
Snooker star with 12-year ban misses World Championships despite completing ban
Disgraced snooker star Stephen Lee could have pursued qualification for this year's World Championship, as his 12-year ban from playing ceased in October 2024. In 2013, the former World No.5 was handed a 12-year ban, which was backdated to 2012, after being found guilty of match fixing.
He was punished for seven instances of match-fixing during 2008 and 2009, which were condemned by the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) as the "the worst case of corruption" within snooker circles. Lee's punishment stood as the harshest until 2023 when Li Hang and Liang Wenbo received lifetime bans following another match-fixing exposé. However, unlike the Chinese pair, Lee's suspension has run its course, which provided him with the opportunity to qualify for the ongoing World Snooker Championship, had he chosen to do so.
Should the ambition bite for next year, Lee must first clear the substantial £40,000 fine levied by the WPBSA, which escalated to £125,000 after an ill-fated appeal attempt. Paying off this debt would open pathways for qualification via options like the Q Tour, the WSF Championship, or Q School for the next World Snooker Tour season.
To facilitate his return, the WPBSA clarified to the Mirror, stating: "Stephen Lee would need to reach a satisfactory agreement with the WPBSA over the settlement of his outstanding costs before he could return to compete at WPBSA/WST events."
Lee had previously expressed his reluctance to return to competition in an interview with the Mirror back in 2022. He said: "I must get asked this weekly, daily, minutely. I would like to say no, but I am still capable of playing
"Let's see what happens in two years. It's not a no, and not a yes. My eyes are getting worse, and I never had good eyes to start with. As you get older the determination and the fire goes."
Around the same time, in a candid response on Facebook, Lee further quashed rumours of a comeback, writing: "Not a chance of it my friend. I struggle to break off nowadays. It's down to my son now.."
Lee responded to the match-fixing allegations, claiming he was "totally innocent" and "devastated" by the guilty verdict. However, a tribunal found him guilty of intentionally throwing matches against Ken Doherty and Marco Fu at the 2008 Malta Cup, and also deliberately losing the opening frame in matches against Stephen Hendry and Mark King at the 2008 UK Championship.
A 2012 verdict from Tribunal Chairman Adam Lewis said: "I concluded that Mr Lee did not strike me as a cynical cheat, but rather as a weak man who under financial pressure, succumbed to the temptation to take improper steps that he may well have justified to himself as not really wrong, because the ultimate result of the match, win or lose, was the same.
"These breaches occurred when Mr Lee was in a financially perilous state not entirely of his own making and was finding it difficult to obtain entry to enough tournaments. As a weak man in a vulnerable position, he succumbed to temptation. I consider it unlikely that he was the prime mover or instigator of the activity. It seems to me likely that advantage was taken of him."
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Irish Examiner
12 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
King Cuan win the final leg of 83/1 treble for Billy Lee
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Irish Examiner
12 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Boy fell over edge at Cliffs of Moher after slipping, inquest told
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Sunday World
14 hours ago
- Sunday World
Boy (12) stumbled in puddle before falling over Cliffs of Moher, inquest hears
'It was very quick - he found himself in an awkward position with his left foot in a void over the cliff and his right knee on the edge of the cliff.' A 12-year old boy stumbled in a puddle and lost his balance before he fell over the edge of the Cliffs of Moher to his death, an inquest has been told. In eye-witness testimony at the Clare coroner's court into the accidental death of Zhihan Zhao at the Cliffs of Moher on July 23, 2024, French tourist, Marion Tourgon described seeing Zhihan fall over the edge at around 1.45pm on the day. Zhihan had set out on walking the Cliffs of Moher trail from Hag's Head on the Liscannor side or southern side of the Cliffs of Moher to the Cliffs of Moher visitor centre with his mother, Xianhong Huang and her friends. The two Chinese nationals had arrived in Ireland only 12 days previous on July 11. Last year, 1.49m people visited the Cliffs of Moher making it Ireland's most popular natural attraction. In her deposition, Ms Huang said that Zhihan was walking ahead of her on the Cliffs of Moher trail and she lost sight of him. The Cliffs of Moher. Photo: Depositphotos News in 90 Seconds - 6th June 2025 Speaking through an interpreter at the inquest in Kilrush, Co Clare, Ms Huang wiping away tears, asked: 'What exactly caused Zhihan to fall from the Cliffs?' Clare County Coroner, Isobel O'Dea told the distraught Ms Huang that the evidence of Ms Tourgon would help answer that question. In her deposition Ms Tourgon said that she was at the edge of the Cliffs of Moher with her husband and two children at around 1.45pm. She said that they were taking a selfie when she saw a young Asian boy, who was alone, come into view. She said: 'I saw him slipping in the puddle that appears in the photo that my husband sent to the police." 'His right foot slipped into the puddle with him trying to stop himself from falling with his left foot but his left foot ended up in the air. 'It was very quick - he found himself in an awkward position with his left foot in a void over the cliff and his right knee on the edge of the cliff.' 'His right knee eventually fell into the void over the cliff and he was trying to grasp the grass with his hands to pull himself up. He didn't shout and there was no noise.' She said that 'it is the only the few of us who saw him falling' and the Tourgons alerted the emergency services by phone. Speaking again through an interpreter, Ms Huang asked 'did he slip?' and in reply, Insp Helen Costello told her: 'It appears from the witness that he slipped into the void having stumbled in the puddle.' In her deposition, Ms Huang said that she started out from Nagle's car park in Liscannor to walk to the Cliffs of Moher with Zhihan and friends of hers. She said: 'My son walked very fast and was ahead of us by 50 metres.' She said: 'As there was only one path I thought we would meet him along the way. When I didn't I walked to the visitor centre and I checked the visitor centre." When she couldn't find her son here, she walked back along the path to search for her son and after not finding him, she reported him missing. She said that she last saw Zhihan at 1pm that day. She said that Zhihan was a fluent English speaker and described the clothes that Zhihan was wearing that day including black shorts, Nike Air Jordans, an LA Lakers wristband and a kid's smart-watch. Sgt Claire McGuigan said that on the day, Ms Huang was able to provide a photo of Zhihan she had taken taken earlier on the Cliffs of Moher trail. Garda Colm Collins said that he received a call that day at 2pm to attend the Cliffs of Moher after a male was seen falling off the cliff edge. He said that the Irish Coastguard had spotted a body floating in the water at the base of the Cliffs of Moher. Through the interpreter, the mother asked was the location the same spot where scenes from a Harry Potter movie were shot and Insp Costello said that they were not. Garda Collins said that a lifeboat was launched but the craft was not able to access the site where the body was spotted due to the sea conditions. Zhihan's body would not be recovered from the sea for another five days and was recovered after fisherman, Matthew O'Halloran from Corofin, Co Clare spotted a body facedown and arms extended in the water between Doolin and the Aran Islands shortly after 10am on Sunday, July 28. Mr O'Halloran alerted the Irish coastguard at Valentia and members of the Doolin unit of the Irish coastguard retrieved Zhihan's body from the waters and brought it ashore at Doolin. Ms O'Dea said that the post mortem found that Zhihan died from multiple traumatic injuries consistent with a fall from a height. Ms O'Dea said her verdict was one of 'accidental death'. She said: 'It is clear from evidence we heard that Zhihan slipped off the Cliffs rather than any other way. His death would have been very quick - instantaneous." Ms O'Dea told Ms Huang 'I can't imagine how upsetting this is for you' and the two embraced as Ms Huang left the coroner's court in Kilrush. Ms O'Dea also extended her sympathies to Zhihan's father who was not present at the inquest. Addressing Ms Huang, Insp Costello said: 'The pain must be immeasurable for you all.' Ms Huang declined to comment on the record when approached for comment after the inquest. On August 22 of last year, the Clare Local Development Company closed off large sections of part of the Cliffs of Moher trail and it remains closed off today due to continuing safety concerns. At the time, the Clare Local Development Company confirmed that it was taking the action following the two recent fatal accidents on the Cliffs of Moher trail. In May 2024, a young woman died after she fell from the Cliffs of Moher. She was in her early 20s and a college student from Belgium who was studying in Scotland.