Joe Davis


Joseph Davis was an English professional snooker and English billiards player. He was the dominant figure in snooker from the 1920s to the 1950s and has been credited with inventing aspects of the way that the game is now played, such as building. With equipment manufacturer Bill Camkin, he drove the creation of the World Snooker Championship by persuading the Billiards Association and Control Council to recognise an official professional snooker championship in 1927. Davis won the first 15 championships from 1927 to 1946, and remains the only undefeated player in World Snooker Championship history. He made the championship's first break, in 1930.
Davis was a professional English billiards player from the age of 18, and was World Billiards Champion four times between 1928 and 1932. He was the first person to win world titles in both billiards and snooker. After his 1946 World Snooker Championship victory he no longer played in the World Championship but did participate in other tournaments and exhibition matches until 1964, winning four News of the World Snooker Tournament titles. He also continued to wield considerable influence over the professional game through chairing the professional players' association, being a co-owner of the venue Leicester Square Hall, and negotiating television contracts. His younger brother Fred Davis was the only person ever to beat Joe Davis in a competitive snooker match without receiving a start.
In 1955, Davis was the first player to make an officially recognised maximum break. He died in 1978 from a chest infection suffered whilst convalescing from an operation following a collapse that happened whilst he was watching Fred play Perrie Mans in the semi-final of the 1978 World Snooker Championship.

Early life, and billiards career

Joe Davis, was born in Whitwell, Derbyshire on 15 April 1901, the eldest of six children of coalminer and pub landlord Fred Davis, and his wife Ann-Eliza. Fred Davis was the youngest of the six children. He learnt how to play English billiards in the billiard room of The Queen's Hotel, his family's pub in Whittington Moor, and was coached by a local player, Ernest Rudge. He also read Charles Dawson's book Practical Billiards. He made a break in billiards at the age of 12 and won the Chesterfield and District Championship at the age of 13. Davis would later manage billiard halls owned by either his family or by Rudge.
Davis became a professional billiards player in 1919, at the age of 18. Davis lost to Fred Lawrence in the semi-final of an invitational professional tournament at Thurston's Hall in 1920. He also lost to Lawrence in the final of his first open professional championship, the 1921 Midlands Counties Billiards Championship. Davis won the 1922 Midlands Counties Billiards Championship, beating Tom Dennis 6,417–4,433 in the week-long final.
Victory in the second division championship later in 1922, which included a victory over Arthur Peall, son of former world champion W.J. Peall in the final, gave Davis an entry into the Billiards Association and Control Council Professional Championship. According to The Birmingham Daily Gazette he was "outclassed" by Tom Newman in their professional championship match, losing 5,181–8,000. He failed to qualify for the 1923 event, losing to Lawrence in the second division semi-final, and although he was eligible for 1924, opted not to enter. In 1925, only Newman and Tom Reece entered the championship.
In 1926, Davis and defending champion Newman were the only entrants in the Professional Championship. Newman beat Davis comprehensively, 16,000–9,505, with an average score of 82.9 per. Davis reached the final the following year and was runner-up again to the same opponent, despite making a break of 2,501. In his third final, in 1928, Davis defeated Newman to become the world champion at English billiards for the first time, making sixty in the last final to be played with ivory balls. He would successfully defend his title for the next three years. In the 1929 final against Newman, Davis made 63 century breaks, and his average score per visit to the table was 100, whilst in 1930 he set a new record average score per visit of 113.3 in beating Newman 20,198–20,117. The event was not held in 1931 as most of the leading professionals, mainly due to a disagreement with the BA&CC over the to be used. Willie Smith was the only person to enter, but was not declared champion. In 1932, Davis faced New Zealander Clark McConachy in the final. McConarchy had won three of their four warm-up matches, but in the championship itself, Davis won 25,161–19,259, scoring over 11,000 of his points through a series of runs of "close cannons," where the three balls are kept close together for consecutive. Davis contested the final two further times, in 1933 and 1934, losing on both occasions to Australian Walter Lindrum.

Snooker career

Coinciding with Davis' peak as a billiards player, public interest in billiards was waning as the top players were becoming so proficient that the game was seen as boring for spectators. By 1924, amendments to the rules were being discussed to make high breaks more difficult, but of over 1,000 became increasingly common. As a billiard hall manager, Davis noticed the increasing popularity of snooker, and with Birmingham billiard equipment manager Bill Camkin, persuaded the Billiards Association and Control Council to recognise an official professional snooker championship in the 1926–27 season. The final of the first snooker world championship in 1927 was held at Camkin's Hall, and Davis won the tournament by beating Dennis 16–7 in the final, for which he won £6 10s.
He went on to win the world championship every year until 1940, and made the championship's first official century break in 1930. In 1928 the final was held in the back room of a pub owned by losing finalist Dennis, and in the early years, the tournament was twice contested only by Davis and another player. From 1935 the championship became more remunerative for players. The 1940 final was contested between Joe Davis and his brother Fred, with Joe taking an early lead before Fred won 11 in a row to take a 20–14 lead. Eventually Joe won the match 37–35, with Fred winning the dead frame that took it to 37–36.
Due to World War II the world championship was not held again until 1946. Davis successfully defended his title, his 15th consecutive win, and thereby held the title for 20 straight years. To date, he has won more world championships than any other player. He retired from the event following this victory, having won the title at all fifteen events from 1927 to 1946, making him, as of 2020, the only undefeated player in the history of the world championships. He remained the best player until his retirement in 1964, with his brother Fred coming closest to Joe's standard during this time. Joe Davis' retirement from the world championship reduced its prestige according to snooker historian Clive Everton, a view shared by snooker journalists and authors Hector Nunns and David Hendon.
Apart from the world championship, tournaments were played on a handicap basis, and Davis would concede a set number of points in each frame to his opponents, for example beginning each frame from 0 points, whilst his opponent started from 14. He won the News of the World Tournament on three occasions during the 1950s, whilst his brother Fred and future world champion John Pulman each won it on two occasions. In 1959 Davis attempted to popularise a new version of the game called snooker plus. This game had two extra, an orange and a purple and was used for the 1959 News of the World Snooker Plus Tournament. According to Everton, ""the public rejected the game for the gimmick it was."
He made the first officially recognised Maximum break of 147 on 22 January 1955 at Leicester Square Hall, in an exhibition match against Willie Smith. As the match had taken place under the rules used by professionals, that included the "play again" rule where a player who has made a shot can be required by the other player to play the next shot as well, the Billiards Association and Control Council initially refused to recongise the break as it was not under their own version of the rules. The break was finally recognised by the BA&CC in April 1957, shortly before the "play again" rule was incorporated into their own rules for amateur players.
In 1962, when over 60 years of age, he made a televised century break. This break of exactly 100 was his first visit to the table in the very first frame of a match against the sitting World Champion John Pulman and consisted of seven blacks, two pinks and five blues. The break came to an end when Davis missed a long red into the top right hand pocket, the only time during the break when he was faced with a difficult pot, such was the quality of his positional play.
Davis was awarded the Order of the British Empire in 1963. He continued to play professionally until 1964. Davis died on 10 July 1978, two months after becoming ill while watching his brother play Perrie Mans in the 1978 World Snooker Championship semi-final. The day after the match, he collapsed in the street, and required a lengthy operation. He died from a chest infection whilst recuperating following the operation. The house where he was born in Whitwell bears a plaque commemorating him.

Legacy

Davis won 15 World Snooker Championship titles, spanning a 20-year period where he was undefeated, and four world billiards championship titles. Other than in handicapped matches where he conceded a start, he lost only four times – all of which came towards the end of his career and were against his brother Fred, Everton has said of Davis' influence on the game in the early 1920s that:
Fred Davis, the second person to become a world champion at both snooker and billiards, following his brother, said that Davis was "a very good player before anyone else knew how to play the game."
Joe Davis was not able to focus with his right eye, and played with his cue to the left of his chin. Coach Frank Callan, in his book Frank Callan's Snooker Clinic, compared the most successful player at the time, Steve Davis, to Joe Davis, and concluded that Joe Davis was the better player. Callan also stated that "many players who tried to emulate Joe's stance simply gave up the game when they found they couldn't play like that".
Steve Davis was heavily influenced by Davis' How I Play Snooker when learning to play, and Ronnie O'Sullivan said of a Davis coaching book "2007-8 … was one of my best years and it was all because I was reading the Joe Davis book."
Davis' influence on the game was such that, according to Callan, "his word was law". Everton says that following his retirement from the world championship, Davis "through his force of personality … controlled the game," being the pre-eminent player, chairman of the professional players' association, a co-owner of the Leicester Square Hall, the main venue for professional matches, and the negotiator for television contacts.

Personal life

Davis married Florence Enid Stevenson in 1921, and they had two children. The marriage was dissolved in 1931. In 1945 he married Juanita Ida Triggs, who was a singer performing under the stage name of June Malo.

Snooker performance and rankings timeline

Career finals

Snooker world championship finals: (15 titles)

OutcomeNo.YearChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Winner11927World Snooker Championship20–11
Winner21928World Snooker Championship16–13
Winner31929World Snooker Championship19–14
Winner41930World Snooker Championship25–12
Winner51931World Snooker Championship25–21
Winner61932World Snooker Championship30–19
Winner71933World Snooker Championship25–18
Winner81934World Snooker Championship25–22
Winner91935World Snooker Championship25–20
Winner101936World Snooker Championship34–27
Winner111937World Snooker Championship32–29
Winner121938World Snooker Championship37–24
Winner131939World Snooker Championship43–30
Winner141940World Snooker Championship37–36
Winner151946World Snooker Championship78–67

Other snooker tournament wins: (9 titles)

OutcomeNo.DateChampionshipOpponent in the finalScore
Runner-up1May 1926Billiards Association and Control Club Championship9,505–16,000
Runner-up2May 1927Billiards Association and Control Club Championship14,763–16,000
Winner1May 1928Billiards Association and Control Club Championship16,000–14,874
Winner2April 1929Billiards Association and Control Club Championship18,000–17,219
Winner3May 1930Billiards Association and Control Club Championship20,198–20,117
Winner4March 1932Billiards Association and Control Club Championship25,161–19,259
Runner-up3May 1933World Professional Championship of English Billiards21,121–21,815
Runner-up4October 1934World Professional Championship of English Billiards22,678–23,553