Like a Hurricane: The Alex Higgins Story
http://youtube.com/watch?v=wmn0z09XGdk
http://youtube.com/watch?v=9VD-0NbkOeM
http://youtube.com/watch?v=wmn0z09XGdk
http://youtube.com/watch?v=9VD-0NbkOeM
Like everyone at the time I loved to watch Alex as much as anyone. But don't fall for the 'I made snooker' mantra. It was BBC2/colour television and the prize money from tobacco sponsorship that made snooker. Like everyone else in that era, Alex Higgins was in the right place at the right time, nothing more. The simple fact is that it was Davis who was defining snooker during its heyday, and later Hendry, all in the total absence of Higgins.mosconiac said:Thank you so much for making me aware of Alex Higgins and his contribution to the sport. Yes, the demise was horrible to see, but it really looks like he made professional snooker what it is today.
Boro Nut said:He can't hide from the fact that not only was he not close to being the best snooker player, he's not even the best snooker player called Higgins.
Boro Nut
Secaucus Fats said:Thank you very much for posting the links.
With his working class background, wealth of talent, his brash and unorthodox style, his ability to summon up heart when others would have stumbled, and his prodigious appetite for booze, cigarettes, broads, and brawls, Alex Higgins took snooker out of the doldrums. He was the upstart commoner who became the people's favorite.
Higgins, more than anyone else helped build snooker into the richest of cue sports. He drew the audiences and helped make snooker big on British TV.
Despite his many battles with the demons that plagued him, he deserves to always be remembered as one of snooker's greatest.
Fats