, the Indian National Billiards Championship (an international event despite its name), defeating Michael Ferreira, and later went on to win the NBC again four years in a row, 1985–1988, and made a comeback in both 1997 and 1998 to reclaim the title.

He rose to international prominence by winning the IBSF World Amateur Billiards Championships in 1985, versus Bob Marshall in an eight-hour-long final round. In 1987, he again won the IBSF event, as well as the ACBS Asian Billiards Championship He won another World Amateur Billiards title 2001, despite having previously played as a pro by that date.

Sethi also took the Indian National Snooker Championships four times back to back, in the same 1985–1988 span as his national English billiards streak. In the 1989 event, held at Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, though he did not take the title, he did achieve the world’s first amateur maximum break of 147 in official competition. He has never placed in the top snooker world rankings, however. Sethi is the only Indian in the history of cue-sports to have scored a maximum (147) in competitive snooker and a 1000+ break in competitive billiards.

In the 1992 World Professional Billiards Championship, Sethi constructed a world-record English billiards of 1276 under the three-pot rule, also the highest break in five decades) and won first place. He went on to win the title again in 1993, 1995, 1998, and 2006.

In the 2006 event, in Prestatyn, Wales, he defeated David Causier in the quarter final, and defending World Pro Champion Chris Shutt in the semi-final. He won the title round 2073–1057 (average per 34.3 vs. 17.0) in a timed five-hour final against Lee Lagan (who had previously beaten him 6 to 5 at the untimed 2003 IBSF Amateur World Championship). After running two in the first hour, Sethi led by 150, increased this to 427 with two more centuries by the end of the first of the two , and followed it up with a of 238 ; meanwhile Langan only managed two centuries in the first session and one in the second.. When the time ran out, Sethi had just reached a double century again, at 206, and had been poised to continue the break.

He has been described as an "arch-rival" of Mike Russell of England, also an eight-time English billiards World Champion, and each of them had defeated the other for the title, with Russell victorious in 1996, and Sethi the winner in 1998, as of their next encounter at the 2007 event. They both scored two triple centuries apiece in the semi-finals, but Russell kocked Sethi out of the running, 1835–1231 (65.5 vs. 45.6 average); Russell eventually won the title, for his ninth World crown.