Advani has won a staggering eight world titles in the last three years and he continues to go about his business unassumingly. It is as if he is expected to lap up the trophies every season.
Probably that was the reason there was little noise earlier this month when he outdid familiar foe and multiple time world champion Peter Gilchrist in the world billiards final (150-up format) at home for his only major title of the year.
However, 2016 was not all about him. Dhruv Sitwala defended his Asian billiards crown beating compatriot Bhaskar Balachandra in the final.
Balachandra had accounted for none other than Advani earlier in the competition. Forty-two year old Dharminder Lilly also made the nation proud by the lifting the world snooker trophy in the masters category (over 40) in what was his maiden attempt.
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What is most striking about him in all these years is his ability to seamlessly juggle between billiards and snooker. Less than a week after he secured a bronze in the world snooker championships in Doha, Advani was back in his hometown Bengaluru in the first week of December to defend the world billiards crown.
It is no surprise that juggling between the two cue sports remains his biggest challenge.
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Ask him about the juggling job, Advani says even he doesn't have a proper answer to it.
"And I can say it with some authority, nobody else plays billiards and snooker regularly at the highest level. I can only say it is one of the toughest things to do," Advani said shortly after winning the billiards title in Bengaluru.
He doesn't do the usual comparison with cricket, his complaint is that sports like his, which are not part of Olympics, get a raw deal from the administrators.
To a certain extent, he is right when he says the attention is only on multi-sporting event like Olympics, Commonwealth and Asian Games and not on a discipline like cue sport in which the world championships are held every year.
Despite little hope from the system, Advani continues to bring laurels to the country year after year. One expects a lot more from the 31-year-old, who hopes to remain at his peak at least for another couple of seasons.