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Snooker

I’m enjoying listening to some of the old boys in the commentary to be fair, Tony Knowles criticising some of the Seniors play forgetting that they are past their best and also forgetting he is also no longer capable of the shots he thinks others should be. At least Cliff Thorburn adds the caveat that it’s much easier to pot them from the commentary box.
Especially liked Thorburn bantering with Virgo about the fact Doherty is considered an overseas champion, he seemed genuinely bothered that he should be on the list with himself and Robertson, he went off on a tangent saying it’s not overseas if you can get in a boat and row there, amusing stuff and I think they forget there was a match on.
..... yeah! I agree sometimes the banter is much better than the actual snooker. Always pleasant to listen to something that grabs your attention. Used to hate to watch Terry Griffiths as he was usually up and down about twenty times or so prior to selecting his shot. My hero was of course Alex Higgins who is unfortunately no longer with us. But real exciting times when he played!;)
 
..... exactly right, wasting his time if he ever thinks he is going to make a comeback. Should stick to commentating while he still has the respectability. John Virgo and Dennis Taylor I notice are being put out to pasture and now look like surplus to requirements as far as commentaries are involved. I think that only Ronnie has proved that there is still snooker life beyond the 40 year old mark. Not many around that can say that and play to the degree which is required at top level.;)
Would say Mark Williams and John Higgins are quite decent for their age, similar to O'Sullivan age. Williams once won this event many years ago but never competed since. Even Bingham just a year younger. Hawkins 43 so a little younger but not too bad.
 
I’m enjoying listening to some of the old boys in the commentary to be fair, Tony Knowles criticising some of the Seniors play forgetting that they are past their best and also forgetting he is also no longer capable of the shots he thinks others should be. At least Cliff Thorburn adds the caveat that it’s much easier to pot them from the commentary box.
Especially liked Thorburn bantering with Virgo about the fact Doherty is considered an overseas champion, he seemed genuinely bothered that he should be on the list with himself and Robertson, he went off on a tangent saying it’s not overseas if you can get in a boat and row there, amusing stuff and I think they forget there was a match on.
Poor Hendry. He seems to be dogged by players suddenly becoming World beaters against him. Thepchaiyah Un-Nooh with his 5 centuries in the UK at York, Chris Wakelin in one of those Home Nations events, then today Lee Walker. Never seen him play so well, certainly performance of the event so far.
Jimmy White was quite decent tonight as well, not seen the other games today.
Draw for Quarter Finals, last 2 Round 2 games tomorrow but not around.
Although the ratings have Doherty favourite against Walker I am sure it will be much closer on today's efforts.
AS you say O Outlander , Talaat was not so bad, missed his first frame yesterday and competed well until lost heart after first frame tonight and White got his act together.
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Poor Hendry. He seems to be dogged by players suddenly becoming World beaters against him.
..... looks like one does not have to be a world beater to win against Hendry these days. He is a man living on past reputation and should hang up his boots now before there is more damage done. Looks like he wants to recapture his youth and his golden playing days, but to be honest and brutal, it aint gonna happen! If he was going to show any sort of form by now, it would have happened, after all he is not just getting pipped, he is getting his backside tanned. Today 0-3 is not exactly being at the races. Call it a day Stephen while you still can and keep your reputation intact. Follow Mr.Parrott and hang your cue up for good.;)
 

Neil Robertson wins World Snooker Tour’s Player of the Year, Ronnie O'Sullivan wins award voted for by journalists.

The most successful season of his career saw Neil Robertson win four tournaments including the English Open and the Tour Championship. Fresh from winning the World Championship, Ronnie O'Sullivan was voted as the Snooker Journalists’ Player of the Year, while his final victory over Judd Trump was also recognised. Reanne Evans and Alison Fisher have been entered into the Snooker Hall of Fame.

Neil Robertson has been named the World Snooker Tour’s Player of the Year, recognising an emphatic season which saw him win four tournaments.
The Australian enjoyed success at the English Open, the Masters, Players Championship and the Tour Championship, and will now have an extra piece of silverware to add to his collection.
Despite enjoying the most prolific season of his career, Robertson was left disappointed after a second round exit at the World Championship against Jack Lisowski. However, his incredible 147 against Lisowski saw him also pick up Magic Moment of the Year, after becoming only the eighth player to make a maximum at the Crucible.
The winner of that tournament - Ronnie O’Sullivan - took the Snooker Journalists’ Player of the Year award, while The Rocket’s display in the showpiece event against Judd Trump won Performance of the Year.
China’s Zhao Xintong won the Fans’ Player of the Year trophy following a season which saw him climb to number six in the world and win the UK Championship and German Masters.
There was also success for his compatriot Wu Yize, with the 18-year-old winning Rookie of the Year after reaching the last 32 of ranking events on three occasions.
Reanne Evans and Alison Fisher have been entered into the Snooker Hall of Fame, in recognition of their impact on the sport.
Evans is the most successful player of the women’s tour, having won the World Championship a record 12 times, while Fisher was a seven-time world champion in the 1980s and 1990s.;)
 
So Parrott has retired, the free money from Seniors tournaments has ended now as they become more competitive. As you say Delboy99 Delboy99 it is time for Hendry to follow suit or take it seriously. But no Hearn keeps handing him a free card for the 2 or 3 events a year he comeptes in. Ruining a great reputation.

Well semi finals today and all playing well. Lines at 10/11 pick of the odds. Walker is playing much better than his rating I suspect so expect a clsoe game against Lilley who has already made it back on to next season's Tour.
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So Parrott has retired, the free money from Seniors tournaments has ended now as they become more competitive. As you say Delboy99 Delboy99 it is time for Hendry to follow suit or take it seriously. But no Hearn keeps handing him a free card for the 2 or 3 events a year he comeptes in. Ruining a great reputation.

Well semi finals today and all playing well. Lines at 10/11 pick of the odds. Walker is playing much better than his rating I suspect so expect a clsoe game against Lilley who has already made it back on to next season's Tour.
View attachment 116668
..... would like to see Jimmy win it for old times sake. He has been good in his day but I don't know what he will be like in this company.;)
 
Well both the lower rated won. On performance White has to be the fancy, very impressive against Lines and well above current rating. The long break could help but Walker is top rated and been in great form as well this week so as White favourite with bookies Walker has to be the bet.

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Well both the lower rated won. On performance White has to be the fancy, very impressive against Lines and well above current rating. The long break could help but Walker is top rated and been in great form as well this week so as White favourite with bookies Walker has to be the bet.

View attachment 116693
..... come on Jimmy! I just have to cling on to the hope that Jimmy does his stuff and plays like yesteryear! He was a fine player in his prime but alas, that was long ago and not capable like Ronnie from the same era. Mind you I still think he would beat Hendry and maybe playing with his other hand. How many frames is this over?;)
 

Lee Walker Beats Jimmy White in World Seniors Final.

Lee Walker won a maiden World Seniors Championship title after a 5-4 victory over Jimmy White in the final on Sunday.





Walker fought his way back from 4-2 down, reeling off the last three frames to deny White a fourth success in the tournament.


It was a fitting ending for the Welshman, who had already demonstrated some remarkable battling qualities at the Crucible Theatre.


Walker coasted through his opening two fixtures with a brace of 3-0 wins against Tony Knowles and Stephen Hendry – compiling an excellent 121 against the latter.
But things got a lot tougher for the 46 year-old in the quarter-finals when he overturned an early 2-0 deficit to Ken Doherty, eventually prevailing 4-2.


There was an even bigger comeback in the semi-final, when he took the final four frames to deny reigning champion David Lilley in a decider.


Walker looked to be out of the running again in the world seniors final but managed to conjure another recovery act from the brink.


When White, who had produced two sparkling performances to beat Rory McLeod and Peter Lines in the earlier rounds, led by two frames with three to play, another title for the Whirlwind seemed inevitable.


But Walker discovered his scoring form at just the right time with breaks of
79 and 83 in the last two frames earning him the biggest victory of his career.


The former professional, who reached the quarter-finals of the World Championship 25 years ago, may now receive an invitation to the lucrative Champion of Champions – as has become customary in recent campaigns.


For White, it was disappointment at the last hurdle again after a similarly close loss at the same stage of the 2021 tournament.


The 2022 World Seniors Championship also proved to be the last competitive tournament for John Parrott, with the 1991 world champion announcing his retirement from the game. ;)
 

Ronnie O'Sullivan's relationship with daughter who banned him from meeting grandchild.

Snooker legend Ronnie O'Sullivan's daughter Taylor-Ann Magnus recently vowed he will "never meet" his own granddaughter after the pair became estranged.
Ronnie O’Sullivan has had a challenging home life over the years.


The 46-year-old snooker legend recently confirmed he'd got back together with his long-term fiancée Laila Rouass, but as stated by his daughter Taylor-Ann Magnus, 25, a reunion between them is off the cards.


O'Sullivan, who recently won the 2022 World Snooker Championship, hasn’t seen her in years and the origins of their fractured relationship goes back decades to his previous relationship with her mother.


In 2018, Taylor-Ann gave birth to her own daughter, but soon made it clear that she wanted her to have nothing to do with O’Sullivan.


Now in 2022, she has re-affirmed their estranged relationship, vowing Ronnie will never meet his three-year-old granddaughter.


Why is Ronnie O'Sullivan estranged from his daughter?​

In the 1990s, O'Sullivan was in a relationship with Sally-Ann Magnus, who moved into the O'Sullivan home when his parents were both sent to prison.



However, when Ronnie’s mum Maria was finally released, she kicked Sally-Ann out soon after, leading to their relationship coming to a swift end.


Because of this, he has only met their shared daughter Taylor-Ann Magnus, now 25, a handful of times.



After Taylor-Ann's child Zarah-Ann was born in 2018, she confirmed her daughter will grow up not knowing who O’Sullivan is.


Speaking to The Sun, she said: “He might be world champion to some, but he's not fit to be called 'Dad' let alone 'Grandad' as far as I'm concerned.


“Zarah-Ann will grow up never knowing who he is. He's made so many promises, but what he says and what he does are so different.”


Shortly after the birth of his granddaughter, O’Sullivan made it clear he wanted to meet her.


But Taylor-Ann refused to let it happen.
“When I read that Dad had said he wanted to see Zarah I thought there was a chance we could be a normal family and he could be a grandad to her," she went on.


“I had always hoped for a better, closer, more loving relationship with my dad and think I've been waiting for him my whole life.


“When I announced I was pregnant there was a little flurry of interest from Ronnie. His friend called me a couple of times and said Ronnie was really excited about being a grandad.


“I should have known better than to get my hopes up. He told a few reporters how sad he was that we aren't closer, and mentioned how much he'd love to see my daughter but that was pretty much it. It was just a show.


“He never contacted me personally once. It broke my heart.”;)


 

Chaotic life of snooker star Alex Higgins who was stabbed by girlfriend and died penniless.

Three World Cup titles, two World Championship wins and one girlfriend stabbing him - Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins was certainly one of snooker’s most colourful and intriguing characters.
It’s been almost 12 years since snooker legend Alex Higgins tragically passed away penniless in Belfast. The Hurricane was undoubtedly one of the most colourful, charismatic, and complicated characters in British sports history.


His nickname is fitting: a rapidly rotating storm of strong winds, thunder and lightening amid heavy rain that strikes fear as it approaches and leaves destruction in its wake. Hurricanes rotate in circles, imitating the cyclical nature of Higgins and his demons throughout his controversial career.


Higgins was an unpredictable personality who firmly established himself as one of snooker’s greatest characters, but this same persona robbed him of becoming one of the sport’s best players. Such a description implies how Higgins was very much a flawed genius, whose tormented soul could never separate his explosive inhibitions from his play with a cue in-hand.
This is a shame because his play was, well, extraordinary. In 1972, Higgins became the first qualifier in history to become world champion at the age of just 22. He added a second title in 1982, and he was a beaten finalist in between each triumph.


Higgins was also twice a Masters champion, a UK Championship winner and a three-time World Cup winner with the all-Ireland side. His ability to make key pots under pressure was unrivalled and few players can claim to be as cool in the biggest moments.


His 1982 win at the Crucible is one such highlight as Higgins dramatically secured the final three frames to claim the title, with the emotional scenes between his then-wife and daughter living long in the memory. His crucial 69 break against Jimmy White in the semi-final of the World Championship to reach the final is renowned as one of the best in snooker history.

While he was exceptional on the table, Higgins was labelled ‘The People’s Champion’ thanks to his anti-establishment mentality while playing with a unique aura. Higgins related to fans as he didn’t hide his love for drinking and smoking while having a laugh with his mates - only he was a superstar snooker player.
Higgins’ downfall was as rapid as his rise to the top of the sport as, within three years of his second world title, he was divorced and awarded a five-tournament ban - as well as a £12,000 fine - for head-butting a WPBSA official after he was asked to take a drugs test.


In 1989, Higgins broke several bones after he fell out a window while trying to escape from his own home to a casino - and then he won the Irish Professional Championships soon after, encapsulating his immense talent riddled by off-table antics.
A year later at the 1990 World Snooker Championships, Higgins lost to Steve James in the opening round amid a flood of rumours, including that he was facing disciplinary action for threatening to have World Cup team-mate Dennis Taylor shot during the tournament. The intoxicated Hurricane punched WPBSA press officer Colin Randle after turning up to a press conference to announce his retirement in a slurred rant - he was never going to go quietly, was he?
Higgins was awarded a one-year ban from competitive snooker and stripped of all ranking points, but it wouldn’t matter. The Hurricane had faded to a mere breeze.


Problems continued after his retirement. He was convicted of assaulting a 14-year-old boy and a year later, girlfriend Holly Haise stabbed him three times during an argument.
Higgins later admitted to smoking and drinking heavily, to regularly using cocaine and cannabis, and to struggling with a gambling addiction. The final admission explains how he blew around £4 million in career earnings.
In 1998, Higgins was diagnosed with throat cancer. By the time he died at the age of 61 in 2010, there were multiple contributory health-related causes.
Higgins represented snooker’s first real superstar, akin to Paul Gascoigne in his standing as a cult figure. When snooker was particularly popular in the 1980s, it was Higgins who undoubtedly appealed to a wider audience.


For all the negative publicity Higgins received as a result of ill-advised actions, the positivity the Hurricane brought to the sport of snooker will surely never be forgotten.;)
 

Snooker chiefs announce major change for 2023 World Championship.

What's old is new again as the Snooker World Championship will adopt a different format for the its qualifying rounds when the prestigious tournament rolls around in 2023.
Snooker chiefs have made an announcement regarding the 2023 World Championship. According to the World Snooker Tour website, from next year all the tournament’s qualifying rounds will be played over the best of 19 frames.
This decision was made based on feedback from the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) and players to revert back to the previous format. This is significantly longer than matches played over best of 11 frames, which had been the format of recent seasons.
The dates for the qualifying event will be announced at a later date. Also announced was the increase in prize money for several events in 2023.
The winner of the Turkish Open will receive £525,000, while the British Open conqueror will earn £478,000. Those who win the English, Northern Ireland, Scottish and Welsh Open will secure £427,000, along with the German and European masters.


The breakdowns for remaining events will be announced in due course. Speaking of prize money, world snooker champion Ronnie O’Sullivan has revealed he will spend the prize money from his record-equalling seventh world title by purchasing a rigid inflatable boat.


He plans to go to the Lake District and ‘explore’ - while also staying fit enough to compete and elongate his legendary career. “I’m going to do loads of stuff, I’m going to travel,” O’Sullivan said. “I might go to the Lake District, I’ve already got like a house boat up there but I might go and buy a little RIB and explore the lake and just have some fun. I’m just going to be enjoying myself and getting fit as well.”

;)
 

Snooker chiefs announce major change for 2023 World Championship.

What's old is new again as the Snooker World Championship will adopt a different format for the its qualifying rounds when the prestigious tournament rolls around in 2023.
Snooker chiefs have made an announcement regarding the 2023 World Championship. According to the World Snooker Tour website, from next year all the tournament’s qualifying rounds will be played over the best of 19 frames.
This decision was made based on feedback from the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) and players to revert back to the previous format. This is significantly longer than matches played over best of 11 frames, which had been the format of recent seasons.
The dates for the qualifying event will be announced at a later date. Also announced was the increase in prize money for several events in 2023.
The winner of the Turkish Open will receive £525,000, while the British Open conqueror will earn £478,000. Those who win the English, Northern Ireland, Scottish and Welsh Open will secure £427,000, along with the German and European masters.


The breakdowns for remaining events will be announced in due course. Speaking of prize money, world snooker champion Ronnie O’Sullivan has revealed he will spend the prize money from his record-equalling seventh world title by purchasing a rigid inflatable boat.


He plans to go to the Lake District and ‘explore’ - while also staying fit enough to compete and elongate his legendary career. “I’m going to do loads of stuff, I’m going to travel,” O’Sullivan said. “I might go to the Lake District, I’ve already got like a house boat up there but I might go and buy a little RIB and explore the lake and just have some fun. I’m just going to be enjoying myself and getting fit as well.”

;)
Great to see reverting to the 19 frames format, a proper event again.
 

Neil Robertson wins World Snooker Tour’s Player of the Year, Ronnie O'Sullivan wins award voted for by journalists.

The most successful season of his career saw Neil Robertson win four tournaments including the English Open and the Tour Championship. Fresh from winning the World Championship, Ronnie O'Sullivan was voted as the Snooker Journalists’ Player of the Year, while his final victory over Judd Trump was also recognised. Reanne Evans and Alison Fisher have been entered into the Snooker Hall of Fame.

Neil Robertson has been named the World Snooker Tour’s Player of the Year, recognising an emphatic season which saw him win four tournaments.
The Australian enjoyed success at the English Open, the Masters, Players Championship and the Tour Championship, and will now have an extra piece of silverware to add to his collection.
Despite enjoying the most prolific season of his career, Robertson was left disappointed after a second round exit at the World Championship against Jack Lisowski. However, his incredible 147 against Lisowski saw him also pick up Magic Moment of the Year, after becoming only the eighth player to make a maximum at the Crucible.
The winner of that tournament - Ronnie O’Sullivan - took the Snooker Journalists’ Player of the Year award, while The Rocket’s display in the showpiece event against Judd Trump won Performance of the Year.
China’s Zhao Xintong won the Fans’ Player of the Year trophy following a season which saw him climb to number six in the world and win the UK Championship and German Masters.
There was also success for his compatriot Wu Yize, with the 18-year-old winning Rookie of the Year after reaching the last 32 of ranking events on three occasions.
Reanne Evans and Alison Fisher have been entered into the Snooker Hall of Fame, in recognition of their impact on the sport.
Evans is the most successful player of the women’s tour, having won the World Championship a record 12 times, while Fisher was a seven-time world champion in the 1980s and 1990s.
The WST say they have been added to the list because of their “outstanding contributions to the growth of snooker.”;)
 

Gary Wilson Set For Pool Debut.

Former Crucible semi-finalist Gary Wilson is temporarily switching cue sport codes next week, to make his nine ball pool debut at the UK Open and he is intent on making an impression.


The Wallsend cueman reached the British Open final at the start of last season, beating Stephen Hendry, Hossein Vafaei, David Gilbert and close friend Elliot Slessor on his way to the title match. However, he succumbed to a 6-4 loss against Mark Williams.


Since then, Wilson struggled to produce his best form and only went beyond the second round of a ranking event on three subsequent occasions during the season. He’s eyeing next term as an opportunity to up his consistency levels and target a place in the world’s top 16.


In the meantime, Wilson is preparing for his first ever appearance in a major nine ball pool event. He faces American Blaine Barcus on Tuesday at the Copper Box in London. Martin Gould is also in action and he takes on Tashunka Schultz. We caught up with 36-year-old Wilson to find out how he is feeling ahead of the tournament…


Gary, what was it that inspired you to throw your hat in the ring for the UK Open?


“As snooker players, playing in the club growing up, you always have a little mess around on the pool tables as well. Sometimes it was really just to show off. You go and play someone at a game of pool and clear up. Obviously at the top level it is a lot harder than that, with everyone being so good. I played a little bit of eight ball and nine ball, but not properly. I watched Judd Trump playing in the US Open last year and fancied playing myself, I saw the UK Open come up and went for it. The fact that the snooker season is finished made it an ideal opportunity to try something different.”


Judd had a few good wins at the US Open, before suffering a heavy defeat to former champion Jayson Shaw and then falling out of the loser’s bracket. How did you think he fared?


“Lets be frank, if snooker players had time to practise and play the game properly, then the majority of us would be able to play nine ball pretty well. Judd had a couple of results and was learning his way through it. Unfortunately, he came up against Jayson Shaw and didn’t have much of a shot. That can happen. Until you learn the intricacies of the game like the kick shots, bank shots and jump shots, you won’t be competing at the top end. Snooker players will always be pretty good at the general clearing up bit, but when you are playing the best players they will tie you up in knots. You need to know every facet of the game. I’ve been trying to get familiarised with all of that since the end of the snooker season.”


How have your preparations been going so far?


“I messaged a guy called Brian Halcrow, who is from the local area. He plays a lot of English eight ball, but has also been over to America to play nine ball. Brian offered to meet me at a club called Spot White in Sunderland and we had a couple of hours on the match table. He showed me the ropes and a few scenarios that might come up in safety situations. He offered me a couple of his cues, including a jump cue. I think I have some half decent equipment now. I’m actually using a cue which Gareth Potts (English and Chinese eight ball champion) gave me when I was playing Chinese eight ball, it is kind of half way between a snooker cue and a pool cue.


“I think that nine ball is one of the simpler versions of pool to pick up and it isn’t going to fry my head. The safety side is a little bit like snooker, in that you are only trying to hide one ball. I liked that and if I can get more acquainted with the safety side I think I can hold my own. I want to put in a good performance and not just turn up to have a go.”


What is the main target that you have set yourself for next week?


“I just want to go over and show what I can do as well as get some exposure. I’m looking forward to something different. I know what it is all about on the snooker front, but this is an experience of something new. There is a buzz and a different feeling when you are coming into a new environment. I had that when I started snooker, but in that instance it was my job and there was additional pressure. That isn’t the case here at all, it is a free shot to try something else in a one off occasion. I can’t wait to go down there and see what it is all about.”


What are your thoughts on last season and how do you feel ahead of the 22/23 campaign?


“Take away the final in the British Open and it was a really disappointing season. There were a lot of times that I didn’t play that badly and I was just on the wrong end of someone playing really well. I was against Jamie Clarke at the World Championship and I was stuck in my chair watching how well he was playing. In one sense you feel annoyed that it happened to you in the biggest tournament. He absolutely flew in that game. The upside is that I have hardly any money to defend next season. I hope to find that consistency in each tournament and feature in the latter stages. If I can do that I will push up the rankings and the top 16 becomes more possible. Those are my two targets, the top 16 and to win a tournament.


“Looking back over the years I seem to be a player who goes on a run and then goes missing for months on end. I feel like I’m due a run soon, but I want to make that more consistent. The guys around the top 16 seem to be getting quarter-finals at least on a regular basis. Next season is a big opportunity so I’m ready to work hard and try to stamp my authority on the season.”;)
 

Gary Wilson Set For Pool Debut.

Former Crucible semi-finalist Gary Wilson is temporarily switching cue sport codes next week, to make his nine ball pool debut at the UK Open and he is intent on making an impression.


The Wallsend cueman reached the British Open final at the start of last season, beating Stephen Hendry, Hossein Vafaei, David Gilbert and close friend Elliot Slessor on his way to the title match. However, he succumbed to a 6-4 loss against Mark Williams.


Since then, Wilson struggled to produce his best form and only went beyond the second round of a ranking event on three subsequent occasions during the season. He’s eyeing next term as an opportunity to up his consistency levels and target a place in the world’s top 16.


In the meantime, Wilson is preparing for his first ever appearance in a major nine ball pool event. He faces American Blaine Barcus on Tuesday at the Copper Box in London. Martin Gould is also in action and he takes on Tashunka Schultz. We caught up with 36-year-old Wilson to find out how he is feeling ahead of the tournament…


Gary, what was it that inspired you to throw your hat in the ring for the UK Open?


“As snooker players, playing in the club growing up, you always have a little mess around on the pool tables as well. Sometimes it was really just to show off. You go and play someone at a game of pool and clear up. Obviously at the top level it is a lot harder than that, with everyone being so good. I played a little bit of eight ball and nine ball, but not properly. I watched Judd Trump playing in the US Open last year and fancied playing myself, I saw the UK Open come up and went for it. The fact that the snooker season is finished made it an ideal opportunity to try something different.”


Judd had a few good wins at the US Open, before suffering a heavy defeat to former champion Jayson Shaw and then falling out of the loser’s bracket. How did you think he fared?


“Lets be frank, if snooker players had time to practise and play the game properly, then the majority of us would be able to play nine ball pretty well. Judd had a couple of results and was learning his way through it. Unfortunately, he came up against Jayson Shaw and didn’t have much of a shot. That can happen. Until you learn the intricacies of the game like the kick shots, bank shots and jump shots, you won’t be competing at the top end. Snooker players will always be pretty good at the general clearing up bit, but when you are playing the best players they will tie you up in knots. You need to know every facet of the game. I’ve been trying to get familiarised with all of that since the end of the snooker season.”


How have your preparations been going so far?


“I messaged a guy called Brian Halcrow, who is from the local area. He plays a lot of English eight ball, but has also been over to America to play nine ball. Brian offered to meet me at a club called Spot White in Sunderland and we had a couple of hours on the match table. He showed me the ropes and a few scenarios that might come up in safety situations. He offered me a couple of his cues, including a jump cue. I think I have some half decent equipment now. I’m actually using a cue which Gareth Potts (English and Chinese eight ball champion) gave me when I was playing Chinese eight ball, it is kind of half way between a snooker cue and a pool cue.


“I think that nine ball is one of the simpler versions of pool to pick up and it isn’t going to fry my head. The safety side is a little bit like snooker, in that you are only trying to hide one ball. I liked that and if I can get more acquainted with the safety side I think I can hold my own. I want to put in a good performance and not just turn up to have a go.”


What is the main target that you have set yourself for next week?


“I just want to go over and show what I can do as well as get some exposure. I’m looking forward to something different. I know what it is all about on the snooker front, but this is an experience of something new. There is a buzz and a different feeling when you are coming into a new environment. I had that when I started snooker, but in that instance it was my job and there was additional pressure. That isn’t the case here at all, it is a free shot to try something else in a one off occasion. I can’t wait to go down there and see what it is all about.”


What are your thoughts on last season and how do you feel ahead of the 22/23 campaign?


“Take away the final in the British Open and it was a really disappointing season. There were a lot of times that I didn’t play that badly and I was just on the wrong end of someone playing really well. I was against Jamie Clarke at the World Championship and I was stuck in my chair watching how well he was playing. In one sense you feel annoyed that it happened to you in the biggest tournament. He absolutely flew in that game. The upside is that I have hardly any money to defend next season. I hope to find that consistency in each tournament and feature in the latter stages. If I can do that I will push up the rankings and the top 16 becomes more possible. Those are my two targets, the top 16 and to win a tournament.


“Looking back over the years I seem to be a player who goes on a run and then goes missing for months on end. I feel like I’m due a run soon, but I want to make that more consistent. The guys around the top 16 seem to be getting quarter-finals at least on a regular basis. Next season is a big opportunity so I’m ready to work hard and try to stamp my authority on the season.”;)
Very inconsistent Gary, like he says. Sometimes looks like he can compete with Top 16 but very easily loses his way. Maybe the Pool will inspire him like Selby.
 

Footballers' Wives star Laila Rouass and fiancé Ronnie O'Sullivan 'jet off on holiday together' as they are seen carrying suitcases after rekindling romance.

Laila Rouass and Ronnie O'Sullivan appear to have jetted off on holiday together after recently rekindling their romance.

The Footballers Wives star, 50, and the snooker ace, 46, announced their split back in February after 10 years together but recent pictures showed her wearing her engagement ring.

The pair were recently spotted in Essex lugging several suitcases while Ronnie could also be seen sporting a floral shirt ahead of their trip.
An insider revealed the excursion will come as a welcome break for the on-off couple following their recent reunion.
A source told The Mirror: 'They've both been through a tough time. The holiday should a much-needed bit of R and R.'
Laila cut a casual figure for the outing as she sported a black top with a scooped neckline which she wore under a grey hoodie.

The actress also wore a pair of grey patterned leggings along with a pair of dark boots.
Also sporting a pair of sunglasses, the star carried a grey carry-on as she and Ronnie made their way to their car.

The outing comes after Laila appeared on Friday's episode of Loose Women where she told how she had 'manifested' Ronnie back into her life.

Laila said: 'Me and Ronnie are back together, we found our way back. We just worked it out – back when I announced it, we hadn't been together for almost eight months at that time.'

'He text me and said: 'tell them you manifested me back into your life.';)
 

Alex Higgins: The Man Who Changed Snooker.

February 26, 1972. The World Snooker Championship final concludes at a rowdy Royal British Legion club in Birmingham where spectators sit on upturned beer crates. There are no television cameras present. The champion collects £480.


May 16, 1982. Snooker’s showpiece match is played before an audience of millions watching on the BBC amid the plush surroundings of a packed Crucible theatre in Sheffield. The winner pockets £25,000.


What changed in snooker’s fortunes in the decade in between? Much of it was down to the man who won both titles, the force of nature that was Alex Higgins.


Born in Belfast in 1949, Higgins learned his trade at the Jampot, a club in Sandy Row. At 15, he moved to England to become an apprentice jockey, but snooker was in his blood and at 18 he won the Northern Ireland amateur title.


Reports of his remarkable shot-making ability permeated through the sport’s grapevine, but stories also abounded of scrapes and altercations, bust-ups and trouble. His frenetic style of play and rapid body movement, together with his emerging reputation as an authentic bad-boy of the baize, earned him an apposite nickname.


A hurricane was about to hit the genteel world of professional snooker.


50 years ago, the World Championship was played over the course of 11 months. Matches began in March 1971 with Higgins beating Jackie Rea 19-11 and John Pulman 31-23 to reach the semi-finals.


Here, he was level 30-30 with Rex Williams and trailing in their deciding frame until Williams missed a blue to a middle pocket with a clear chance to win. Higgins won the frame to set up a meeting with John Spencer for the title.


These were very different times. The 1970s saw Britain beset by power cuts due to strikes. A mobile generator was installed at Selly Park Legion to provide lighting. Before one session, Spencer was stuck in a lift after the power went off in his hotel.


Snooker had started to gain some mainstream popularity when Pot Black launched the new colour TV service on BBC2 in 1969. It was not just the game, though, which brought spectators to Birmingham. The final would illustrate why Higgins would soon become known as the People’s Champion.


Audiences flocked to see him play. In his book, Black Farce and Cue Ball Wizards, Clive Everton, who covered the event as a journalist, wrote: “Snooker was unaccustomed to the paying public being so keen to see a match. Beer supplies held up but toilet facilities proved sadly inadequate as the Ladies was ruthlessly appropriate by hordes of gents.”


Higgins was in his element. These were his kind of people and he was becoming their hero.


He wrote in his autobiography, From the Eye of the Hurricane: “There was no quietness anywhere. These fans were dragging chairs, dropping glasses and even walking past us on the other side of the table to go to the toilets. This was not traditional snooker etiquette at all and I loved it.”


Higgins beat Spencer 37-32. A few weeks short of his 23rd birthday, he had become snooker’s youngest world champion. The sport had worked hard to present a professional, establishment image to gain acceptance with the viewing public. This did not interest the Hurricane. He lived life by his own rules, building up a lengthy disciplinary record for a litany of offences. Underlying it all was an undeniable charm. His behaviour could be both boorish and comical. He was quick-witted, erudite and sought neither approval nor respectability.


He was a fierce competitor who hated losing. He played to the galleries, sometimes to his cost, and was above all the most watchable player of his era, or perhaps any era.


His lifestyle was not conducive to being a regular winner, but he reached the world final again in 1976, losing to Ray Reardon, and 1980, where he was defeated by Cliff Thorburn.


During the 1981/82 season, Steve Davis and Terry Griffiths contested five finals and were widely tipped to meet in the Crucible finale. In fact, both lost in the first round, Davis famously to Tony Knowles and Griffiths to Willie Thorne.


Through the pack came Higgins, who reached the final having compiled perhaps the most memorable clearance in snooker history against Jimmy White. Trailing 15-14 and by 59 points, Higgins stepped in to complete a 69 break full of spellbinding death-or-glory pots before winning the decider.


This was Higgins at his best, his snooker and personality a perfect symmetry of heart, nerve and a desire to live on the edge.


Snooker’s popularity and footprint in the culture had increased dramatically since 1972. Five years later the World Championship arrived at the Crucible. By 1982 the BBC were devoting 200 hours of coverage to the event.


The final saw Higgins lead Reardon 10-7 after the first day and just 13-12 going into the last session. He pulled away to 15-12 before Reardon drew level, but the six-times champion did not score another point as Higgins, propelled by inspiration, the support of the crowd and a sense of destiny a decade on from that first triumph, sprinted to the line. He won 18-15, making a 135 break in the final frame.


His private life had endured very public problems but, in the moments after victory, there was a brief calm to his world as he cradled the trophy and tearfully called for his baby daughter, Lauren, to be brought on to the stage.


It was a moment of rare human vulnerability for a player associated with volatility. The public, even those who disapproved of his behaviour, instantly warmed to the genuine emotion on show.


Higgins’s 1982 victory confirmed snooker as TV box office and the sport boomed in the UK. He became a regular on the front pages of newspapers as his vivid personal life played out as a public entertainment.


Among his other successes were victories at the Masters in 1978 and 1981, the 1983 UK Championship and the 1989 Irish Masters. He may have won more but it wasn’t only a self-destructive side to his character which stopped him. He was also up against an iron-willed winning machine.


He and Davis were like fire and water. Higgins was unpredictable, dangerous even, while Davis oozed professionalism and respectability. They brought very different people to snooker, Higgins the working class hero, Davis representative of the new middle class of Thatcher’s Britain.
In Dublin, one young boy was transfixed by Higgins and dreamt of following in his footsteps. This became a reality when Ken Doherty won the World Championship in 1997.


“My first recollection of seeing Alex Higgins was Pot Black in 1977,” Doherty said. “I was eight years of age. My father used to watch the snooker and I watched it with him one night. Alex was playing, flying round the table potting balls and from that moment on I wanted a snooker table from Santa. I’ve been hooked ever since.


“Higgins was my inspiration. When he won the World Championship in ’82 it was one of the most iconic moments in our sport, with the tears and the baby coming out. He inspired so many people at that time.


“You never knew what you’d get with him. He had an electricity, an unpredictability, a charisma that we hadn’t seen before in our sport. He came along and sparked it into life.


“The way he played the game brought a different type of crowd. He made it more showbiz. That’s why snooker exploded from then on. Clubs were opening up everywhere in the 1980s. We had three snooker clubs just in our little village at one stage. The game just went from strength to strength.


“He broke the mould in terms of how the game was played. I don’t think anybody could replicate his cue action, the way he jumped and twitched. He took on pots the other players wouldn’t even look at, which is why the crowds loved him.”


Doherty beat Higgins 10-6 on the Hurricane’s 14th and last Crucible appearance in 1994, which included a stand-up argument between him and referee John Williams.


“It was a completely hollow victory,” Doherty said. “I didn’t like the match at all because he was at the end of his career and my hero. It’s not something I have happy memories about.


“I am grateful to him. He was an icon and snooker owes him. I know he did a lot of bad stuff in his career as well but I loved him for what he did on a snooker table and for giving me the inspiration to become a player.”


Alex Higgins, who died in 2010 at the age of 61, was a key reason why snooker entered the bloodstream of British culture in the 1970s and 80s and refused to leave. He was a unique, charismatic character, with a distinctive style of play. More than anything, he brought people to the sport. He excited them, entertained them and at times exasperated them. But they never left him.


In 2003, Higgins, by now in failing health, returned to the Crucible to watch a one-man show, Hurricane, written and performed by Richard Dormer, telling the story of his tumultuous life and career.


At the end of the play, Dormer as Higgins, surrounded by cigarette stubs, betting slips and the assorted detritus of his life, turns to the audience and perfectly captures the unapologetic defiance which drew so many to follow him.


“Don’t pity me,” he says. “I stood on top of the world.”;)
 
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