More about Ronnie’s controversial 146

The initial reaction to Ronnie’s snub on a 147 was mixed, some being amazed and amused, other being gutted and angry. Barry Hearn first reaction was negative, but today, he changed his mind and backed Ronnie. Why? This is what Hector Nunns tries to explain on inside-snooker:

CRITICISED O’SULLIVAN SHOWS OFF HIS PUBLICITY POWER

Hector Nunns February 16, 2016

So is it possible to pull all this into one piece? Let’s have a go, because yet again Ronnie O’Sullivan has propelled snooker way, way beyond its own traditional interest base.

There will be those that didn’t want to hear it but when World Snooker chairman Barry Hearn described the Rocket as “almost bigger than the sport” on Tuesday morning on BBC Radio Five Live he was being honest and accurate.

Honest, because he and many executives at World Snooker and the WPBSA spend much of the year at home and overseas saying pretty much the opposite – that the game can and does do without O’Sullivan just fine.

But that is not true. It does nowhere near as well without him on or off the table, and even seasoned media professionals were taken aback at the explosion of interest in the UK and beyond in the story surrounding O’Sullivan’s snubbed 147 at the BetVictor Welsh Open on Monday afternoon.

The power of the O’Sullivan publicity machine remains undiminished, and is arguably even heightened in these days of rarer appearances.

As any wind-up merchant from a talk-show host to a Twitter troll knows, polarising opinion gets you noticed. And O’Sullivan appears to have split people into those who are bewitched by his genius, and those who think he is a disrespectful and selfish brat. It is pure story gold for us lot.

O’Sullivan, as by now the man (or woman) on the moon probably knows, asked mid-break against Barry Pinches what the prize was for a maximum and on hearing it was ‘only’ £10,000 decided to allow the devil that occasionally sits on his left shoulder onto the table to make a statement.

The problem for O’Sullivan is that a 147 is not worth £169,000 (the most he has won for one) or any other figure by right. It is worth what someone is prepared to pay for it, and right now that is a rolling prize pot starting at £5,000 and going up by £5,000 an event if one is not made.

And the irony of course is that if one single person could be said to have taken a little magic off the actual feat itself, then despite the brilliant execution that could be the man who has made more than any other?

Some fans of the sport (and probably some who have never watched it before) are out for blood, accusing O’Sullivan of dishonouring and disrespecting his sport, himself, his family and his pets. As he admitted on Tuesday on talkSPORT, “I probably should have done the 147”. But when he is out there, that clear thinking can disappear.

Some punters are unhappy, I would be if I had backed a max in that match. Some spectators were disappointed, I might have been had I taken young kids for a sight of the great man. But even these, won’t they have a reasonable tale to tell for the rest of their lives?

Of all the criticism Ali Carter’s rings truest. If the Rocket really had a point to make, make the 147, donate it to charity and then use the press conference to say why. That gets almost as much publicity. Almost. But that requires full clarity of thought in the heat of battle, something O’Sullivan has already admitted isn’t always there.

My job as a journalist for national newspapers is to take snooker outside its comfort zone, outside its heartlands and die-hard fan base, to the wider sporting public and even beyond. This kind of story is manna from heaven and I wish more players had that power.

You will, I can almost guarantee, in the next couple of days see news and features columnists who wouldn’t know one end of a snooker cue from the other, lambasting O’Sullivan for squandering the equivalent of a nurse’s training year salary.

There is a bigger question for snooker to answer – how on earth do we get this publicity when he is gone. It isn’t going to be easy. There are some great players out there playing the game to a supremely high standard but O’Sullivan still has an X Factor above all others. He has earned that, but the more we see challenging it in whatever way, the better.

 

And to confirm Hector’s views there was an interesting development coming from one of the main betting companies. (excerpt source Eurosport)

Bookmaker cashes in on Ronnie O’Sullivan controversy by offering him £61,000 to make 147

By Eurosport

Published on 16/02/2016 at 16:27

A leading bookmaker has cashed in on the publicity surrounding Ronnie O’Sullivan’s controversial 146 by offering the five-times world champion £61,000 to make a maximum.

Irish bookie Paddy Power claims they will offer O’Sulllivan the sum of money for running in the 14th competitive maximum of his career a day after the Englishman declared on 146 when a 147 was within touching distance at the Welsh Open hosted by the Motorpoint Arena in Cardiff.

O’Sullivan has welcomed the move and said he would give £11,000 thousand to charity if he managed the feat after bemoaning only being offered £10,000 by World Snooker.

PaddyPower147Offer

Three tons and a 90 – Ronnie’s last 64 in Cardiff

Welsh Open 2016: Ronnie beat Tian Pengfei by 4-0 in the last 64

Ronnie beat Tian Pengfei in emphatic fashion this afternoon. The 4-0 score only tells part of the story: just look at the stats …
He also made three centuries, 112, 110 and 102, bringing his ton tally to 811, so he can be forgiven for failing miserably in frame 2, scoring only 90.

Shame he only entertained the crowd for less than an hour, 39 minutes and 14 seconds exactly. Also, very disrespectful from Ronnie to deprive Brendan Moore from his customary decider. 😄😄😄

RonnieWelshL64Scores

Pictures courtesy of my friend Tai Chengzhe – Big thanks!

Some studio quotes from Ronnie just after the match:

“When you get to 40 and you’ve been playing for 25 years, you have to start enjoying it a bit. Yesterday was just a bit of fun.”

“I love doing exhibitions more than playing tournaments. It can be quite grueling sometimes”

“It’s not about the money, it’s about having a bit of a laugh and I hope everyone just sees it as that.”

 

If you missed it, here is the video of the match.

Ronnie in the media room after the match, being interviewed by Jamie Broughton (BBC radio)

RonnieWelshL64Press

Here is what he had to say (source Worldsnooker – excerpt)

“I was really happy with that.,” said three-time Welsh Open winner O’Sullivan, who had lost his previous two matches against Tian. “I was just trying to play the balls the way I like and it’s always nice to take them.”

Asked about his decision to turn down the chance of a 147 yesterday, O’Sullivan responded: “I don’t see what’s wrong in just bringing a form of entertainment and making it a little bit light hearted because it can be a serious game. Once I step over that line when I’m ready to play, I go into a mindset that I have to be myself. Sometimes I get it right, sometimes I get it wrong, but over the course my career I’d like to think I get it right more times than wrong. I’ve already had 13 maximums, five world titles, six Masters, five UK Championships and hold the record for the most centuries. I think I’ve done some good things.

“If I was to go out there and think about charities, mums, dads, my children, what my cleaners are doing, whether I’ve paid my bills, what Barry Hearn wants me to do, what the public wants me to do…I wouldn’t be able to perform. I’d be too worried. When you cross that line you have to back yourself, you need to grow shoulders deal with whatever is put in front of you.

“Stephen Fry apparently upset someone and he’s one of the most intelligent men on the planet, and he has divided opinion. When you do things differently and unexpectedly it is going to divide opinion. I can’t help what I did yesterday because it comes instinctively.”

Barry Hearn on Ronnie, yesterday and today

Barry Hearn was harsh on Ronnie yesterday on twitter, claiming he was unprofessional for not making a 147, and that it was a shame because he disappointed the paying public.

This morning however, after a tide of media coverage about Ronnie’s 146, both of them were interviewed by the BBC and it seems to me that the tone has changed slightly …

Ronnie O’Sullivan nearly bigger than snooker, says Barry Hearn on BBC

Ronnie O’Sullivan is “close” to being bigger than snooker, says the sport’s chairman Barry Hearn.

O’Sullivan turned down a maximum 147 break at the Welsh Open saying the £10,000 prize money was “too cheap”

He potted 14 reds and 13 blacks before opting for an easier pink as he made a 146 to beat Barry Pinches 4-1.

“Without personality and characters, sport dies,” Hearn told BBC Radio 5 live. “O’Sullivan is the biggest character in the sport.”

‘Ronnie brings the game into fine repute’

Five-time world champion O’Sullivan had scored 80 in the break when he asked an official what the prize was for the highest break. He also asked the commentary box for information and looked visibly disappointed when told he could win up to £12,000.

The £10,000, boosted by the £2000 on offer for the highest break of the tournament, is a rolling prize fund at ranking events which has not been won since Neil Robertson made a 147 at the UK Championship last year.

Most maximum 147 breaks in snooker history

13: Ronnie O’Sullivan

11: Stephen Hendry

6: John Higgins

5: Ding Junhui

4: Marco Fu, Shaun Murphy

See the full list here

“I could have done it, but I didn’t think the prize was worthy of a 147,” O’Sullivan told BBC Sport after the match on Monday. “So I’ve tried to let it build up until it’s worthy and then go for it.”

O’Sullivan leads the list of most maximum 147 breaks compiled in snooker history, two ahead of Stephen Hendry.

Hearn, who initially criticised O’Sullivan’s actions, said players had no obligation to go for certain shots and ‘The Rocket’ had not broken any rules.

“Some have said he has brought the game into disrepute but Ronnie brings the game into fine repute,” Hearn said on Tuesday.

“In his little head, he thought it would be funny. He is quite dry. The 147 is a the pinnacle but Ronnie has made loads of them, he has got loads of money.

“He is the biggest character in the sport. When he breaks the rules, he gets punished, in this case, it was his choice.

“No-one is bigger than the game but Ronnie is close because he is a fabulous player and a fun personality.

Last 128 in Cardiff

Yesterday saw 128 players in action at the Motorpoint Arena in Cardiff as the Welsh Open 2016 got underway. They started early morning and finished around 1 am this morning, with 12 tables in use.

Overall the seeds went through with a few high profile exceptions: Stephen Maguire, Stuart Bingham and Kyren Wilson all lost their opening match. The Welsh had mixed fortunes, but Michael White, Matthew Stevens and Mark Williams all won, although Mark was not happy with his performance, which, truth to be said, was very poor.

Ronnie stole the headlines by making another non-147, you can read all about it here.

But the break of the day, for me, is the one Anthony Hamilton made to win his match against the World Champion:

Truly remarkable.

All the results and statistics are available on cuetracker.net . Thank you Ron Florax.

 

 

Naughty Ronnie wins his last 128 match in Cardiff

The Welsh Open 2016 gets underway today in Cardiff and all 128 players play their first match on day 1. All matches are best of 7 up to, and including the last 16.

Ronnie made a good start in the Welsh Open 2016 as he beat Barry Pinches by 4-1 in the last 128.

RonnieWelshL128Scores

It was far from obvious at the start of the match, as Ronnie looked bored and frustrated, especially in frame 3. In that frame in particular the balls ran very awkward, it was slow going and nothing seemed to work for him. Barry looked set to win it, but, crucially, failed to get position on the last red, when 31 up with 35 remaining. A weak safety from Barry, gave Ronnie a chance and he cleared to win with a couple of impressive shots. From then on, Ronnie gained fluency.

The last frame was very special: Ronnie was on a 147, but, after asking the referee about the 147  prize, he deliberately took the pink with the 14th red and
finished the match on a 146 … Naughty! He was all smiles for most of the break.

You can watch the 146 here:

2016 Welsh Open: Ronnie O’Sullivan 146 – Barry Pinches

In the press room a very relaxed Ronnie explained that 10K isn’t enough for the 147 as it is a massive achievement. Ronnie’s decision to turn down a maximum was received with mixed feelings by the fans, but one thing is certain, he got people talking, and snooker in the news … AGAIN.

RonnieWelshL128Press

Here are Ronnie’s quotes after the match (excerpt from Worldsnooker report)

“I like to entertain the fans, it’s like a film – you want them to come back and watch the next one,” said world number five O’Sullivan, who has already made a record 13 career maximums. “There’s no point giving them the best ending they could ever have, let’s just leave them for a better ending next time. When the prize (for a 147) gets a bit higher then I’ll go for it.

“That could have been a really long match today because Barry was taking his time between shots. With everything I’ve got on in the calendar I didn’t want to take too much out of myself by losing 4-3 in four hours. I thought if I am going to get beat, I want to get beat in an hour and a quarter or win in an hour and a quarter. So I just went for my shots and it turned out well.”

Enjoy these few pictures thanks to my good friend Tai Chengzhe

 

2016 Welsh Open: preview of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – Barry Pinches match (BBC)

For those who missed the match, or want to watch it again, here:

2016 Welsh Open: Ronnie O’Sullivan – Barry Pinches

2016 Welsh Open: review of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – Barry Pinches match (BBC)

Judd talks to Hector Nunns ahead of the Eleven 30 Series

TRUMP: I AM IMMUNE TO O’SULLIVAN FEAR FACTOR

Hector Nunns February 10, 2016

Judd Trump believes he is immune to a Ronnie O’Sullivan ‘fear factor’ that still appears to cripple many of the Rocket’s rivals.

The Juddernaut will be one of O’Sullivan’s biggest world title challengers at the Crucible when the 40-year-old goes for a sixth crown later this year.

O’Sullivan was pushed to 6-5 by Mark Williams in the first round but overall won last month’s Masters at a relative canter after opponents failed to fire – and that has also happened in Sheffield.

World No5 Trump trails O’Sullivan just 8-7 in the overall head to head, and has pushed him very close even in some of those losses.

And the 26-year-old, who will play a series of six showdown matches this summer against O’Sullivan, insists even top players are scared just entering the arena.

He said: “Ronnie still has a fear factor with many players, you saw that in the Masters final where he beat Barry Hawkins 10-1.

“So many just don’t play well against him, and even when he isn’t playing that well players just play so badly in their matches.

“Everyone gets so scared playing him and that is something that no one else in the game possesses, it his biggest asset now.

“Luckily it doesn’t get me like that, I beat him early in my career and that helped, some guys on tour have either never beaten him or not for 10 years.”

Eleven30Poster2

The six-match Trump v O’Sullivan series, over the best of 11 frames and at venues in England, Ireland and Northern Ireland, is lined up to have a shot-clock of 30 seconds per shot – but Trump has challenged his opponent to prove he truly is still ‘The Rocket’.

The pair are among if not the quickest players on the circuit, but Trump claims both can go faster.

He added: “I think 30 seconds is loads of time, probably too long for us. We are both comfortable playing under 20 seconds, so maybe we can get that down.

“Everyone should be playing to that speed anyway, 23-25 seconds, you know the shot you are going to play. If you play quicker, you play better – look at Neil Robertson.

“I will go for any time on the shot-clock, let’s see what Ronnie agrees to and can cope with. Hopefully he’d go for 15 seconds, 10 seconds even.”

Personally, I think that 30 seconds, or even 25 seconds is good. It guarantees that the players don’t waste any time procastinating over shots. But it’s still plenty enough time to think or to get properly on the shot when using the rest or another implement.

15 or, worse, 10 seconds, makes using implements virtually impossible and will result in bashing balls around. It might suit Judd but I hope Ronnie and the promoters will resist the idea and stick to the initial format. I want to see proper and skillful snooker, not slapstick.