Template:Good article Template:Short description Template:Infobox snooker player

Joe Johnson (born 29 July 1952) is an English former professional snooker player and a snooker commentator for Eurosport. As an amateur, he became the British Template:Nowrap champion in 1971, defeating Tony Knowles in the final. After reaching the finals of both the English Amateur Championship and the World Amateur Championship in 1978, Johnson turned professional the following year. He reached his first ranking final at the 1983 Professional Players Tournament, where he finished runner-up to Knowles, and he progressed to the semi-finals of the 1985 Classic.

With first-round losses in both of his previous Crucible appearances, Johnson started off as a 150Template:Nbnd1 outsider at the 1986 World Snooker Championship. He defeated Terry Griffiths 13Template:Nbnd12 in the quarter-finals, Knowles 16Template:Nbnd8 in the semi-finals, and Steve Davis 18Template:Nbnd12 in the final to win the world title and the only ranking title of his career. As defending champion in 1987, Johnson defeated Stephen Hendry 13Template:Nbnd12 in the quarter-finals and Neal Foulds 16Template:Nbnd9 in the semi-finals, before losing the final 14Template:Nbnd18 to Davis. After his two consecutive appearances in the World Championship final, Johnson subsequently won only a single match in the main stage of the competition, defeating Cliff Wilson in the first round in 1988.

His best performances in the other two Triple Crown events were a semi-final appearance at the 1987 UK Championship (losing 4Template:Nbnd9 to Jimmy White) and another at the 1988 Masters (losing 3Template:Nbnd6 to Davis). He dropped out of the world's "top 16" after the [[1989–90 snooker season|1989Template:Nbnd90 season]] and made his last World Championship Crucible appearance in 1991, losing in the first round to Dennis Taylor. Johnson continued playing on the professional tour until 2005, when he retired at age 53 after breaking his ankle. He later competed on the World Seniors Tour and won the 2019 Seniors Masters.

Early life and amateur careerEdit

Johnson was born on 29 July 1952, in Bradford, England.Template:Sfn His mother's name was Margaret, and his father was engineer Malik Farooq.Template:Sfn<ref name="PAYNE"/> The couple separated when Joe was two years old.Template:Sfn Margaret later married Ken Johnson, who taught his stepson how to play snooker from the age of four.Template:Sfn<ref name="PAYNE">Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson became the [[British Junior Snooker Championship|national Template:Nowrap champion]] in 1971 and was three-times Yorkshire champion.Template:Sfn

He set a record in 1978 for the highest Template:Cuegloss compiled by an amateur player, recording a 140 break at the TUC Club in Middlesbrough.Template:Sfn The same year, after finishing second to Terry Griffiths in the English Amateur Championship, Johnson represented England at the World Amateur Snooker Championship in Malta.Template:Sfn He reached the final, where he was defeated 11–5 by Cliff Wilson; they were level at five Template:Cuegloss each after the first Template:Cuegloss, but Wilson won six consecutive frames for the victory.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson made the highest break of the tournament, a 101.Template:Sfn

In 1979, he was accepted as a professional snooker player by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association along with Wilson, Tony Meo and Mike Hallett.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Before taking up snooker professionally, Johnson worked as an apprentice motor mechanic and as a gasfitter.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Professional careerEdit

Early yearsEdit

Johnson achieved little success in his early professional career and gained a reputation for not performing well in televised matches.Template:Sfn<ref name="WPBSA JJ special">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At the 1979 Canadian Open, he defeated Steve Baruda 5–4 in the fifth round after making a 100 break in the first frame.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Snooker Scene"/> He eliminated John Bear 9–7 in the next round but then lost 2–9 to Kirk Stevens in the last 16.<ref name="Snooker Scene">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Johnson won the billiards competition that was running alongside the snooker event, defeating Ian Williamson 500–284 in the final.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

At the 1980 World Championship, he eliminated Roy Andrewartha 9–5 in the first round of qualifying but lost his next match 6–9 to Pat Houlihan.Template:Sfn At the 1981 World Championship, he took a 4–3 lead against Tony Meo after the first session but lost in the Template:Cuegloss.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

In the 1981–82 season, Johnson progressed through several rounds of the 1981 Jameson International.Template:Sfn After defeating Jim Donnelly 5–4 and Murdo MacLeod 5–1, he received a walkover against John Pulman. He next eliminated Jim Wych 5–2, which was the most significant win of Johnson's professional career up to that point, but he then lost 3–5 to Graham Miles in the last 24.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

He began the 1981 UK Championship with a 9–1 win over Tommy Murphy, followed by a 9–3 defeat of Mike Watterson and a 9–4 win over Cliff Wilson. In the next round, he eliminated the former world champion John Spencer 9–5, earning himself a Template:Nowrap tie against another former world champion, Ray Reardon, to whom he lost 7–9.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Johnson defeated Vic Harris 9–4 in the qualifying rounds of the 1982 World Championship and reached the last 48, where he lost 8–9 to Mike Hallett.Template:Sfn

1982–1985: Ranking event finalistEdit

In the qualifying competition for the 1982 Jameson International, Johnson received a walkover against John Phillips and then faced Cliff Wilson, losing 4–5 after building a 4–2 lead.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> He won the first ranking points of his career in October 1982, at the Professional Players Tournament,Template:Sfn where he followed a 5–1 win against Graham Miles with a 5–1 win against sixth-ranked Kirk Stevens and a 5–4 win against Mark Wildman in the last 16.<ref name="PPTS">Template:Cite magazine</ref> He took the first frame of the quarter-final against John Virgo but then lost five in a row to be defeated 1–5.<ref name="PPTS"/> As one of six players outside the world's "top eight" to have progressed furthest in the tournament, Johnson was awarded a place at the 1983 Masters;<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> however, he lost his opening match 2–5 to Cliff Thorburn.Template:Sfn At the 1983 World Championship, he recorded a 10–0 Template:Cuegloss against Paul Watchorn in the first round of qualifying but then lost 8–9 to Wilson, missing his chance to reach the main stage of the event.Template:Sfn

For the 1983–84 season, Johnson's points from the previous season placed him 23rd in the world rankings.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> He beat Dennis Hughes 5–1 in the last 48 of the 1983 International Open, before losing 2–5 to Eddie Charlton in the last 32.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He began the untelevised 1983 Professional Players Tournament with a 5–3 win over Pascal Burke, also defeating Jimmy White 5–3 and Charlton 5–0.Template:Sfn He then eliminated Thorburn 5–1 in the quarter-finals and Tony Meo 9–6 in the semi-finals to reach his first major final, where he faced Tony Knowles.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn From 1–6 down, Johnson compiled a 135 break (the highest of the tournament) and levelled the match at 8–8, but Knowles secured the deciding frame for the title.<ref name="PPT83F">Template:Cite news</ref>

Johnson reached the quarter-finals of the 1983 UK Championship by eliminating Matt Gibson and Virgo, both 9–6, and David Taylor 9–3.Template:Sfn In the quarter-final against Terry Griffiths, which was Johnson's first televised match as a professional,<ref name="MEN83">Template:Cite news</ref> he lost the first seven frames and was defeated 2–9.<ref name="MEN83"/> At the qualifying event for the 1984 World Championship, he won his encounter with Gibson 10–3 to earn his debut in the main competition at the Crucible Theatre,Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> where he met Dennis Taylor in the first round for a 1–10 defeat.Template:Sfn

Ranked 19th at the start of the [[1984–85 snooker season|1984Template:Nbnd85 season]],<ref name="cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Johnson recorded a 3–1 quarter-final win against Mick Fisher at the 1984 Costa Del Sol Classic, but he lost 2–3 to Dennis Taylor in the semi-finals.Template:Sfn He was defeated by Taylor again at the 1984 International Open;Template:Sfn after beating Mario Morra 5–0 and Charlton 5–1, he was eliminated by Taylor 2–5 in the last 16.Template:Sfn At his next ranking event, the 1984 Grand Prix, Johnson defeated Paul Medati 5–1 but lost 4–5 to Ian Williamson in the last 32.Template:Sfn He began the 1984 UK Championship by defeating John Rea 9–6, and John Spencer by the same score in the last 32, before losing 2–9 to Stevens in the last 16.Template:Sfn At the 1985 Mercantile Credit Classic, he defeated Ray Edmonds and Knowles to reach the last 16,Template:Sfn where he whitewashed Wilson 5–0 (winning each frame by a narrow margin) to achieve his first televised match victory.<ref name="MCC85">Template:Cite magazine</ref> He then progressed to the semi-finals after a 5–3 win against Warren King.<ref name="MCC85"/> According to Janice Hale of The Daily Telegraph, Johnson "failed to reproduce any of the fighting form which he displayed in the final of last season's Professional Players Tournament" as he lost 2–9 to Thorburn.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 1985, Johnson competed in the main stage of the World Championship for the second time, after defeating Geoff Foulds 10–6 in qualifying.Template:Sfn He played Bill Werbeniuk in the first round; having not won a match all season, Werbeniuk made a 143 break in the tenth frame—the third-highest break ever recorded at the championship at that time—and won the match 10–8.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

1986 World ChampionEdit

Johnson began the 1985–86 season ranked 16th, inside the top 16 for the first time in his career.<ref name="PMJJ"/> He was relatively unheralded at the start of the 1986 World Championship, having only ever won one televised match.<ref name="espn.co.uk">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Johnson was rated a 150Template:Nbnd1 outsider going into the championship, his only two previous Crucible appearances having ended in first-round defeats.<ref name="Guardian1986WSC">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="BBC 2003">Template:Cite news</ref> His best results during the season had been quarter-final finishes at the 1985 Matchroom Trophy (where he lost 3–5 to Neal Foulds) and at the 1986 Classic (where he lost 4–5 to Cliff Thorburn).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

He defeated Dave Martin 10–3 in the first round,<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" /> for his first win in three appearances at the main stage of the World Championship.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the second round, he took a 5–3 lead against Mike Hallett after the first session, eventually winning the match 13–6.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He then met former world champion Terry Griffiths in the quarter-finals; Johnson was leading 9–7 before the final session, but Griffiths won five straight frames to lead 12–9; Johnson took the next four frames (including two century breaks) to triumph 13–12.<ref name="espn.co.uk"/><ref name="FRISKIN1M86">Template:Cite news</ref> He eliminated Tony Knowles in the semi-finals, despite being in severe pain from a cyst on his back, winning the last two frames of the match for a 16–8 victory.<ref name="BBC 2003" /><ref name="ROSS2M86">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="TIMES5M86">Template:Cite news</ref> Leading by 7–5 at the half-way point, Johnson was in so much pain that he very nearly conceded the match, and a doctor had to be called in to administer pain relief.<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" />

His opponent in the final was world number one Steve Davis,<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" /> this being their first professional match against one another.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Davis—who had already won the World Championship three times<ref name="METCALFESL" />—was considered highly likely to win the title, as reflected in the bookmakers' odds of 2Template:Nbnd9 for Davis and 5Template:Nbnd1 for Johnson.Template:Sfn Davis won three of the first four frames, compiling century breaks of 108 and 107.Template:Sfn Johnson responded by taking the next three frames to finish the first session 4–3 ahead.<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" /> Davis started the second session by winning four frames in a row to lead 7–4. Johnson won four consecutive frames after the mid-session interval,<ref name="BBC 2003"/> before Davis clinched the last frame of the session to leave the match level at 8–8 overnight.<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" /><ref name="METCALFESL">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

On the second day of the final, Johnson wore an unusual pair of red, pink and white leather shoes.Template:Sfn Resuming the match, he won another run of four frames to take a 12–8 lead.<ref name="METCALFESL" /> Gordon Burn wrote in his book Pocket Money (1986), "From the beginning of the third session he played an open game full of flair and daring and the length-of-the-table, long-potting which had been so characteristic of Steve Davis in the days when he was still making his name."Template:Sfn The session concluded with Johnson ahead 13–11.<ref name="BBC 2003"/> In the final session of the match, the crowd appeared to favour Johnson, who had played with an attacking style throughout the tournament.<ref name="METCALFESL" /> After winning three of the next four frames to lead 16–12 at the interval,<ref name="METCALFESL" /><ref name="FRISKIN6M86">Template:Cite news</ref> he added frame 29 and compiled a break of 64 in frame 30 to win the match 18–12.<ref name="BBC 2003"/><ref name="METCALFESL" /><ref name="FRISKIN6M86" /> Claiming the world title helped to lift Johnson from 16th place in the world rankings to eighth for 1986–87.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

When he was not playing in a match, Johnson was seen at the tournament wearing a T-shirt with the slogan "Bradford's Bouncing Back"—a reference to the Bradford City stadium fire a year earlier.Template:Sfn His victory at the World Championship led to an appearance on the television show Wogan and a "personal appearance" accompanying pop star Cliff Richard to watch Wimbledon.<ref name="METCALFESL" />

Writing in 2008, the Historian Alwyn W. Turner called Johnson's defeat of Steve Davis in the final "the biggest upset that snooker had witnessed".Template:Sfn Soon after the match, former world champions Dennis Taylor and Ray Reardon both expressed the sentiment that Johnson's win would benefit snooker because he was unfamiliar to most viewers, who would welcome a new champion.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The sportswriter Peter Arnold agreed that "the public took to [Johnson] immediately" and found him relatable.Template:Sfn In 1986, snooker was the most-covered sport on UK television, with 394 hours of broadcast time, ahead of cricket with 336 hours.Template:Sfn A British Market Research Bureau survey that year found that 60% of respondents were interested in watching snooker on television, with athletics placed second at 46%.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The 1986 world final was watched by an average of 11.4Template:Nbspmillion viewers, peaking at 15.6Template:Nbspmillion.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Although he initially seemed comfortable with the attention garnered by winning the title,Template:Sfn Johnson had difficulty dealing with the pressures of World Championship fame.Template:Sfn

Post-World Championship winEdit

As reigning world champion in [[1986–87 snooker season|1986Template:Nbnd87]], Johnson had a poor season in terms of results prior to the World Championship,<ref name="PMJJ"/>Template:Sfn his best finish in a ranking tournament being the last 16 of the British Open.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> By his own admission, he arrived at the Crucible to defend his title with the mere hope of simply progressing past the first round.<ref name="SCENE87"/> Defying expectations, however, he reached the final for the second year in a row.Template:Sfn He narrowly defeated Eugene Hughes in the first round, their match concluding with a final-frame decider.<ref name="BBC87"/> He followed this with a 13Template:Nbnd7 win against Murdo MacLeod and eliminated Template:Nowrap Stephen Hendry 13Template:Nbnd12 in the quarter-finals.Template:Sfn<ref name="BBC87"/>Template:Sfn He then achieved a 16Template:Nbnd9 semi-final victory against Neal Foulds to earn a place in the final,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> where his opponent was once again Steve Davis.<ref name="BBC87">Template:Cite news</ref>

After taking a 4–3 lead in the first session, Johnson had fallen behind 7Template:Nbnd9 by the end of the second.<ref name="SCENE87">Template:Cite magazine</ref> Davis increased his advantage to 14Template:Nbnd9 at the start of day two, but Johnson then took the last frame of the third session and the first three frames of the concluding session to move within one frame of his opponent, at 13Template:Nbnd14.<ref name="JH87F">Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson missed an attempted long pot early in frame 28, before Davis took the frame and the next two for an 18Template:Nbnd14 victory.<ref name="SCENE87"/><ref name="JH87F"/> Davis said in his post-match interview, "For Joe to come to the Crucible and play as if he hadn't had the season he has had was tremendous really."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson praised Davis, as he had after the 1986 final, and said of his own year as champion: "It only seemed five minutes when I walked out to play Steve again in the final, but with all the personal appearances it just seemed to go on and on."<ref name="SCENE87"/>

Johnson is one of only two first-time world champions to have reached the final at the Crucible the following season, the other being the 1997 champion Ken Doherty who was runner-up in 1998.<ref name="SSJJ" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Johnson came within four frames of retaining his crown in 1987,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> while Doherty came within six, at 12Template:Nbnd18,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> meaning that Johnson has come closer than any other player to breaking the so-called "Crucible curse" (which relates to the fact that no first-time world champion has ever successfully defended their title since the event moved to the Crucible in 1977).<ref name="SSJJ" /><ref name="espn.co.uk" />

File:Terry Griffith 1991 (cropped).jpg
Johnson defeated Terry Griffiths (pictured in 1991) to win the 1987 Scottish Masters.

In the 1987–88 season, Johnson reached fifth place in the world rankings based on his results from the two preceding seasons, largely owing to his performances at the Crucible.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> In 1987, he was runner-up to Dennis Taylor in the four-player Carling Challenge,Template:Sfn and he won the Scottish Masters by overcoming Terry Griffiths 9Template:Nbnd7 in the final for the only other major title of his professional career.<ref name="WSTJJ"/>Template:Sfn Later that year, he reached the semi-finals of the UK Championship, where he came close to making a 147 maximum break against Jimmy White but missed the pink on 134,<ref name="PMJJ">Template:Cite magazine</ref> eventually losing the match 4Template:Nbnd9.Template:Sfn In January 1988, Johnson eliminated Willie Thorne and White to progress to the semi-finals of the Masters, where he was defeated 3Template:Nbnd6 by Davis.Template:Sfn After beating Cliff Wilson 10Template:Nbnd7 in the first round of the 1988 World Championship,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> he won six straight frames to recover from 3Template:Nbnd11 to 9Template:Nbnd11 against Steve James in the second round, before losing the next two frames and the match.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Dropping six places to 11th in the [[1988–89 snooker season|1988Template:Nbnd89 season]],Template:Sfn Johnson's best showing in a ranking tournament was reaching the quarter-finals of the Fidelity International Open.Template:Sfn He lost 5Template:Nbnd10 to Tony Meo in the first round of the 1989 World Championship.Template:Sfn In the [[1989–90 snooker season|1989Template:Nbnd90 season]], he was runner-up to Thorne in the invitational New Zealand Masters.Template:Sfn His best ranking-tournament performance was at the Rothmans Grand Prix, where he whitewashed White 5Template:Nbnd0 in a run to the quarter-finals.Template:Sfn Johnson won the invitational Norwich Union Grand Prix by defeating Hendry 5Template:Nbnd3 in the final.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He finished the season by losing 8Template:Nbnd10 to Darren Morgan in the opening round of the 1990 World Championship.Template:Sfn

Later careerEdit

Ranked 18th, Johnson began the [[1990–91 snooker season|1990Template:Nbnd91 season]] outside the top 16 for the first time in five years,<ref name="cajt.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk"/>Template:Sfn and he failed to progress to the quarter-finals in any of the ranking events that season.Template:Sfn He won the 1991 Nescafe Extra Challenge (a four-player round-robin event) with victories in all three of his matches, against Tony Drago, James Wattana and Alain Robidoux.<ref name="NESC">Template:Cite news</ref> He qualified for the 1991 World Championship but lost 6Template:Nbnd10 to Dennis Taylor in the first round, this being his final appearance at the main stage of the championship.Template:Sfn Despite having heart and eye problems during the 1990s, Johnson continued playing on the professional snooker circuit.<ref name="NECHO"/> After having his first heart attack in 1991, he was given medical advice to retire from the sport as the pressure of competitive matches could increase the likelihood of another attack.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

In 1991, Johnson reached the quarter-finals of the Grand Prix by defeating Warren King in the last 64, Tony Jones in the last 32, and Mike Hallett in the last 16, before losing 3Template:Nbnd5 to Nigel Bond.Template:Sfn He was runner-up to Stephen Hendry in the 1992 European Challenge,<ref name="Hendry best">Template:Cite news</ref> and he narrowly missed qualifying for the 1992 World Championship when he lost 9Template:Nbnd10 to Mick Price on the Template:Cuegloss in their deciding frame.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Johnson needed only one match win to qualify for the 1993 World Championship, but he lost 6Template:Nbnd10 to Karl Payne in the Template:Nowrap.Template:Sfn In his next five attempts to qualify for the championship, he won just one match: a 10Template:Nbnd5 victory against Matthew Couch in 1995.Template:Sfn Although he failed to reach the Template:Nowrap of the World Championship again after 1993, he did win three qualifying matches in 2003.Template:Sfn He broke his ankle in a fall at home before the start of the [[2003–04 snooker season|2003Template:Nbnd04 season]], which prevented him from competing in any events until the World Championship qualifying in February 2004. Trailing 0Template:Nbnd9, Johnson conceded to Ian Preece in their Template:Nowrapframes match.<ref name="SCMAR2004">Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He played his last professional match the following month in the qualifying rounds of the 2004 Players Championship, where he lost 3Template:Nbnd5 to Stuart Mann.<ref name="SCMAR2004"/><ref name="HER2006">Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson retired in 2005, aged 53, the oldest player on the professional snooker circuit at the time.<ref name="espn.co.uk"/>

Seniors eventsEdit

Johnson won the Seniors Pot Black trophy in 1997.<ref name="SEN97"/> At the 2000 World Seniors Masters (a one-frame-format event), he was eliminated in the first round by the eventual champion Willie Thorne.<ref name="Smith 26–28">Template:Cite magazine</ref> He promoted the revival of the World Seniors Championship in 2010,<ref name="PMJJ"/>Template:Sfn losing 0–2 to Steve Davis in his opening match.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In April 2019, he won the World Seniors Masters at the Crucible by defeating Jimmy White, Aaron Canavan and Barry Pinches;<ref name="SSJJ">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> all three matches were decided on a Template:Cuegloss, used as a tiebreaker at 1–1 rather than playing a third frame.<ref name="2019SEN">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> After losing 0–3 to Australian player Adrian Ridley in the first round of the 2023 World Seniors Championship,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> he lost 1–3 to Pinches at the same stage of the 2024 edition.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Retrospective commentaryEdit

In their 2005 book about snooker world champions, Luke Williams and Paul Gadsby wrote of Johnson: "His attacking style and ability to crash in long pots [...] prefigured the tactical approach that would dominate snooker from the 1990s into the new millennium."Template:Sfn In his 2012 book Black Farce and Cue Ball Wizards, Clive Everton wrote that Johnson "produced an unstoppable surge of inspiration [in 1986]" but "never sustained such form before and never sustained it again".Template:Sfn Davis reflected in 2015 that although Johnson was "naturally gifted"Template:Sfn and had a "wonderful flowing style with a beautiful touch",Template:Sfn he seemed less motivated than others, and Davis saw him as "too nice to be a relentless winner".Template:Sfn

The snooker journalist Hector Nunns wrote in 2017 that Johnson would always be remembered for "his shot-making, his shoes, his extra-curricular singing, and his sheer joie de vivre in the match that defined his career".Template:Sfn In his 2023 autobiography Unbreakable, Ronnie O'Sullivan recalled watching the 1986 and 1987 finals, and said that it had been clear to him that Johnson had the character and talent to win in the pressured environment of the World Championship.Template:Sfn O'Sullivan said of Johnson: "He locked me into what the World Championship is about [...] After him I was hooked."Template:Sfn

Non-playing activitiesEdit

Johnson was the subject of This is Your Life in late 1986, and he was a celebrity guest on the sports quiz A Question of Sport.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In April 1987, BBC1 broadcast a Template:Nowrap profile of Johnson, titled An Ordinary Joe, which focused on the year since his surprising World Championship victory.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He made several appearances on the snooker-themed game show Big Break between 1991 and 2001.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was interviewed for an episode of the BBC Radio 5 Live show Time of My Life in 1998 and appeared on the TV quiz show Celebrity Eggheads in 2012.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

He and his business partner Dave Shipley have bought three snooker clubs, and Johnson has managed snooker coaching academies.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As well as coaching Shaun Murphy,<ref name="PMJJ"/> he was an early influence on Paul Hunter.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Johnson is a regular commentator for Eurosport.<ref name="WSTJJ">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> During the UK Championship in December 2013, John Higgins said of him: "I heard before the tournament Joe Johnson was slating me. If that guy isn't the worst commentator in the world, he's in the top three."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Johnson sang in the Preston-based music band Made in Japan,<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" />Template:Sfn who released a cover of "Everlasting Love" in October 1986.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He is married to Terryll,<ref name="Guardian1986WSC" /> and they have seven children.Template:Sfn<ref name="NECHO">Template:Cite news</ref> By 2017, Johnson had survived seven heart attacks.<ref name="NECHO"/>

Performance and rankings timelineEdit

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Template:Ref heading
LG CupTemplate:Efn Not Held QF F 2R 3R 1R 2R 2R QF 1R QF 2R 1R 2R 2R 1R LQ 2R LQ LQ LQ LQ WD Template:Sfn
British OpenTemplate:Efn Non-Ranking Event 1R 2R 3R 3R QF 2R 2R 3R 2R 2R LQ 1R LQ 2R 1R 1R LQ LQ LQ WD Template:Sfn
UK Championship Non-Ranking Event 2R 2R 2R SF 3R 3R 3R 1R 2R 1R 1R LQ 3R LQ LQ 1R LQ LQ LQ WD Template:Sfn
Welsh Open Not Held 3R 1R 1R 2R LQ 1R LQ 2R 1R LQ LQ LQ WD Template:Sfn
European OpenTemplate:Efn Not Held 3R 3R 2R 2R 3R LQ LQ 2R LQ NH LQ Not Held LQ LQ WD Template:Sfn
Canadian MastersTemplate:Efn NR Not Held Non-Ranking 1R Not Held Template:Sfn
Hong Kong OpenTemplate:Efn Non-Ranking Event NH LQ Not Held NR NR Not Held Template:Sfn
Classic Non-Ranking Event 1R SF QF 2R 2R 3R 1R 3R 1R Not Held Template:Sfn
Strachan Open Not Held 2R Not Held Template:Sfn
Dubai ClassicTemplate:Efn Not Held NR 1R 1R QF 1R LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ Not Held Template:Sfn
German Open Not Held LQ LQ LQ NR Not Held Template:Sfn
Malta Grand Prix Not Held Non-Ranking Event WD NR Not Held Template:Sfn
China OpenTemplate:Efn Not Held NR LQ LQ LQ LQ Not Held Template:Sfn
Thailand MastersTemplate:Efn Not Held Non-Ranking Event Not Held 2R 1R 1R 3R LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ NR NH Template:Sfn
Irish Masters Non-Ranking Event LQ WD Template:Sfn
Players ChampionshipTemplate:Efn Not Held NR LQ 1R 2R QF 2R 1R QF 1R Not Held 1R 1R LQ 2R 2R LQ 1R LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ Template:Sfn
World Championship LQ LQ LQ LQ 1R 1R W F 2R 1R 1R 1R LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ LQ Template:Sfn
citation
CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Tournament 1979/
80
1980/
81
1981/
82
1982/
83
1983/
84
1984/
85
1985/
86
1986/
87
1987/
88
1988/
89
1989/
90
1990/
91
1991/
92
1992/
93
1993/
94
1994/
95
1995/
96
1996/
97
1997/
98
1998/
99
1999/
00
2000/
01
2001/
02
2002/
03
2003/
04
Template:Ref heading
The Masters A A A 1R A A 1R QF SF 1R QF LQ A A LQ A A A A A A A A A A Template:Sfn
Matchroom LeagueTemplate:Efn Not Held A RRTemplate:Efn A A A A Not Held <ref name="ML88">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Players ChampionshipTemplate:Efn Not Held 2R Ranking Event Not Held Ranking Event <ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
British OpenTemplate:Efn LQ LQ RR LQ LQ Ranking Event <ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Bass & Golden Leisure Classic Not Held LQ Not Held <ref name="CWJUL82">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
UK Championship 1R 1R 2R 1R QF Ranking Event Template:Sfn
Costa Del Sol Classic Not Held SF Not Held Template:Sfn
Australian MastersTemplate:Efn A A A A A A QF SF QF NH R Not Held A A Not Held Template:Sfn
Scottish Masters Not Held A A A A A QF W NH A A A A A A A A A A A A A Not Held Template:Sfn
Carling ChallengeTemplate:Efn Not Held A A SF F A Not Held Template:Sfn
Canadian MastersTemplate:Efn 2R A Not Held A QF QF R Not Held <ref name="Snooker Scene"/>Template:Sfn
Kent Cup Not Held A QF A A A NH A Not Held <ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
World Matchplay Not Held QF A A A A Not Held Template:Sfn
English Professional Championship NH QF Not Held 2R QF SF SF QF Not Held Template:Sfn
New Zealand Masters Not Held A Not Held SF F Not Held Template:Sfn
Irish Masters A A A A A A A QF QF A 1R A A A A A A A A A A A A Ranking Template:Sfn
Shoot-Out Not Held 1R Not Held <ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Nescafe Extra Challenge Not Held W NH A Not Held <ref name="NESC"/>
Norwich Union Grand Prix Not Held A W SF Not Held Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
World Masters Not Held 3R Not Held Template:Sfn
Pontins Professional A A A A A A A A A A QF QF A A A A A A A A A Not Held Template:Sfn
European Challenge Not Held F A Not Held <ref name="Hendry best" />
Strachan Challenge 1 Not Held 2R LQ Not Held Template:Sfn
Strachan Challenge 2 Not Held LQ LQ Not Held Template:Sfn
Strachan Challenge 3 Not Held LQ Not Held Template:Sfn
Malta Grand Prix Not Held QF A A A A R A Not Held Template:Sfn
Seniors Pot Black Not Held W Not Held citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

World Seniors Masters Not Held 1R Not Held <ref name="Smith 26–28"/>
Performance table legend
LQ Lost in the qualifying draw #R Lost in the early rounds of the tournament
(RR = Round-robin tournament)
QF Lost in the quarter-finals
SF Lost in the semi–finals F Lost in the final W Won the tournament
DNQ Did not qualify for the tournament A Did not participate in the tournament WD Withdrew from the tournament
NH / Not Held Means the event was not held.
NR / Non-Ranking Event Means the event is/was no longer a ranking event.
R / Ranking Event Means the event is/was a ranking event.

Template:Reflist

Career finalsEdit

Ranking finals: 3 (1 title)Edit

Ranking finals contested by Joe Johnson
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Template:Ref heading
Runner-up 1. 1983 Professional Players Tournament Template:Flagathlete 8–9 <ref name="PPT83F"/>
Winner 1. 1986 World Snooker Championship Template:Flagathlete 18–12 <ref name="BBC 2003"/>
Runner-up 2. 1987 World Snooker Championship Template:Flagathlete 14–18 <ref name="BBC87"/>

Non-ranking finals: 8 (5 titles)Edit

Non-ranking finals contested by Joe Johnson
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Template:Ref heading
Runner-up 1. 1987 Carling Challenge Template:Flagathlete 5–8 Template:Sfn
Winner 1. 1987 Scottish Masters Template:Flagathlete 9–7 Template:Sfn
Runner-up 2. 1989 New Zealand Masters Template:Flagathlete 4–7 Template:Sfn
Winner 2. 1989 Norwich Union Grand Prix Template:Flagathlete 5–3 Template:Sfn
Winner 3. 1991 Nescafe Extra Challenge Template:Flagathlete Round–Robin <ref name="NESC"/>
Runner-up 3. 1992 European Challenge Template:Flagathlete 0–4 Template:Sfn
Winner 4. 1997 Seniors Pot Black Template:Flagathlete unknown citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

Winner 5. 2019 The Seniors Masters Template:Flagathlete 2–1 <ref name="2019SEN"/>

Pro-am finals: 1 (1 title)Edit

Pro-am finals contested by Joe Johnson
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Template:Ref heading
Winner 1. 1981 William Younger Open Template:Flagathlete 8–7 Template:Sfn

Amateur finals: 3 (1 title)Edit

Amateur finals contested by Joe Johnson
Outcome No. Year Championship Opponent in the final Score Template:Abbr
Winner 1. 1971 British Under-19 Championship Template:Flagathlete 3–0 <ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Runner-up 1. 1978 English Amateur Championship Template:Flagathlete 6–13 Template:Sfn
Runner-up 2. 1978 World Amateur Championship Template:Flagathlete 5–11 Template:Sfn

NotesEdit

Template:Notelist

ReferencesEdit

Citations Template:Reflist

Bibliography

External linksEdit

Template:World snooker champions Template:Snooker player of the year

Template:Use dmy dates