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Steve Davis the Golden Nugget who turned Romford snooker loopy

PUBLISHED: 16:15 14 March 2016 | UPDATED: 16:23 14 March 2016

Steve Davis

Steve Davis

EMPICS Sports Photo Agency

Snooker star Steve Davis rose to fame in the 1980s and has been lauded one of the best players the game has ever produced.

Steve Davis

Steve Davis dominated snooker during the 1980s, a decade that saw him ranked world number one for seven consecutive seasons and win six world championships.

During his career Steve also won three Masters and six UK Championships.

In the 1987/1988 season he became the first player to complete snooker’s triple crown, winning the UK Championship, Masters and World Championship in the same season.

He also won the World Doubles Championship four times with Tony Meo and won the World Team Classic/World Cup four times with England.

Steve continued to play high level snooker into his 50s, reaching the final of the UK Championship in 2005 at the age of 48. He was still ranked in the top 16 when he turned 50 during the 2007/2008 season.

In 2010 he reached the quarter finals of the World Championship, making him the oldest quarter-finalist since 1983.

Steve won the World Seniors Championship in 2013.

Outside of snooker he has played pool, chess and poker in high level tournaments.

Now 58, he has also appeared on television shows including I’m A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here.

In 1988 Steve was appointed an MBE, followed by an OBE in 2001.

Hailing from Plumstead, south London, he made his name as a teenager playing at Romford Snooker Club.

“It was part of my training, my apprenticeship. I felt like it was my spiritual home.”

During these early days, Steve faced a two-hour journey to the town, three times a week: “I used to get a bus to Woolwich Ferry, walk through the tunnel, a bus to Manor Park then an 86 to Romford, which on a Wednesday was horrific, because all the grannies were out in force for market day! 
Little did I know I could have got a train…”

The people in the club were always “interesting”, Steve said.

“The players were serious, but there were also hustlers, off-duty police, ne’er-do-wells and people who just liked a game in their lunch hour,” he added.

“And if you couldn’t verbally defend yourself, you’d get ripped to pieces!”

Some characters remain a fond memory, such as the Lazarus family, who were synonymous with the Romford area.

“Bobby Lazarus, he was funny. He used to spend so much time in the club.

“One Sunday, he was playing on table one and his wife walked up the stairs and threw the Sunday dinner on the table!”

Crucial to Steve’s early success was the support of his fellow club members and the wider Romford community.

His devoted “Romford Roar” followed him around the country, while he also garnered a number of nicknames, including Nugget.

“I was their Golden Nugget, because I was basically money in the bank.

“The Ginger Magician was also coined there and the Romford Robot.

“The ‘Interesting’ tag came a lot later.”

As Steve’s star rose, so did the profile of Romford Snooker Club, then part of the Lucania chain.

It became one of the most famous clubs in the country during the early 1980s, due to its innovative Matchroom.

Steve said: “It had two rooms, one with 13 tables and a smaller one with six.

“We’d move all the tables, put one in the middle, put chairs around and Ray Reardon, John Spencer and Alex Higgins would come down.”

Health and safety wasn’t as much of a concern back then.

“Alex came down for a 65-frame, four-day match with me, and the crowds were hanging off the rafters.

“If you think about it now, it’s frightening. It had one entrance, no fire exit and 200 to 300 people in the room!”

Times have changed.

“I think it’s the only snooker club in the Romford area now,” said Steve.

Since retiring from professional snooker, Steve has kept busy, playing exhibition matches all over the country, as well as hosting his long-running Interesting Alternative Show on Billericay’s Phoenix FM.

He even has a new role as a club DJ, playing progressive rock and electronic music, and is involved with schemes which use snooker to inspire young people to learn.

Steve’s passion for snooker remains and one issue close to his heart is the future of the sport in terms of attracting young players.

“Kids aren’t going into snooker clubs like they used to,” he said.

“Viewing figures are still good, but it’s tough to get kids to go up the stairs to a snooker club on their own.

“You need a parent, or you need to be totally besotted and brave enough to walk in there on your own.”

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