Bai Yulu
Born | Weinan, Shaanxi, China | July 10, 2003
---|---|
Sport country | China |
Professional | 2024– |
Highest ranking | World Women's Snooker: 8[1] |
Current ranking | 120 (as of 11 November 2024) |
Bai Yulu (Chinese: 白雨露; born 10 July 2003) is a Chinese snooker player. A former world junior champion,[2][3] she is the reigning women's world champion, having won the 2024 World Women's Snooker Championship. The first player from mainland China to win the women's world title, she received a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season. Bai is also the reigning women's Under-21 world champion.
Early life
Bai Yulu was born in Weinan, Shaanxi. Her parents went to work in Dongguan, Guangdong when she was a child. After she started school, she moved to Dongguan to live with her parents.[4]
Career
Bai won the women's 2019 IBSF World Under-21 Snooker Championship in Qingdao with a 4–0 victory over Mink Nutcharut in the final. She celebrated her 16th birthday during the tournament.[5][6][7] She reached the quarter-finals of the 2019 IBSF Women's World Snooker Championship,[8] making the three highest breaks of the event: 91, 81 and 78.[9] Accompanied by her mother, as she was unable as a 16-year-old to travel alone, she competed in the 2019 Hong Kong World Women's Masters, where she lost 1–4 to Rebecca Kenna in the final.[10][11]
She made her World Women's Snooker Tour debut at the 2023 World Women's Snooker Championship in Bangkok, Thailand.[12] She made a 127 break in her group match against Amee Kamani, the highest break in the tournament's history, surpassing Kelly Fisher's 125 at the 2003 event.[13] She defeated 12-time champion Reanne Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals, but lost the final 3–6 to Baipat Siripaporn.[14][15] She won her first women's ranking title at the 2023 British Women's Open, defeating Evans 4–3 in the final.[12][16]
The 2024 World Women's Snooker Championship was the first edition of the tournament to be staged in China. After coming from 0–3 behind to defeat Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals,[17] Bai secured her first women's world title with a 6–5 victory over Mink in the final.[18] Her 122 break in the final was the highest of the tournament and the highest ever made in a women's world final.[18] Winning the world women's title secured Bai a two-year tour card to the main professional World Snooker Tour from the start of the 2024–25 snooker season.[18] She also won the concurrent 2024 World Women's Under-21 Snooker Championship, defeating Narucha Phoemphul 3–0 in the final.[19]
Performance and rankings timeline
World Women's Snooker
Tournament[20] | 2022/ 23 |
2023/ 24 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Current tournaments | |||||||||
UK Championship | A | F | |||||||
US Open | A | A | |||||||
Australian Open | A | A | |||||||
Masters | A | A | |||||||
Belgian Open | A | A | |||||||
Albanian Open | NH | SF | |||||||
World Championship | F | W | |||||||
British Open | W |
Performance Table Legend | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LQ | lost in the qualifying draw | #R | lost in the early rounds of the tournament (WR = Wildcard round, RR = Round robin) |
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 an event was not held. | |||
NR / Non-Ranking Event | means an event is/was no longer a ranking event. | |||
R / Ranking Event | means an event is/was a ranking event. | |||
MR / Minor-Ranking Event | means an event is/was a minor-ranking event. |
Career finals
Women's finals: 4 (2 titles)
References
External links |