Morning fun with Ronnie on twitter

Ronnie is clearly enjoying his time in Berlin, and, for the first time since months really took on twitter (and Facebook) this morning .

So here we go…

He started with a question

Who’s agrees to trying thicker cloths to see if it gets rid of the dreaded kicks?

feel free to answer in comments, I’ll pass it on.

Next

Done 4 Mile run in Berlin, what a beauty city, also run pass part of the Berlin Wall

Followed by

Breakfast in Berlin

BreakfastInBerlin

So much for those who in recent months used his name to promote vegetarian or vegan diet! He isn’t either and when I showed him one article on a blog claiming he was, his answer was “Me? Never!”. (Read “Mee? Nevah!”)

He also shared this video on twitter and Facebook

 

And concluded (for now) with this picture and quote…

 

RonnieNightmare Including myself …

Berlin Tagebuch – Day 4

It was one table setup and semi finals day in Berlin and, as you would expect, an enthusiat crowd filled the Tempodrom to the rafters to cheers on the players. The fact that none of the top 16 boys made it that far made no difference to the German fans.

Martin Gould defeated an out of sort Graeme Dott by a convincing 6-2, withot firing on all cylinders himself. Luca Brecel, the 20 years old Belgian, beat a tired Kyren Wilson by 6-3. It was an error strewn affair but it won’t matter to Luca who, after the match,  joked “We must have had about 700 chances each”  … with a big smile.

It is Luca’s first final, and only the second time that an Eurpean player from outside the UK/Ireland reaches that stage. Only Tony Drago from Malta did it before. Should he win he would be the first mainland Europe winner ever. But he will need to play better than yesterday to beat Martin Gould today…

If Martin wins the final, he will climb to 15th in the ranking, kicking Michael White out of the top 16 ahead of the Welsh Open. Luca is now provisionally 28th, already his highest ranking ever, and he could reach nr 20 if he wins today.

For those without access to ES UK here are the punditry bits by Matt Smith, Neal Foulds, Jimmy White and Ronnie:

Martin Gould v Graeme Dott:

Preview

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Graeme Dott – Martin Gould match

Midsession

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: MSI of the Graeme Dott – Martin Gould match

Aftermatch

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Graeme Dott – Martin Gould match

Luca Brecel v Kyren Wilson:

Preview:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Kyren Wilson – Luca Brecel match

Midsession

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: MSI of the Kyren Wilson – Luca Brecel match

Aftermatch

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Kyren Wilson – Luca Brecel match

One point the pundits made was that Graeme Dott never had the opportunity to play on the main table before the SF. The side tables play heavier and have a different lighting and Graeme never seemed to find the pace of the table nor the cueball control. They suggested that players should maybe have the opportunity to practice for 1/2 hour on the main table before an important match like this one.

Ronnie and Jimmy both spent  some time in the commentary box too. Twitters feedback was quite positive. Ronnie’s commentary was highly appreciated by the experts, whilst Jimmy was branded “very funny”.

As usual cuetracker.net provides all the scores and details about the matches.

More about Ronnie’s “World Championship Quotes”

Hector Nunns on inside-snooker came back on Ronnie’s suggestion that the World Championship should be shortened and added Barry Hearn’s reaction to those suggestions

‘THOSE’ O’SULLIVAN CRUCIBLE VIEWS…AND REACTION

Hector Nunns February 6, 2016

Ronnie O’Sullivan, who jetted in to Berlin to take up German Masters TV studio duties on Friday night, caused a stir this week with some strong views about the world championship format.

So let’s have a quick recap of what O’Sullivan actually said, before taking in some alternative player views and then hearing from the man that really matters on the subject – World Snooker chairman Barry Hearn, who has the power to make such things happen or quietly disappear.

O’Sullivan is a huge fan of the Masters format, and also by his own admission no lover of the 17 days a player must spend in Sheffield to win a world championship – this despite the fact he has managed it five times, including in the past four seasons two titles and one further Crucible final.

A combination of these two factors led him to call for radical change in the format of the blue-riband event, primarily slashing the number of days over which it is played by cutting the match distances. Currently these, of course, stand at best-of-19, two best-of-25s, a best-of-33 semi-final and a best-of-35 final.

He said: “I am not really looking forward to playing at Sheffield to be honest. For me it goes on far too long, and I am not sure yet how I will approach that tournament. It is a very long time, longer than the Olympics for 32 players as people know.

“First and foremost it is a lot of table time. You have a best of 19 frame match, two best of 25s, a best of 33 and a best of 35 to win.

“The final is over two long days of four sessions, and the semi-finals over three days. The darts World Championship final is over in two and a half hours.

“I honestly think the world final could be played over the best of 17 frames, first to nine, and have it all done in one day.

“Who needs to play a best-of-25 frame match in the last 16, or one opponent over three days in the semis or even earlier rounds?

“I don’t like it, even though I have won it five times it is my worst tournament over 17 days, it goes on and on and on.

“And every time I have own it I have felt a huge sense of relief, and just been glad it was over rather than pure joy. The Masters is the perfect tournament, that’s the model for all the big events.

“The worlds could be best of 11s, maybe best of 13s for the semis and best of 17 for the final. That is plenty, more than enough.

“For me it is about enjoying playing now, and Sheffield is one of the events I least like playing in – but of course it is our world championship.

“I would enjoy it more going on a tour of Asia or something. I’m sure I won’t and will be there, but that’s how I really feel and don’t look forward to it. That said, it is what it is and you have to get on with it while it has this format.”

The story provoked some fairly predictable howls of derision from the die-hards, and some interesting input from players – hardly any of whom agreed with O’Sullivan.

Just as examples Jimmy White, a close friend of the Rocket and a six-time Crucible runner-up, said: “I don’t think the best player would emerge winning it if you had best-of-11 frame matches. It should stay as it is.”

Former world champion Neil Robertson was also against any radical reform, but did see scope for some minor tweaking of the semi-finals and final, currently played over a total of 12 sessions and five days. This, he felt, could be reduced perhaps trimming a couple of days of the event while still providing a stern test and producing a worthy winner.

The Australian said: “I really like the best-of-25s, they throw up some great games over a distance we don’t get to play. So I would leave it as it is up to the semi-finals, but make them best-of-25 too, and then the final best-of-29, or first to 15. That would be fine.

“As a whole it does go on a bit too long, maybe at the expenses of quality. I would also like to see a bigger break between the semis and the final. I do think there is a problem with the semi-finals and the final, you can get to the final exhausted and it just isn’t necessary for it to be that long.”

So realistically what are the prospects for any alteration in the short or medium term? Speaking to Hearn, it would appear virtually none with the supremo minded to preserve the tournament’s unique appeal.

He said: “It is our job to run the sport for all and not for individual players, and do what we think is right. We can’t change formats based on one player’s wishes.

“Some boxers like four-round fights and not championship 12-round contests, they run out of steam. Some tennis players would rather if Wimbledon was one set and not best of five.

“But this isn’t a punch-up in a telephone box, and it is a marathon not a sprint, and that is part of the event’s unique appeal. I will always listen to Ronnie, but that is the position.

“We constantly review tournament formats but the mood at this moment is that it isn’t broken and there is nothing to fix.

“The world championship is the supreme test not just of skill but of endurance and concentration. The longer the slog, the all-round best player emerges victorious.

“It is important that the world championship is set aside from normal events.

“The appeal of the world championship is based on a very difficult format which won’t appeal to everyone, maybe that includes Ronnie although he hasn’t done too badly there.

“I am not saying it can’t ever be tweaked slightly but overall we are happy. It is the ultimate test and for the moment that is exactly how it will stay.

“There were changes to the UK Championship and a lot of hard-core traditionalists found that upsetting. That one was responding to broadcaster needs, but the BBC are happy.”

 

Photograph by Monique Limbos

 

Those quotes of course sparkled lots of reactions on the social media, and in the bar in Berlin, as Hector aknowleges, not all negative …

To start with, Ronnie himself took a slightly less extreme view when he discussed the topic with Neal Foulds in Berlin before the QF session:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Judd Trump – Martin Gould

Next here are some reactions from top pros and pundits on twitter:

Neal Foulds (ex world n°3, commentator and pundit)

@nr147 @insidesnooker @DailyMirror the semi- finals can drag a bit. Play 3 sessions and give the finalists the evening off to prep for final

Shaun Murphy (World Champion,  who was adressing other changes as well like the dress code for instance)

Yeah I agree 35 is too long. No need for any match to be over 2 sessions long 

I’d support whatever is deemed the longest possible match over 2 sessions

Ron Florax @CueTracker_Ron

@Magician147 Does that mean you’d want a best of 19 world final?

IMO it needs to be faster, shorter, change in dress code, louder

ben potts @ben4675

@Magician147 in your opinion what does snooker need to make it more attractive to watch? And encourage people to start to play? #lovethegame

Most people I speak to outside the snooker “bubble” want it faster with a more modern dress code

Timo Sacklén @timo_sacklen

@Magician147 Can you please describe how to be faster and also the dress code. I can not see the benefit of 30sec shot clock.

I’m only going off what people say to me all over the world. There’s a very strong move for change

E JONES @wildey_1

@Magician147 absolute crap ….do you seriously think that if you do your so out of touch with what fans want and like to see.

Sports have moved on over time. The only thing that’s changed since the glory days of the 80’s is the carpet colour

Matt @ProSnookerBlog

@Magician147 I must say, for someone who obviously loves snooker, it does shock me how much you want to fundamentally change about the sport

Well as snooker lovers and friends we can agree to disagree 

Matt @ProSnookerBlog

@Magician147 You know me – in the main I think that things are good. I don’t think that the sport needs a radical overhaul right now.

Pretty much I think yes. 

Hurleyyy @Hurlay1

@Magician147 Among the pro’s, Shaun, is the opinion of needing change universal? Surely if the top players want it then thats the way to go?

Neil Robertson (World Champion)

Keep the same format but change semis to best of 25 and final best of 29 then it’s perfect

Judd Trump (UK Champion and World finalist)

@Snookerlegends @Skent26 @ronnieo147 30 we aren’t trying to make people fall asleep here. Let’s make it 20 or 25

So it’s clear to me that whatever outrage it raises in the die-hard traditionalist camp, there is also a rather strong support for changes, coming from the men who actually play it … as opposed to the ones who watch it from their armchair.

Berlin Tagebuch – Day 3

Day 3 in Berlin saw the conclusion of the last 16 and the QF on the same day. The surprises continued to come and the top players continued to tumble…

Here is whey Hector Nunns wrote on inside-snooker:

FINAL FOUR PREPARE TO DO BATTLE IN BERLIN

Hector Nunns February 6, 2016

This year’s German Masters quarter-finals would have had to go some to beat last year’s for drama and entertainment – but they have certainly thrown up a fascinating semi-final line-up.

Just 12 months ago we watched Shaun Murphy beating Ronnie O’Sullivan, Judd Trump make a 147 but lose to Mark Selby, Neil Robertson knocking the black in to foul from two snookers up and lose to Stephen Maguire, and Liang Wenbo coming through against Ryan Day in a fourth decider of a memorable evening.

Of those players Trump, Maguire and Day were again involved in the last eight, but all fell on Friday night – albeit to players that are hardly rank outsiders and have started to sniff something special themselves this weekin Martin Gould, Graeme Dott and Kyren Wilson.

The 2012 Australian Open also saw a semi-final line-up without a single top-16 player, although in fairness many failed to make the trip that year. You would have to go back to 1991 to find no top-16 seed in the last four.

The 34-year-old Gould has not yet won a ranking title, but came very close in Australia this season going down 9-8 to John Higgins, having previously lost a PTC Finals showpiece. World No20 Gould afterwards hoped that “the snooker gods” might now look kindly on his bid to land that first ranking title.

Standing in the Londoner’s path to another final is Dott, who at 38 admitted that he had begun to wonder if he would ever seriously contend again for the major honours. Dott followed up his 2006 Crucible triumph with a China Open win a year later.

But he has not won since, and a surprisingly comfortable 5-1 win over Maguire, including a clearance of 71 from 61-0 down, clinched the match and only a second semi-final place in five years, a record Dott described as “terrible” and “a wilderness” from he needs to escape.

That afternoon clash will be followed in the evening by one featuring two of the brightest young prospects snooker has to offer up in Wilson and Luca Brecel.

A shattered Wilson, after his third 5-4 win in two days and second on Friday, could be forgiven for having a head so scrambled that he asked: “Am I the only ranking event winner left in?” There was of course the small matter of former world champion Dott remaining in the draw.

The 24-year-old, whose debut ranking title came in Shanghai this season, could easily have been on the plane home in round one having trailed Rory McLeod 4-1. His efforts against Michael Holt and then from 4-2 down against Stuart Bingham’s conqueror Ryan Day were similarly impressive.

Wilson looked very tired after his win over Day, with good reason, and recovery could be the key to the outcome of his clash with Brecel, into a second ranking semi-final after matching this run at the Welsh Open last year before losing to John Higgins.

Brecel, now 20, was hailed as a child prodigy in his early teens but found life tough on tour, and there were plenty of reports emanating from Belgium that his attitude and focus dropped off despite there being so much to play for. Ability-wise he has it all going on, and if he listens and learns from now on, he will be a big danger at any event.

So with the sport desperate to see a champion emerge from mainland Europe, a dedicated Brecel’s return to form and contention is welcome. He denied Mark Joyce a first semi-final spot with a 5-4 victory.

It is very hard to pick a winner from these four, not least because of the intriguing personal ambition at stake. Wilson wants to prove he is no one-hit wonder, though there seems little danger of that.

Dott would love to win a first ranking title for nine years; Gould would cherish winning a first; and any move from Brecel this weekend could herald the emergence of a special talisman for the new snooker territories. It should be well worth a watch, with the Tempodrom and 2,000-plus fans coming alive at this stage of the tournament.

 

Photographs courtesy of Monique Limbos

The day also saw a change in the pundit team, with Ronnie replacing Neil Robertson from the QF on. Here are the various matches preview and analysis:

Afternoon session with Neil Robertson:

Session preview with Bingham v Day focus:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Stuart Bingham – Ryan Day match

Bingham v Day aftermatch:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Stuart Bingham – Ryan Day match

Evening session with Ronnie:

Session preview with Trump v Gould focus:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Judd Trump – Martin Gould match

Trump v Gould mid-session

MissingClip  2016 German Masters: MSI of the Judd Trump – Martin Gould match

Trump v Gould aftermatch and Gould interview:

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Judd Trump – Martin Gould match

As usual cuetracker.net provides all the scores and details about the matches.

Berlin Tagebuch – Day 2

Day 2 in Berlin produced a number of surprises with a lot of higher seeds going out.

The first two sessions saw the conclusion of the last 32, with Kurt Maflin beating Marco Fu convincingly and Mark Joyce sending Mark Allen home.

Kurt of course is an absolutely brilliant player on his day and Marco is a bit inconsistant and when he’s not on his game, he’s really poor. So not a real shock here. Mark Allen beaten by Mark Joyce is more surprising,  although not that much. Allen hates Joyce methodical approach and made no mystery of how he felt after the match on twitter. “Needle” between those two is un understatement.

Young Belgian Luca Brecel beat even younger Zhao Xintong convincingly. World Champion Stuart Bingham beat Fergal O’ Brien by 5-2 but the match was much closer that the score suggests and … well, rather poor quality. Both players made countless mistakes.

The last session of the day saw the start of the last 16.

Mark Selby, the defending champion and world n°1, went out, beaten 5-3, at the hand of an applied Stephen Maguire. Maguire is trying to regain his last 16 spot and could well do it here in Germany.

Barry Hawkins, finalist at the Masters,  also went out, also by 5-3, victim of the ever gritty Graeme Dott.

The two other matches were short and one sided. Judd Trump beat stable mate Zhang Anda, by 5-1, with three consecutive centuries to finish. The last one, a 120, was a failed maximum attempt: Judd snookered himself on the last yellow.  Funnily, he was playing on the exact same table as the one he made a maximum here last year. Martin Gould trashed Ben Woollaston by 5-0.

For those who can’t watch Eurosport UK and enjoy the punditry, here it is:

Stuart Bingham v Fergal O’Brien

Preview

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Stuart Bingham – Fergal O’Brien match

MSI analysis

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: MSI of the Stuart Bingham – Fergal O’Brien match

Aftermatch

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Stuart Bingham – Fergal O’Brien match

Mark Selby v Stephen Maguire

Preview

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: preview of the Mark Selby – Stephen Maguire match

Mid Session

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: MSI of the Mark Selby – Stephen Maguire match

Aftermatch

MissingClip 2016 German Masters: review of the Mark Selby – Stephen Maguire match

As usual cuetracker.net provides all the scores and details about the matches.

Ronnie O’Sullivan says World Snooker Championship should be cut down by half

Ronnie O’Sullivan says World Snooker Championship should be cut down by HALF

BY HECTOR NUNNS

Ronnie O’Sullivan has savaged the Crucible format – insisting the World Championship could be slashed in half.

The sport’s blue-riband tournament lasts for 17 days – and the champion must win 71 frames in a possible total of 137 played.

The Rocket has lifted the trophy five times but O’Sullivan claims he does not enjoy the event and feels only relief at the end.

And the 40-year-old reckons a worthy winner can be produced in far less time than the current marathon.

Any such move would provoke a storm of protest. When supremo Barry Hearn cut the length of UK Championship matches he was heavily criticised by players.

But O’Sullivan said: “I am not really looking forward to playing at Sheffield, to be honest. For me, it goes on far too long and I am not sure yet how I will approach that tournament.

“It is a very long time — longer than the Olympics.

“First and foremost it is a lot of table time. You have a best of 19 frame match, two best of 25s, a best of 33 and a best of 35 to win.

“The final is over two long days of four sessions, and the semi-finals over three days. The Darts World Championship final is over in two and a half hours.

“I honestly think the world final could be played over the best of 17 frames — first to nine — and have it all done in one day.

“Who needs to play a best-of-25 frame match in the last 16, or one opponent over three days in the semis or even earlier rounds?

“I don’t like it, even though I have won it five times. It is my worst tournament, it goes on and on and on.

“And every time I have won it I have felt a huge sense of relief, and just been glad it was over rather than pure joy.

“The Masters is the perfect tournament, that’s the model for all the big events. The Worlds could be best of 11s, maybe best of 13s for the semis and best of 17 for the final. That is plenty, more than enough.

“For me it is about enjoying playing now, and Sheffield is one of the events I least like playing in – but of course it is our World Championship.

“I would enjoy it more if I went on a tour of Asia or something. I’m sure I won’t and will be there, but that’s how I really feel and don’t look forward to it.

“That said, it is what it is and you have to get on with it while it has this format.”

Things could be worse for O’Sullivan.

When Fred Davis beat Walter Donaldson in the 1948 World Championship final the score was 84 frames to 61!

I’m certain many will disagree with this and I’m one of them … to an extend.

First this is Ronnie not in the best frame of mind. It was plain for all to see at the Masters that his current back problems are weighting on his mind, causing him concerns and anxiety about his future and the state of his game. He hates producing a poor display and can be overly critical of his own performances. Don’t expect any positive interview when he feels low …

Next, it IS true that this is a very long tournament at the end of a long season. During the first week there is a lot of waiting time that the players have to fill the best they can. Many find it hard, especially the older players who have done it all before and have a family.

The second week is relentless snooker and by the time the players reach the final, or even the semi finals they are exhausted. This has often produced one-sided or poor quality matches. Ronnie himself has won his semi final at least three times with a session to spare: the audience then gets an exhibition but they probably feel short changed. This is not what they paid for, and paid quite a lot. We also have had quite a number of anti-climactic finals, poor quality and little suspense, again because a combination of factors: players are emotionally spent and extremely tense because of what is at stake. I’d say that if we look at the last six finals, only two of them were quality: Ronnie v Hawkins because they both played very well and the last one, Bingham v Murphy because it was close and Bingham came back. Some will say that Selby v Ronnie in 2014 was good, but I disagree: it was a match in two halves, with Ronnie dominating a tired Selby on day one, and Selby crushing a flat Ronnie on day two. It made for a good story but it wasn’t a good final.

Also, having been there, all these last six years, you sense that some sessions don’t really get the audience on the edge of their seats, in particular the “middle” sessions of the semi finals and the second session of the final. There is no real tension, there is no result at the end of them (usually), the media room is often half empty…

And finally, I agree that there is no need to play such long matches to find out the best player.  Many predicted that we would have surprise winners at the UK when the format was shortened: it did not happen. Since we have the shorter format winners have been Trump, Selby, Ronnie and Robertson twice …

In the past John Higgins and Neil Robertson – both World Champions – have expressed similar criticisms about the lengths of the World Championship. So it’s not just Ronnie.

 

 

 

The Eleven 30 Series …

This is the concept Ronnie was talking about yesterday. It’s organised by Snooker Legends and supported by Events that ROK.

This is the Press Release:

Eleven 30 logo

Ronnie O’Sullivan v Judd Trump
“The Eleven 30 series where the winner takes all”

Snooker Legends are proud to present two of the world’s biggest snooker stars in one of the biggest grudge matches ever!


Starring the world’s most popular player,
Ronnie O’Sullivan settling scores with the young pretender Judd Trump.

Ronnie is the current Masters Champion, a title he won for the 6th time in January. Add to that his 5 world titles, 5 UK titles, most ever competitive centuries and the fastest ever 147 break and you have a player who many regard as the greatest ever to hold a snooker cue.

Judd is the future; with his brand of “naughty snooker” he has proven he can stand toe to toe with the Rocket. At their last match up, the 2015 Grand Prix Final, it was Judd who triumphed 10-7. With major ranking events wins in China and Australia, as well as the 2012 UK Championship the ‘Ace in the Pack’ is ready and willing to settle this rivalry once and for all.


It’s
WINNER TAKES ALL in a best of 11 frame match over 6 fantastic nights.


Forget the silent gentlemanly atmousphere of the snooker halls; this is rock and roll all the way.

Limited VIP packages are available where you can meet both the players before the match in a private drinks reception.

Eleven30 Generic low.jpg