Sascha Diemer
Sascha Diemer | |
---|---|
birthday | 25th February 1976 (age 44) |
nationality |
![]() |
Prize money | - |
Highest break | unknown |
Century Breaks | - |
Success at amateur tournaments | |
National championships | 3 × German champion |
Best results | |
World championships | - |
Continental Championships | 1 × group stage |
Professional tournaments | 10th place ( European League 1994 ) 1 × round of 16 ( WPBSA Minor Tour ) |
Sascha Diemer (born February 25, 1976 ) is a German snooker player who won three German snooker championships from the mid-1990s .
Career
At the beginning of the 1990s Diemer, who came from Munich, began to take part on the German amateur tour under the guidance of Mike Henson and reached the last rounds in numerous tournaments during the 1992/93 season. He was also able to win two tournaments, with three others he was only defeated in the final. At the same time he reached the semifinals of the German snooker championship of the DSKV in 1993. In 1994 he was invited to the professional tournament European League , where he finished last in the final table of the group stage despite a victory over Mario Wehrmann . After losing a short time later at an event of the WPBSA Minor Tour in the quarter-finals against eventual tournament winner Jamie Woodman , he reached the final of the German DSKV championship at the end of the same year, beating Michael Heeger 4-0 there . In 1997 he reached the final again at the same tournament and this time defeated Hans-Joachim Meyer 5-2 . At the 1998 championship, which was not held until January 1999 and was the last DSKV championship, he reached the final again, but lost to Mike Henson.
In previous years he had also had success in other disciplines of the DSKV championship, far from the individual competition. Together with Karl-Heinz Beggel he won the doubles championship in 1993, which he won again in 1998 with Mike Henson. In 1994 he also won the team championship as part of the Breakers Munich . In 1999 he finally took part in the European Championship for the first time , but retired with three wins from six games in the group stage. A year later he took part in the German championship of the DBU for the first time and was defeated by Hans-Joachim Meyer in the second round. A year later he reached the final with a victory over Thomas Hein and won his third championship title there against Lasse Münstermann . In 2004 he took part in the Grand Prix Fürth and was eliminated in the quarter-finals. In the following years he took part in various individual tournaments, including the Fürth German Open 2006 and tournaments of the German amateur tour . In 2006 he won such a tournament.
In addition, Diemer was also active in the team sector and took part in the 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2009/10 as a player for 1. Münchner SC , where he also worked as a coach , where he recorded both his team on the final table and as an individual player took 3rd place in the corresponding ranking list. In the next season his club finished 5th, while Diemer took second place in the individual ranking behind Sascha Lippe . But even if Diemer took second place in the individual standings again in the 2011/12 season and his club also took second place on the table, his club pulled the team back to the 2nd Bundesliga snooker . Therefore, he played in the next season for the newly promoted snooker club Neu-Ulm , which finished 5th on the final table, while Diemer was only 14th in the individual table. After his new club had canceled his team from league operations, Diemer played for BV Fortuna Straubing from then on .
Successes (selection)
output | year | competition | Final opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amateur tournaments | ||||
winner | 1992 | German Open Snooker Ranking - Event 9 - 1 Star |
![]() |
3: 1 |
winner | 1992 | German Open Snooker Ranking - Event 20 - 2 Stars |
![]() |
3: 1 |
Second | 1992 | German Open Snooker Ranking - Event 22 - 1 Star |
![]() |
1: 3 |
Second | 1992 | German Open Snooker Ranking - Event 25 - 1 Star |
![]() |
2: 3 |
Second | 1993 | German Open Snooker Ranking - Event 12 - 1 Star |
![]() |
2: 3 |
winner | 1994 | German Snooker Championship (DSKV) |
![]() |
4-0 |
winner | 1997 | German Snooker Championship (DSKV) |
![]() |
5: 2 |
Second | 1998 | German Snooker Championship (DSKV) |
![]() |
5-0 |
winner | 2001 | German Snooker Championship (DBU) |
![]() |
4: 2 |
winner | 2006 | German Grand Prix - Event 1 |
![]() |
3: 1 |
Web links
- Profile of Sascha Diemer at CueTracker
- Profile of Sascha Diemer at the BillardArea
- Profile of Sascha Diemer at the Global Snooker Center (archived)
Individual evidence
- ↑ Werner Grewatsch, Marcus Rosenstein: Snooker ... Billiards "made in England" . 6th revised edition. Weinmann, Berlin 2006, ISBN 978-3-87892-061-8 , pp. 23 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1992-1993 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ a b 6th National German Championship . In: German Snooker Control Association (Hrsg.): Snooker in Germany . No. 2/1994 , p. 3-5 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1993-1994 - Professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1994-1995 - Professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1994-1995 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1997-1998 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1998-1999 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ German team championship in snooker - Gifhorner put Munich to the strongest test . In: Gifhorner Rundschau . December 6, 1994.
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 1999-2000 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2000-2001 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2001-2002 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2004-2005 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ a b Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2006-2007 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2013-2014 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Ron Florax: Sascha Diemer - Season 2015-2016 - Non-professional Results. CueTracker.net, accessed July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ training. 1. Münchner SC , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ^ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2009/10. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ^ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2009/10 - list of players. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ^ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2010/11. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ^ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2010/11 - Player List. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ^ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2011/12. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ 1. Bundesliga Snooker 2011/12 - list of players. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ 1st Bundesliga Snooker 2012/13. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ 1st Bundesliga Snooker 2012/13 - list of players. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
- ↑ Single view member Sascha Diemer. In: BillardArea. German Billard Union , accessed on July 8, 2020 .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Diemer, Sascha |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German snooker player |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 25, 1976 |