Rita Holmes Explained

Rita Holmes
Birth Date: 1917
Sport Country:England

Rita Holmes (born 1917 is an English retired player of the cue sports of snooker and English billiards. She won the UK Women's Amateur Snooker Championship four times: on her debut in 1953 and again in 1957, 1958 and 1963. She retired from snooker in 1964 to concentrate on her primary career of teaching dancing, but after overcoming an injury, played in the 2006 British Open.

Biography

Rita Holmes was born 1917. Her father owned the Midland Billiard Club in Leyton, London. Holmes started playing snooker in about 1950, and seeing Rosemary Davies, who was the 1952 Women's Amateur Snooker Champion play, decided to take up the game seriously; her father arranged for snooker professional Sydney Lee to coach her.[1] At the same time, Holmes was running the Rita Maureen School of Dance at Chingford; her previous job had been as a ledger clerk at a bank in Westcliff, but she resigned to concentrate on teaching dancing.[2] At 5-foot 1 inch tall, Holmes used a that was four inches shorter than the standard.

After about 11 months of coaching, Holmes decided to enter the 1953 Women's Amateur Snooker Championship to gain experience.[3] She won the tournament, defeating Maureen Barrett 4–3 in the final. The following year, she reached the final again, but this time lost 0–4 to Barrett. A match report in The Billard Player concluded that Holmes had been "too cautious and careful" in her playing approach.[4]

Holmes regained the title in 1957. After leading Pat Ayres 3–0 at the interval, she won 4–2. The correspondent for The Billiard Player called Holmes a "worthy champion" and commended her, but thought she should seek to improve her and use of .[5] Holmes reached the championship final for ten successive years in all, with two further title, in 1958 and 1963. She then retired to competitive play, to concentrate on teaching dancing.[6] [3] She taught tap dancing and musical-comedy dance.[7]

In 2006, she made a return to competition, aged 73, playing in the women's British Open. She won 3–0 against Laura Alves to reach the quarter-finals, where she was defeated 2–4 to Suzie Opacic.[3] [8] She had taken up playing again after successful treatment to the effects of an injury.[8] After this, she started coaching from professional Dominic Dale, and was intending to enter the 2007 World Women's Snooker Championship, but one week before that tournament, she had a stroke that affected her eyesight and was unable to play.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: Quickstep to snooker title? . . 15 October 1953 . 13.
  2. Women's billiards and snooker . The Billiard Player . December 1953 . 9.
  3. News: Rob . Bagchi . Meet snooker's first 'gorgeous bachelor girl' of the baize: Rita Holmes won four Women's Amateur Championships in an extraordinary career that began in 1953 and ended in 2007 . . 22 April 2021 . 10 June 2023 . 16 May 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210516225929/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/snooker/2021/04/22/meet-snookers-first-gorgeous-bachelor-girl-baize/ . live .
  4. Women's amateur snooker c'ship . The Billiard Player . November 1954 . 9.
  5. Rita Holmes again women's amateur snooker champion . The Billiard Player . November 1957 . 15.
  6. News: Bromley . John . Sportlight . . 17 March 1964 . 27.
  7. Pat on the back . . 31 January 1955 . 2 . 5.
  8. Web site: Women's snooker icons: Rita Holmes . . 2 October 2020 . 10 June 2023 . 22 March 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230322055544/https://www.womenssnooker.com/womens-snooker-icons-rita-holmes/ . live .
  9. News: Greg . Jackson . Snooker pro coaches Minehead snooker veteran . . 15 February 2007 . 10 June 2023.