Photo of Steve Davis

Steve Davis

Biography

Steve Davis (born 22 August 1957) is an English retired professional snooker player who is currently a commentator, DJ, electronic musician and author. He first turned professional in 1978 and dominated the sport in the 1980s, when he reached eight World Snooker Championship finals in nine years, won six world titles and held the world number one ranking for seven consecutive seasons. He also won the UK Championship six times and the Masters three times for a total of 15 Triple Crown titles, placing him third all time. He won a total of 28 ranking titles during his career, placing him fifth on the all-time list. He is the only snooker player to have won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Award, which he received in 1988. He was made an MBE in the 1988 Birthday Honours and elevated to OBE in the 2000 New Year Honours. Davis became widely known for his role in one of snooker's most famous matches, the 1985 World Championship final. Then the defending champion, he led Dennis Taylor 9–1 in the best-of-35-frame final, but Taylor recovered to tie the scores at 11–11, 15–15 and 17–17. The 68-minute deciding frame ended in a dramatic battle on the last black ball that attracted 18.5 million viewers in the UK, still the largest British television audience for any broadcast after midnight and any broadcast on BBC Two. Taylor potted the black to win the only world title of his career. Davis's terse responses in post-match interviews became the basis for a recurring caricature on the satirical British television show Spitting Image, which gave him the sardonic nickname "Interesting". Davis was the first player to make an officially recognised maximum break in professional competition, which he achieved at the 1982 Classic, and was also the first to earn £1 million in career prize money. During the 1987–88 season, he became the first player to win all three Triple Crown events in a single season, a feat that only two other players have matched. He won his last major title

Bio from Wikipedia

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Credited work

834 releases · 81 albums · active 1961–2026

  • Performance · 923
  • Other credits · 14

Studios: Atlantic Studios · A&R Studios · Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey · United Recorders

Frequent collaborators

Around the web