Early life Born on 25 October 1985, in
Dudley, West Midlands, Reanne Evans was educated at
Bishop Milner Catholic School, Dudley. Her parents and two older brothers all played snooker, and she began playing herself at age 13.
World Ladies' Billiards and Snooker/World Women's Snooker Evans competed in her first
World Women's Snooker Championship in
2002, aged 16. She defeated third seed
Lynette Horsburgh 4–3 in the quarter-finals but lost 0–4 to eventual champion
Kelly Fisher in the semi-finals. She won her first ranking tournament, the Connie Gough Memorial Championship, in 2004. This was the only women's ranking event held in the 2003–04 season. Evans made the highest of the
2008 tournament, 102, and won 5–2 against
June Banks in the final. Evans defeated
Maria Catalano in four of the next five world championship finals, including a 5–2 win in
2009, and a 5–1 margin in
2010. A 5–1 victory against
Emma Bonney in the
2011 final was Evans's 88th consecutive match win in women's snooker events. Catalano and Evans were level at 2–2 in the
2012 final before Evans went on to win 5–3. In the final against Catalano in
2013, Evans compiled two
century breaks during the match, including a 117, the highest of the tournament, and won 6–3. She won her tenth consecutive title in
2014 with a 6–0 defeat of
Ng On-yee in the final. before the final of the Paul Hunter Women's Classic 2017 In the semi-finals of the
2015 championship, Ng and Evans were level at 2–2, before Ng went on to win 4–2. The pair faced each other again in the
2016 final, when Evans won the first frame, before Ng took the next three. Ng led 4–3 before Evans won three frames in a row to take the match 6–4 for her eleventh world championship win. In
2017, Ng eliminated Evans 5–4 in the semi-finals. Evans lost again in the
2018 semi-finals, after Catalano defeated her 5–4. Evans won the 2019 Women's Tour Championship, held at the
Crucible Theatre, defeating
Mink Nutcharut in the semi-finals and Ng in the final. She claimed her twelfth world title in
2019, with a 6–3 win in the final against Mink. She was awarded an
MBE in the
2020 Birthday Honours for her services to women's snooker. In September 2021, following an 18-month suspension of the Women's Snooker Tour due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, Evans won the 2021 UK Women's Championship, defeating
Rebecca Kenna 4–0 in the final. In November 2021, she was runner-up to Ng in the Eden Women's Masters, losing the final 3–4 after having led 3–1. In January 2022, she lost 3–4 to Mink in the final of the British Women's Open. At the
2022 World Championship, Evans was the defending champion, but she lost 1–4 to Belgian player
Wendy Jans in the quarter-finals, the first time she had not reached at least the semi-finals of the tournament. She retained her number one place in the women's world rankings at the end of the 2021–22 season, although Ng and Mink closed the gap in ranking points. After the 2023 Asia-Pacific Women's Championship, Mink replaced Evans as world number one. Evans lost in the semi-finals of the
2023 World Championship to 19-year-old Chinese tour debutant
Bai Yulu, who recovered from 1–3 behind to clinch a 5–3 victory. Bai again eliminated Evans 5–3 in the semi-finals of the
2024 event, taking five consecutive frames after Evans had established a 3–0 lead. Widely recognised as the most successful female player in the sport's history, with her ten consecutive Women's Snooker Championship titles from 2005 to 2014, and further titles in 2016 and 2019 for a total of 12 women's world titles, Evans surpassed
Allison Fisher's previous record of seven. Evans has also won a record 12 UK Women's Snooker Championships, and recorded the highest break on the women's tour (140 twice).
Other international competitions International Billiards and Snooker Federation Evans won the
IBSF Women's
Snooker Championship in 2004, 2007, and 2008, with
Wendy Jans the losing finalist on each occasion. She did not travel to the 2009 championship in
Hyderabad to defend her title as the cost of travelling would have been more than the prize money she could have earned.
European Billiards and Snooker Association Evans reached the final of the Women's
EBSA European Snooker Championship in 2004, but lost 3–5 to Jans. In 2007 she won the title by defeating Jans 5–2 in the final, and retained it in 2008 with a 5–3 victory against
Emma Bonney. ==World Snooker Tour==