Zhao Xintong began this season suspended from snooker after a match-fixing scandal but is tipped to be the sport's new "megastar" after becoming the first Chinese player to win the World Championship.
The 28-year-old, who lives just a 10-minute walk from the Crucible Theatre venue in Sheffield, joined Terry Griffiths and Shaun Murphy as the only qualifiers to land snooker's biggest prize since the tournament's 1977 move to South Yorkshire.
His 18-12 victory over Mark Williams on Monday means he is also the only amateur to claim the world title in the Crucible era, and the youngest winner since Murphy in 2005.
Zhao, who hails from Xi'an in north central China, moved to the UK in 2016 and was appearing in the third ranking-event final of his career.
"Winning the championship is the big dream for Chinese snooker," said Zhao, prior to facing three-time winner Mark Williams in the final.
"When I was eight to 10 years old it was my first time to play snooker and from that moment it has been really far [to get to this point]. If you want to become a good player you need to do this [move away from home], even though it is very hard."
He won the UK Championship in 2021 and the German Masters in 2022, but his burgeoning career was abruptly stopped when he was one of 10 players from China sanctioned in 2023 following an investigation into match-fixing.
Zhao did not directly throw a match, but he accepted charges of being party to another player fixing two matches and betting on matches himself, and for those offences he received a 20-month ban.
He returned to action in September on the amateur Q Tour and has won events in Manchester, Sweden, Austria and Belgium, while he also qualified for the UK Championship but lost to Shaun Murphy in the first round.
At the World Championship, Zhao had to advance through four qualifying rounds and then get past 2024 Crucible finalist Jak Jones, Lei Peifan and Chris Wakelin to reach the semi-finals.
Zhao, nicknamed 'The Cyclone', swept seven-time world champion Ronnie O'Sullivan aside with a session to spare in the last four, to record his 46th win in 48 matches since returning from his ban.
As a result of his suspension, Zhao lost his place on the World Snooker Tour (WST) and his professional status, although he has secured his card to return to the elite tour next term.