Chen Siming

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Chen Siming
Billard Picto 2-white-l.svg

nation China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of China
birthday December 30, 1993
Medal table
Asian Games 1 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
9-ball World Cup 0 × gold 2 × silver 0 × bronze
10-ball world championship 0 × gold 1 × silver 0 × bronze
World Games 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
Pool world rankings

Highest WRL place 1
Current WRL location 1 (as of July 2, 2020)

Chen Siming (born December 30, 1993 ) is a Chinese pool player from Shanghai . She won the gold medal at the World Games in 2017 .

Career

After reaching the round of 16 at the China Open and the 9-Ball World Championship in 2009, Chen finished third at the Amway World Open in early 2010 . In August 2010 she achieved her first major tournament victory when she surprisingly defeated the multiple world champion Allison Fisher in the final of the China Open . A few days later she reached the quarter-finals at the 9-Ball World Cup .

In March 2011, Chen reached the final of the Amway World Open and was defeated by the South Korean Kim Ga-young . A little later she won the Philippines Open and came third at the Beijing Open. After the tournament in the Chinese capital, she took first place in the world rankings for the first time . At the China Open 2011 she lost 3: 9 in the final to her compatriot Fu Xiaofang . In September she moved into the final of the 9-ball World Cup for the first time, which she lost to Bi Zhuqing . At the 10-Ball World Cup she reached the round of 16. At the end of November 2011 she won the All Japan Championship for the first time in the final against Junko Mitsuoka .

At the Amway World Open 2012, Chen finished third. In the summer of 2012 she was eliminated from the 9-Ball World Cup in the quarter-finals and moved into the final of the 10-Ball World Cup , in which she had to admit defeat to Kim Ga-young 5:10. At the China Open 2012 she reached the semifinals. In spring 2013 she won a tournament of the Joseph Pechauer Northeast Women's Tour and the OB Cues Ladies Tour during a stay of several weeks in the USA . A little later, she reached the finals for the third time at the China Open . In the final, she lost 8: 9 to Liu Shasha . In July 2013 she took part in the World Games for the first time and narrowly missed a medal in the women's 9-ball competition . After losing 8: 9 to Kim Ga-young in the semifinals, she lost to reigning world champion Kelly Fisher 6: 9 in the game for third place . At the 9-ball World Cup 2013 she was eliminated in the quarter-finals, at the 10-ball World Cup in the second round.

In early 2014, Chen finished third at the WPBA Masters and the Amway World Open. At the China Open 2014 , she was eliminated in the semifinals against Kim. In October 2014 she made it into a World Cup final for the third time, after 2011 for the second time in 9-Ball , and had to admit defeat to Liu Shasha 8: 9 after she had already led 8: 6. In 2015, Chen finished third at the China Open and the WPBA Masters. At the 9-Ball World Cup in 2015 , she was eliminated in the round of 16 against Pan Xiaoting . In March 2016 she won the Chinese 8-Ball World Championship with a 17:11 final win over Kelly Fisher . At the All Japan Championship 2016 she reached the semi-finals. A little later, at the 9-Ball World Cup in 2016 , she was eliminated in the round of 16 against Karen Corr .

In March 2017, Chen won the Amway Cup by beating Pan Xiaoting 11-8 in the final. A little later she finished third at the Chinese Pool World Championship and the WPBA Rivers US Open. In June 2017 she won the China Open for the second time after 2010 . In the final against Liu Shasha she was able to turn a 6: 8 deficit to a 9: 8 win. At the subsequent CBSA International Open she was third. In July 2017, she became the first Chinese woman to win the gold medal at the 9-ball competition of the World Games in Wroclaw : After victories against Jennifer Barretta , Kristina Tkatsch and Chezka Centeno , Chen defeated Kim Ga-young 9: 3 in the final.

Team career

In 2012 , Chen was nominated for the first time for the World Team Championship , where she reached the semifinals with the second Chinese team. In 2014 she was part of the China 1 team and was eliminated again in the semi-finals.

snooker

At the 2010 Asian Games , Chen won the gold medal in Six Red Snooker in the final against Lai Hui-shan with a 4-0 win . In the team competition she won silver with the Chinese team after a final defeat against Hong Kong.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Athlete Information: Chen Siming. In: worldgames2017.sportresult.com. World Games 2017 , accessed on August 26, 2017 .
  2. a b rankings. Status: Beijing Open 2011. In: wpa-pool.com. World Pool-Billiard Association, archived from the original on May 28, 2011 ; accessed on August 26, 2017 .
  3. a b China’s Siming Chen Completes Team East. In: insidepoolmag.com. Inside Pool Magazine , October 2013, accessed August 26, 2017 .
  4. Thomas Overbeck: Ga Young Kim Crowned Yalin World 10-Ball Champion. In: kozoom.com. Kozoom , August 26, 2012, accessed August 26, 2017 .
  5. World 9-Ball China Open 2013. In: sixpockets.de. Florian Scholl, accessed on August 26, 2017 .
  6. ^ Ted Lerner: Liu Shasha wins second World 9-Ball Championship. In: thepoolscene.com. October 2014, accessed on August 26, 2017 .
  7. Alison Chang: Chen Siming takes China Billiard World Champion. In: thepoolscene.com. March 21, 2016, accessed August 26, 2017 .
  8. ^ Samuel Lai: Chen Siming is The New Amway Queen. (No longer available online.) In: alison-chang.com. March 7, 2017, archived from the original on August 27, 2017 ; accessed on August 26, 2017 (English). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.  @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / alison-chang.com
  9. Ted Lerner: 2017 China Open Awarding. In: wpapool.com. World Pool-Billiard Association , June 11, 2017, accessed August 26, 2017 .
  10. ^ Asian Games Guangzhou 2010: 6-Red Snooker - Women (Individual). In: cuesportsindia.com. Retrieved on August 26, 2017 .
  11. ^ Asian Games Guangzhou 2010: 6-Red Snooker - Women (Team). In: cuesportsindia.com. Retrieved on August 26, 2017 .