![]()  | |
| Born | 19 December 1981 Stirling  | 
|---|---|
| Sport country | Scotland | 
| Professional | 2006/2007, 2009/2010 | 
| Highest ranking | 77 (2009/2010) | 
Mark Boyle (born 19 December 1981) is a Scottish former professional snooker player.[1] He first joined the professional tour for the 2006–07 season, but dropped off at the end of the season.[1] He returned in 2009–10[1] but dropped off again at the end of the season after a 10–8 defeat by Jimmy White. Boyle is currently a professional pool player. Boyle is the ambassador for the Mick McGoldrick junior pool academies with many of his students going on to represent Scotland.
He was runner-up at the 2006 IBSF World Grand Prix[2]
Tournament wins
- Billiards
 
- 2003 Scottish Billiards Champion
 - 2004 Scottish Billiards Champion
 
- Snooker
 
- 2005 Home International Champions (Team Scotland)
 - 2008 Scottish Champion
 - 2009 Scottish Champion
 
- Pool
 
- 2018 IPA Premier League Champion
 - 2018 IPA British Open Champion
 - 2018 English Open Champion
 - 2018 Scottish IM2 Champion
 - 2018 Scottish Super 11's Champions With Falkirk.
 - 2018 IPA Scottish Professional Champion
 - 2018 IPA World Doubles Champions, with Liam Dunster.
 - 2017 IPA Welsh Open Champion
 - 2017 IPA English Open Champion
 - 2017 IPA English Amateur Champion
 - 2017 EBA UK Champion
 - 2017 Scottish IM2 Champion
 - 2017 Scottish IM4 Champion
 - 2017 Scottish Super 15's Champions with Falkirk.
 - 2016 Scottish IM4 Champion
 - 2014 Scottish IM1 Champion
 - 2014 Scottish IM2 Champion
 - 2013 Scottish Champion
 - 2013 Scottish IM1 Champion
 - 2013 Scottish IM2 Champion
 - 2013 Scottish IM4 Champion
 - 2012 Scottish IM2 Champion
 - 2011 Scottish IM3 Champion
 - 2011 Scottish IM6 Champion
 
International Team Events. (for Team Scotland)
- 2018 European Championship Winners
 - 2015 Nation Cup Winners
 - 2012 European Championship Winners
 
References
- 1 2 3 "Player list: Mark Boyle". worldsnooker.com. World Snooker. 2010. Archived from the original on 25 February 2010.
 - ↑ "2006 IBSF World Grand Prix Championship". Global Snooker Centre. Archived from the original on 21 June 2006. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
