| Although he never won
a major ranking tournament, Steady Eddie Charlton
was one of the most consistent and hard to beat players from
the late 1960s to mid 1980s being ranked at number three for
five successive seasons and three times runner-up in the world
championships at both snooker and billiards. He has been the
only Australian since Walter and Horace Lindrum, to reach the
highest level of the game.
Eddie was born in Merewether, New South Wales in Australia
and came from a sporting family. His brother Jim was also
a professional snooker player but never joined the world ranks.
Eddie himself was a senior grade footballer, a champion surfer,
a good cricketer and boxer. One of this proudest moments was
when he carried the Olympic torch on part of its journey to
the 1956 Games in Melbourne.
Having been a coal miner, he turned professional in 1963
at the age of 34 and the following season he won the Australian
Professional Championship, a title which he went on to win,
with one exception for the next 20 years. That one defeat
was at the hands of Warren Simpson in 1968. In that year he
first came to play in England and challenged John Pulman for
the world title, losing 34-39.
He did not play in the first of the newly organised knock
out world championships in 1969, nor the next in April 1970.
When, however, in November of that year, they were held in
Melbourne, he was one of the favourites but, to everyones
surprise, lost in the semis to Warren Simpson. He would not
lose again to a fellow countryman, on level terms, for ten
years.
In 1972 he reached the world semi-final again losing to John
Spencer and won the BBC Pot Black title which he retained
the following year, setting a high break record for that event
of 110 which was never to be bettered. In 1973 he reached
the world final only to lose to Ray Reardon 32-38. In the
next season he only reached the second round.
1975 saw him in the semi-finals of the first Benson &
Hedges Masters and he followed this with another world final,
again losing to Ray Reardon, this time only in the deciding
frame, 30-31. The next season he reached the semis of both
the Masters and the world championship but did win one title.
This was the World Matchplay Championship held in Melbourne.
Eddie beat Ray Reardon 31-24. That tournament was never held
again although the name was revived in an event promoted by
Barry Hearn in the late 1980s.
He reached four more world semi-finals, the last in 1982
and two other world ranking semis; the 1982 Professional Players
Tournament and 1983 Jameson International. A third Pot Black
title came in 1980 and semi-finals of the World Doubles in
both 1982 and 1983 with Alex Higgins and Bill Werbenuik respectively.
He also reached another Masters semi-final in 1983. He then
began to slide down the rankings but was still in the top
16 in 1985/6 at the age of 56 and did not drop out of the
top 32 until 1992/3. By then he was 63 and finding it more
and more difficult to beat the host of new players coming
on the scene. He played for a few more seasons but, after
a dispute, resigned from the WPBSA and did not play on the
circuit after the 1994/5 season.
In the meantime he was runner-up to Cliff Wilson in the World
Seniors championship held in 1991.Eddie had been the captain
of every Australian team in the early World Cups but when
this was event was revived in 1996, he declined to take part.
By then he was 67.
Also proficient at billiards, he twice, unsuccessfully, challenged
Rex Williams for the world title in 1974 and 1976 and reached
a third final only to lose to Mark Wildman in 1984. He was
always active in the organisation and promotion of the game
and formed the Australian Professional Players Association
as well as being responsible for bringing many of the top
players to play in Australia. He still plays to a high standard
and in 2000 he returned to play in the World Seniors Masters.
Active to the last, Eddie was taken ill while on an
exhibition tour in New Zealand and died in hospital following
post-operative complications. He is survived by five children
and eight grandchildren.
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