| The son of Italian
parents, Tony Meo decided at 13 to stay in London with his friends
rather than return to Italy with his family. Perhaps it was
a good thing for snooker that he did.
Tony went to the same South London school as Jimmy White
and although he was some three years older than the young
Whirlwind, the two became good pals and spent
more time down the local snooker hall than they did at school.
A local taxi driver spotted their talents and ferried them
around the country playing matches but soon they were too
big for him to handle.
At 17 Tony became the youngest person to make a 147 and a
year later he beat professional, Doug Mountjoy, in the Warners
Pro-Am. He also beat Jimmy in the Pontins Junior event and
became National Under-19 champion in 1978. Still an amateur
he entered the Canadian Open where he beat no less than Alex
Higgins in the semi-final before losing to Cliff Thorburn
17-15 in the final. That was all the encouragement he needed
to turn professional which he did in 1979.
In his first visit to the Crucible for the 1980 Embassy he
only narrowly lost to Alex Higgins 9-10 in his first round
match. He went one stage further the next year and followed
that with runner-up spot to Steve Davis in the English Professional
and then victory in the Australian Masters and semi-finals
in both the UK Championship and Benson & Hedges Masters.
In 1982 Steve Davis manager, Barry Hearn, signed him
up and he teamed up with Steve to win the first World Doubles
event. The pair became almost unbeatable, winning the event
four times in five years. Tony was still looking for a major
title of his own and he nearly got it in the 1984 Lada Classic.
In the final against Steve, it was 8-8, deciding frame, and
Tony needed only the last few colours to win when, just as
he was playing his shot, someone shouted "Come on, Tony.".
He missed the shot and Steve took frame and match.
He did win the English Professional title in 1986 and retained
it the following year plus another Australian Masters along
the way but the ranking titles proved elusive. His best in
the world championship had been a quarter final in 1983 following
which he started a sequence of first round exits in that particular
event. It was the same in most of the other events and, after
three years in the top 16, by the end of the 1987/88 season
he was down to 31st in the rankings.
The one high spot in that season came in February 1988 when,
during a Matchroom League match against Stephen Hendry at
Chesterfield, Tony made his only 147 break as a professional.
At the time it was only the seventh officially recognised
maximum and the fifth seen in competitive play.
Things went no better the next season and he went into the
1989 Anglian Windows British Open at Derby as a 200-1 outsider.
Although he put out the new rising star, Stephen Hendry, he
avoided most of the other big names. It was still a major
surprise when he lifted the trophy, his one and only ranking
title, with a 13-6 win over Dean Reynolds. This must have
boosted his confidence as he followed it with his best ever
Embassy, reaching the semi-final. This projected him right
back into the top 16 but sadly the revival did not last.
Within two years he was out of the top 32 and the slide continued.
At the end of the 1996/97 season the top 96 only qualified
to play the main tour the following year. Tony was now down
to 160th and so he was out. He decided not to join the secondary,
UK Tour, and, what had seemed once like a very promising career,
came to an end.
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