Ken Owers was born on 30 March 1953. He started playing
snooker when he was 11 and applied to the
World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) to be a professional player in 1985, but was rejected. The following year, he won the Working Men's Club and Institute Union Snooker Championship, regarded as the second-most prestigious amateur snooker event in the UK, behind the
English Amateur Championship. Ower and his playing partner Steve Meakin reached the final of the 1986 National Pairs Championship but they were defeated by P. Fryat and A. Durham. The same year, Owers finished third in the professional ticket series, which meant he was eligible to turn professional in the
1986–87 snooker season. His first tournament as a professional was the
1986 International Open. There, he defeated
John Hargreaves 5–3,
George Scott 5–1,
Jimmy White 5–2 and
Dene O'Kane 5–0, before losing 1–5 to
Neal Foulds in the last-16 round. Later in the same season he reached the last 16 at the
1987 English Professional Championship, exiting 2–6 to
Mike Hallett, and twice beat the veteran
Fred Davis – 5–3 in the British Open, and 10–5 in the
1987 World Championship, where he eventually lost in the last 64 to
Warren King. In the
1987–88 snooker world rankings he was 52nd, and the highest-ranked of the players who had been on the professional circuit for only a year. The following season, Owers beat
Mick Fisher 5–0 and
Rex Williams 5–3 before losing 0–5 to
Peter Francisco in the last 32 at the
1988 Classic, and again progressed to the last 16 of the
English Professional Championship, this time losing 4–6 to
Tony Knowles. Owers won the 1989 WPBSA Invitational Event Two beating
Dave Gilbert 9–6 in the final. In the
1989–90 snooker season he reached the last 64 at the
1990 European Open; there, he lost 2–5 to
Alex Higgins. At the
1990 World Championship, Owers beat
Mike Darrington 10–1, but was eliminated in the last 96, losing 8–10 to
John Spencer. Owers reached the last 16 at a ranking event for the first time in four years at the
1990 Grand Prix. There, he was victorious over Gary Natale, Brian Rowswell,
John Virgo and Knowles, before losing once more to Peter Francisco – this time taking the third frame in a 1–5 defeat. This proved to be Owers' last showing in the latter stages of a tournament; at the
1993 World Championship, he lost his second-round qualifying match 0–10 to
Drew Henry, having beaten Sefton Payne 5–1 in the first round. In the
1997 World Championship, Owers lost 5–10 to Leigh Robinson in his first qualifying match; this was his final match on the professional circuit. He was ranked 256th in the world at the end of the
1996–97 snooker season, when only the top 64 players qualified for the main circuit for the following season.
Non-ranking wins: (1) • WPBSA Non-ranking Event 2 – 1989 ==References==