Adrian Gunnell (born August 24, 1972) is an English professional snooker player from Telford. He has reached the last-16 in four world ranking events (three in Asia, in three different seasons, and at the 2008 Grand Prix), but has yet to progress beyond that stage. He has yet to qualify for the final stages of the World Championship.
While practising in 2003 he pulled off the remarkable feat of compiling three 147 breaks in 4 frames, the only player to do so. He hasn't been able to bring that kind of form to the tournaments, but he has compiled a 147 in tournament play. He is noted for taking a long time to play safety shots.
Notable victories he achieved during the 2007/2008 season included beating Marco Fu 5–3 in last 48 of the Northern Ireland Trophy, and Matthew Stevens 9–7 at the same stage of the 2007 UK Championship from 5–7 behind, to qualify for the final stages of the event played in his home town for the first time. He lost to Peter Ebdon 5–2 and Ding Junhui 9–3 in the last 32 of both tournaments respectively, but his consistent performances have taken him up to number 36 in the 2008/2009 rankings. He also had a notable run in the 2008 Grand Prix, upsetting former World Champion Shaun Murphy 5-3 in the first round (Murphy went on to win the UK Championship and reach the final of the World Championship later in the same season), then coming from 3-0 down against Steve Davis to level at 3-3 and 4-4 and lead by over forty points in the deciding frame, before Davis produced a great clearance to the pink to snatch victory.
The 2011/12 season was rather average only qualifying for 2 of the 8 ranking events the UK championship and the German masters both losing in the first round to Mark Allen and Stephen Lee.At the end of the season he finished NO 69 outside of the top 64, but he tried the Q school event but didn't manage to reach the Quarter-finals in any of the 3 events and then lost his place in the main tour soon afterwards.
Famous quotes containing the word adrian:
“My beautiful, my own
My only Venicethis is breath! Thy breeze
Thine Adrian sea-breeze, how it fans my face!
Thy very winds feel native to my veins,
And cool them into calmness!”
—George Gordon Noel Byron (17881824)