A Professional Billiard Players Association (PBPA) was formed on 26 July 1946, with
Joe Davis as chairman. The professional game was in decline in the 1950s and 1960s and the PBPA was also dormant until being restarted in April 1968 with eight professional members. Mike Green was designated as the Secretary. Membership of the Association was by application, with playing achievements and disciplinary records the main factors taken into account. This means of becoming professional was later replaced by a series of "pro ticket" events. Prior to the formation of the WPBSA, the world governing body of both snooker and English billiards was the Billiards Association and Control Council (BACC or BA&CC), later known as the
Billiards and Snooker Control Council. The BACC announced in August 1968 that the world professional snooker championship would be run on a knockout basis, rather than the challenge system that had been in place from 1964, and in September 1969 that "The BA & CC and Professional Billiard Players Association have reached agreement regarding procedure for turning professional and other events governed by the BA & CC." The PBPA disaffiliated from the BA&CC from 1 October 1970, and was renamed the WPBSA on 12 December 1970, soon taking control of the running of the professional game. The WPBSA was reorganised as a limited company on 13 January 1982, with the intention that it would negotiate contracts with television companies and sponsors, something that had previously been in the control of promoters like
Mike Watterson, as well as organising the tournaments.
Colin Moynihan, a British MP, called for Williams to resign and any players using beta blockers to withdraw from competing. In 2001, in a legal case brought by
Stephen Hendry,
Mark Williams and their management company, the WPBSA was found to have taken advantage of its dominant position in the snooker market by forcing its members to seek permission to play in tournaments, which could allow the WPBSA to prevent rival organisations from competing with it. Former WPBSA chairman
Geoff Foulds lost a libel case that he had brought against
The Daily Mirror when it accused him of submitting falsified expense claims to the WPBSA. When World Snooker scheduled the
2008 Bahrain Championship on dates which clashed with
Premier League Snooker matches scheduled five months earlier with World Snooker approval, this caused four leading players (including Higgins) to miss the Bahrain event and consequently lose ranking points—Higgins called the clash "laughable". Premier League organiser
Barry Hearn commented that "I am very disappointed and I can't understand why World Snooker hasn't discussed dates with us", while Higgins and his manager Pat Mooney threatened legal action over the ranking points situation. Supported by a number of senior players, Hearn became the chairman of the WPBSA in December 2009, with Mooney also joining him on the board. The body received criticism in the late 2000s.
John Higgins had been particularly vocal in his opinion that World Snooker had not done enough to promote the game in new territories, particularly in Eastern Europe. The rival
World Series of Snooker was launched by a consortium including Higgins in 2008. In 2008, the Association's benevolent fund was investigated for accounting irregularities and the apparent involvement in the decision-making process of WPBSA officials. The decision to decline an application for a grant from
Chris Small, a former player who retired due to
Ankylosing spondylitis, was also criticised by several of the game's leading figures.
Promotional activities A subsidiary promotions company, WPBSA Promotions Ltd, was founded in 1983. and in other territories including Germany. The
2008 Bahrain Championship was the first ranking tournament to be staged in the
Middle East, which cost the organisation around £500,000 in prize money and organisational costs. One session at the event did not attract any audience, and the largest attendance for any of the sessions was 150. In 2019, World Snooker announced that there would be a ranking event in Saudi Arabia in 2020, the first in a ten-year series.
Amnesty International criticised the announcement due to concerns about human rights in the country. The WPBSA supports coaching in cue sports through an accredited programme, and in 2013 initiated the "Cue Zone into Schools" programme, which took scaled-down
tables into schools and was intended to interest school children in taking up the game. In 2019, the WPBSA announced the creation of an
all-party parliamentary group for snooker, chaired by
Conor Burns, a
Member of Parliament (MP). In 2015, the Association submitted an unsuccessful bid for snooker to be played at the
2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Another bid has been put forward for
Paris 2024 through a branch of the association formed in 2017, the World Snooker Federation. ==See also==