Hundreds pay tribute to snooker great Higgins
Fellow snooker player and friend Jimmy White led the tributes to "Hurricane" Higgins but was overcome by emotion and needed help reading out his statement.
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Hide AdSt Anne's Church of Ireland Cathedral was packed with 400 former players, friends and family, with thousands more outside paying their last respects.
Past and present stars of the game including Stephen Hendry, Ken Doherty, Willie Thorne, Shaun Murphy and John Virgo attended.
Higgins, 61, twice world champion, died last month after a long battle with throat cancer and alcohol.
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Hide AdThe statement from White said: "He was mind-blowing, he did things I'd never seen before.
"He was The Hurricane. I will miss him to the end."
Higgins's daughter Lauren added: "A million times I will cry; if love alone could have saved you, you never would have died."
His sisters Anne and Jean sat at the front of the cathedral along with Lauren and son Jordan.
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Hide AdRyan Thomas from Coronation Street, Northern Ireland ministers Nelson McCausland and Arlene Foster, Lord Mayor of Belfast Pat Convery and the Olympic pentathlon champion Dame Mary Peters were at the service.
A tearful White helped carry the coffin of the troubled star who was found dead in a flat in Belfast last month.
A floral tribute outside the church read: "The People's Champion."
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Hide AdFollowing a funeral in the family home, a cortege led by a horse drawn carriage wound its way through the centre of Belfast.
Hundreds gathered in the Sandy Row area, where Higgins grew up and died.
White added: "Only a year ago Alex was talking about playing again and coming on the road with me.
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Hide Ad"It angers me that he never listened to anyone, close friends or family but that was Alex he was an individual, his own man, he was The Hurricane."
White recounted an anecdote from a casino in Southampton where they had been drinking and gambling for days. They were in the toilet chatting and White sat on the sink – which came off the wall flooding the place. Higgins confessed to the damage and the pair spent the day in police cells until it was paid for.