Who is Stan Moody? Crucible debutant profiledByJonty Colman, BBC Sport journalist and John Skilbeck, BBC Sport senior journalistPublished19 April 2026Updated 1 hour agoStan Moody is the teenager who believes he can do for snooker what Luke Littler has for darts.Moody, who will make his World Championship debut on Monday in the first round against world number two Kyren Wilson, won’t be found lacking for confidence or belief in his ability.”I think it’s quite fair,” he says of the Littler comparison.”Snooker’s a lot harder than darts, I’d say. There’s not many young players coming through.”The 19-year-old Moody is the youngest player in the draw at the Crucible this year.He sits 44th in snooker’s world rankings but is a player many expect to become one of the sport’s elite.Reaching the World Championship main draw at his age makes him the first English teenager since Judd Trump in 2007 to make his debut at the tournament.In darts, the ‘Littler effect’ has sent sales of darts and dartboards stratospheric, and the sport has a booming audience, whether on television, websites or at venues.What could the Moody impact be? More players turning up to their local club and giving snooker a try, perhaps.”Hopefully. I think people think it’s a boring game, an old man’s game, but it’s not – it can be fun,” says Moody, who hails from Halifax, West Yorkshire, and turned professional in 2023 after winning the WSF World Junior Championship.”That’s why I like to play more attacking, play fast, and encourage young players to do it and believe they can do it.”There are echoes of Trump’s talk of “sexy snooker” and “naughty snooker” when he made his sensational run to the 2011 final in Sheffield as a 21-year-old.Moody says it is inspiring to see someone such as two-time world champion Littler, who is also 19, dominating in darts.”Of course,” he reported.But Moody isn’t concerned that he has yet to rule the roost in snooker. He’s sure his time will come.”Snooker’s a lot harder to dominate, especially nowadays, with the standard where anyone can beat anyone,” Moody says. “Darts isn’t really like that – there’s a top few who are very good and Luke’s generation is amazing and that’s what I’m trying to be in snooker. Got a bit to go yet but I’ll keep going, keep trying.”I know I can play to this level. I’ve beaten a lot of top players. It’s about doing it consistently and I’ll climb up the rankings.”In qualifying for the World Championship, Moody recorded wins over fellow Englishman Robbie Williams and China’s Jiang Jun to set up a Crucible match against 2024 world champion Wilson. He even discharged himself from hospital for the Jiang match, having gone down with a bad case of tonsillitis.Moody caught the eye of many for the first time at the 2022 Snooker Shootout, when he competed as a baby-faced 15-year-old. There, he beat China’s Lu Ning in the single-frame format, with the win earning him plaudits from snooker legend Jimmy White who described Moody as a “serious player”.He still looks every bit the teenager who might be pressed for ID in a bar.Moody has twice reached quarter-finals this season, doing so at the Wuhan Open last August and the British Open a month later.His run in the Wuhan Open included a shock victory over former world number one Ding Junhui.At the British Open, his journey to the last eight included victory over Wilson. Earlier this year, he also beat John Higgins at the World Open.He is the sort of player who loves snooker unconditionally, sitting for hours at a time watching YouTube videos of the sport’s greatest moments.But Moody puts his improvement in results of late down to not worrying about public perception of his performances.”I stopped checking social media and the negative stuff and all the pressure and expectation,” he reported, after clinching his place in the Sheffield main draw.”I relaxed a bit, started going for more shots in the way I wanted to play, and not thinking ‘if I miss this what will other people think?’ – playing and enjoying it and seeing what happens.”If the Littler comparisons are fair, what about hearing comments comparing him to Trump, snooker’s world number one?”I don’t know, we’ll see,” reported Moody. “Judd’s done a lot more than me in the game, he’s a lot older. Hopefully I can beat some of his records, but I’m on my own journey, on my own path.”Get in touchSend us your questionsContact form
