Crucible 2016 – Meeting the press

Today, the top 16 players were meeting the press ahead of the World Championship and here you can listen to (and watch) what Ronnie had to say 

Plus a few pictures put on facebook by Betfred, Jason Francis and John Skilbeck. Ronnie in his customary jeans …

John Skilbeck tweeted

Ronnie O’Sullivan says his practice form has been “pretty shabby” but “it’d be great to win it”. #snooker

One of the beauties of the long format is that a player can build themself into form, actually they don’t want to peak too early.

Also it has been confirmed by David Hendon that the usual gang – Ronnie, Jimmy White and Collin Murray – will do punditry on Eurosport during the World Championship. This is good as on e thing Ronnie finds hard to cope with is boredom between matches.

Sport Magazine Interview – 15 April 2016

Beauty and the Best by Sport Magazine

This article by Sport Magazine – the link to the original is just above – will not bring a lot of novelty to those who have been following Ronnie through his career, and read previous interviews. But it is a good one, where Ronnie appears calm and his insight of the psychology of competition is interesting. Also he tells us that he’s like to play for another 4-5 years, until he’s 45. He also tells us that the World Championship is not his main priority … but make no mistake, he’s been working, and, once at the table the competitive animal always wakes up! I feel that he doesn’t want to put too much pressure on himself, and I believe it’s the right attitude. He’s got nothing to prove after all.

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APRIL 14TH 2016ISSUE 446

AMIT KATWALA

BEAUTY & THE BEAST

Ronnie O’Sullivan on obsession, control and searching for gold

Ronnie O’Sullivan can exhale in a thousand different ways. 

He uses prolonged sighs and sharp intakes of breath like words, scattering his speech with them. At one point, he puffs out his cheeks and flaps his lips like a horse.

That’s the response when we unfold a photograph from 15 years ago – a picture of a young-but-troubled O’Sullivan holding the snooker World Championship trophy aloft for the first time. It took longer than anyone had expected.

“I felt like a different person,” he reflects. “Everybody was saying I was the best player to have never won the world title, and there was a bit of selfdoubt creeping in, I must admit. I’d seen everybody else around me winning the World Championship and I thought I was better than them. And for me not to have won it, I kind of thought, well, maybe I haven’t got something that they have.”

Self-doubt has plagued O’Sullivan’s career. He is a genius, widely regarded as the greatest player to pick up a snooker cue, even if the statistics don’t yet reflect that. But even now, after five World Championships, six Masters and five UK Championships, he finds it hard to picture himself in the same tier as his own sporting heroes. He believes they have something he does not.

“I think people like Roger Federer, Tiger Woods, Usain Bolt – they are kind of blessed with this ability to just switch off,” O’Sullivan explains. He has, he says, always found it difficult to grind out wins. “I could never come from that school of thought – it was more in the beauty side of it, and if the beauty side of it wasn’t right then it didn’t matter about the result because the finesse and all that wasn’t there.”

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There is something undeniably beautiful about the Rocket in full flow – the YouTube video of his 1997 World Championship 147 break in just five minutes and 20 seconds, viewed nearly 2.4 million times, is proof enough of that.

“When I’m playing snooker I do feel like an energy is coming through me,” he says. “Probably if you see me walking around the house, walking around the shopping centre, you wouldn’t recognise me from the guy who has a snooker cue in his hand. I think that, when I get playing, adrenaline goes through your body and you start to get a little bounce in your step.”

Those moments don’t always come easily. “It’s like digging for gold,” he explains. “That’s probably the best way to describe snooker. There are a lot of times where you’re just digging and digging and digging and you think…” He breathes out. “I’m not really getting anywhere with this, and then: ‘Bang!’ It all happens, and you think: ‘Wow! It was worth it.’”

For O’Sullivan, these golden moments haven’t always been linked to success. Some haven’t even come in competition – in his 2014 autobiography Running, he recalls smashing in century after century playing Ronnie Wood and Mick Jagger.

“When I won the Masters this year I was digging and digging; I didn’t find no gold, yet I won the tournament,” he says. “In some of my interviews I was really harsh on myself. I felt I was lucky to get through because I wasn’t playing well; I felt my opponents missed lots of opportunities to beat me. I’m a lot better now at accepting not playing well and getting a win.”

Ronnie O’Sullivan’s sideburns are out of control.

That’s his own assessment during our photo shoot at The Grove. It’s a room full of snooker tables on an industrial estate near Romford, Essex, and a short drive from his home in Chigwell.

You get the impression that, if it was up to him, O’Sullivan would never leave this small corner of east London. He is one of a number of professional players who trains here. It’s empty today, but he prefers it when there are a few people around.

“It is quite an insular type of sport,” he admits. “In a normal day of practice you probably don’t speak for two or three hours, and you’re stuck in this environment where there’s no light.”

There are streaks of grey coming through in his otherwise jet black sideburns. At 40, however, he is arguably in a better place than he’s ever been.

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“I don’t think it is an age thing,” he says. “Five years ago I was 35 and if I hadn’t learnt by 35 I was never going to learn. I just needed to know that there was a different way.”

He has lost years of potential dominance to drink and drugs. In his teens, O’Sullivan was unstoppable – he won 74 of his first 76 professional matches. But everything changed when his father – an influential figure on his career – was jailed for murder.

“I went through a phase between 18 to 24 where I blottoed out a lot of stuff with things that were going on in my life,” he says. “I got into drinking and stuff, so for six or seven years I didn’t really deserve much from the game. It wasn’t until 2001 when I got myself sorted, so from 2001 to now I’ve had a good, solid 15 years.”

It has not all been plain sailing since then, though. There have been high-profile collapses and controversies, personal problems and extended breaks from snooker. Things have changed in the past few years, since O’Sullivan started working with sports psychologist Dr Steve Peters.

“I feel much more confident now as a player then I ever have done, to be honest, and I think that has to go down to working directly with Steve,” he says. “I always had the ability, but I never quite had the ability to control how I was feeling out there.”

His form is more stable as a result. Instead of fluctuating between 50 and 100 per cent, he says, he’s now performing to a steady 85 or 90 per cent of his ability.

“I know that is good enough for me to go and win tournaments,” O’Sullivan explains. “I’m not saying I’m going to win every tournament that I play in, but if I play consistently well it’ll take someone very good to beat me. I feel like my destiny is in my own hands a lot of the time.”

Ronnie O’Sullivan has an aura.

His mere presence in the chair – even if he’s disinterested, picking his nails, sitting with a towel over his head – can cause seasoned professionals to collapse. Even if you’re winning, you never know when he’s going to turn it on.

“Everything happens in quite slow motion,” he says of those times when he strikes gold. “It feels dynamic and it feels strong. You feel like the intensity level gets pushed up. I think there is that aura.

446ronnie4“I always feel like when you play people like Stephen Hendry and John Higgins, the intensity level rises and rises and they draw you into this environment, and it’s whether you can stay with it. They take you to that level; you can’t drag them down to yours. And I think that’s what I kind of do when I play as well.

“We play at such a high tempo and such a high intensity that, sometimes, the opponents get a bit freaked out by it, and they just think…” He puffs out his cheeks. “‘F**king hell, I can’t stay with this.’ It’s probably a bit like watching Manny Pacquiao in his prime where he was just constantly in your face. Eventually you’re gonna go: ‘F**k me, this geezer is just relentless, he ain’t gonna stop.’”

The question – for fans, bookmakers, and O’Sullivan’s opponents – is which version of him will turn up at the Crucible in Sheffield for the World Championship, which begins this weekend. O’Sullivan, who probably doesn’t even know the answer himself, is on the hunt for his sixth world title, which would draw him level with Steve Davis and Ray Reardon, and leave him one behind his idol Hendry.

“If I hadn’t had that six-year blotto-out and maybe met Steve Peters when I was 20, I could have possibly had seven, eight, nine world titles,” he says. “Who knows?”

After winning in 2012 and 2013, he is the tournament favourite. But he talks about it with trademark weariness: “I’m ready for a holiday, but got the World Championship to get through. It’s probably not too high on my priority list… I’m not saying I’m going to enjoy Sheffield because it’s a f**king marathon. It’s 17 days of pure slog.”

Ronnie O’Sullivan is an addict.

The focus of his obsession has changed over the years – from snooker to running to cooking, via junk food, alcohol and marijuana. At one point he even seemed to be addicted to going to addiction meetings. Like the protagonist from Fight Club, he attended meetings for addictions he didn’t even have.

“I tried SA – Sex Anonymous,” he reveals in his autobiography. He is just as frank with us. “I kind of have that in my DNA, to be quite obsessional,” he admits. It’s what pushed him to spend 10 or 11 hours a day at the table from the age of seven. We put it to him that you can’t separate the talent from the obsession – that the gift and the demons come as a package deal.

“I think you’re right,” he says. “I’ve seen plenty of kids that had the same amount of talent as me, if not more, but they kind of got side-tracked. Whenever I was practising they’d be out with their mates or they’d be out roller-skating. I was the one putting in the hours on the table.”

There are times when O’Sullivan has almost discarded snooker in favour of other addictions. He says the best days of his life, other than his kids being born, were appearing on Saturday Kitchen and during the height of his running obsession – when he set himself a target of qualifying to run for Essex over 10km.

Despite his time away and his detached demeanour, he keeps coming back to his first love. “I think there is an addiction there in some sort of way,” he says. “I’m not sure I’d like to devote my whole life to just playing snooker. These past two years I’ve kind of thought: ‘Well, I’m now 40 – I can’t realistically go on forever.’ What is the next 20 years going to be like for me?”

Does he still need snooker? “Less and less as I’ve got a bit older,” he says. “If I wasn’t to play any more, people would go: ‘Well he got to 40 and he had a pretty good innings.’ It wouldn’t be seen as like Eric Cantona or George Best, when they turned their back on football when possibly that was too early for people like them. We missed out on seeing them. If I was going to put a limit on it, I’d say probably 45 would be a good time. I’ll see if I can get another five years out of it if I can.”

Snooker is all about control. We put it to O’Sullivan there is a contrast between the control he demonstrates on the table and his rollercoaster life outside the sport.

“Absolutely, yeah,” he agrees, gesturing to the photo of his 25-year-old self. “At that stage in my life, everything was in control, there was nothing that could have got in the way. But over the past five, six, seven years certain things have happened that were out of my control and I haven’t been able to deal with it as well as I’d like to.

“But you learn to… it’s just life sometimes, and it does make you feel a little bit vulnerable, but then you also start to realise that maybe snooker isn’t everything. At some point you’ve got to put your health and life and your happiness first.”

After 25 years of digging for gold and grasping for control in low-lit snooker clubs and packed theatres, the addict with the aura – the talented and tormented O’Sullivan – has opened his eyes to the glittering moments beyond.

“It’s only a game,” he grins, eyes wide with the possibilities.

Watch the World Championship LIVE on Eurosport, with Colin Murray and analysis from Jimmy White and Ronnie O’Sullivan

The Crucible 2016 – Previews

As always, as soon as the draw is known, bloggers and journalists come up with their predictions and previews. Here is a small selection.

I have deliberately left out the ones by the betting companies. You will find hereafter the links to the full articles, and full quotes of the excerpts related to Ronnie.

Hector Nunns on inside-snooker

Five-time winner and red-hot tournament favourite O’Sullivan was handed David Gilbert in the first round. Gilbert is a fine player, but that contest could be all about how he handles the occasion and the stage. You suspect that the Rocket will feel it could have been worse.

David Caulfield on SnookerHQ

Ronnie O’Sullivan vs David Gilbert

While all the top 16 members would have been desperate to avoid the likes of Ding and Carter, conversely all the qualifiers would have been praying not to see their name paired with Ronnie O’Sullivan. Apologies, then, to the unlucky David Gilbert, who has the task of taking on the overwhelming favourite for this year’s title. Gilbert won a great battle with Jack Lisowski in the final round of qualifying and earlier in the season reached his maiden ranking event final at the International Championship. So it’s not like the 34 year-old is a complete outsider. Yet, it’s going to be oh so tricky a task for the Englishman. O’Sullivan was sensational upon his return to the sport earlier this year when he emerged victorious at a canter in both the Masters and Welsh Open. The 40 year-old is bidding for a sixth world crown to join the Steve Davis and Ray Reardon on joint second in the all-time list, and his draw, if we’re being honest, has been kind. O’Sullivan can’t meet prime rival Mark Selby until the semi-finals while the likes of Higgins, Trump and Robertson, who aren’t intimidated by the ‘Rocket’, are on the other side of the draw. O’Sullivan grows into tournaments such as these and if he gets past the opening two rounds, like he should, then beware the rest of the field. Still, whether he can sustain it right the way to very end, temperament intact, is always an additional query.

Prediction: O’Sullivan

….

Semi-Final Prediction: Ding to beat Higgins. O’Sullivan to beat Allen

Final Prediction: O’Sullivan to beat Ding

Snookerbacker on snookerbacker.com

Ronnie O’Sullivan v Dave Gilbert (Sunday 2.30pm and Monday 10am)

Make no mistake, this is one of the tougher draws for Ronnie. I’ve been an admirer of Dave Gilbert’s for many years and of late he’s been achieving results that he should probably have achieved a decade ago. I like the way he plays the game and his way around the table, he’ll be a test for Ronnie. The Rocket hasn’t been seen since he lost to Holt in the Grand Prix but was at his majestic best at the Welsh Open. They’ve even shifted a load of comps back to the UK next season to keep him happy, something that he isn’t always in Sheffield. As ever, we’ll know quite quickly how he is feeling, last year I think we all knew he wouldn’t win, the shoe incident and the chalk on the table tomfoolery were clues enough. I think he’ll probably be a different animal this year, he’s been putting in the hours and is obviously the man they all have to better, if he’s on song, who can stop him? Oh yes, and stand by for BBC Gilbert O’Sullivan puns, you have been warned. 

Predicted Winner: O’Sullivan 10-4

World Championship 2016 – building up

Only three days left before the World Championship starts and the last 16 qualifiers aren’t know yet. In fact 16 matches are going to their conclusion today, with the 16 qualifiers being drawn again the 16 seeds tomorrow.

In my opinion, this isn’t ideal by any means. The qualifiers, coming out of three long matches, under the highest of pressure will only have a couple of days to recover and sort everything out, hotels, practice etc. They will be tired and this isn’t giving them the best chances right from the start. The media have only a couple of days to really build up the tournament coverage. Ideally they would pick the best ties of round one to promote the event around those matches, but the draw isn’t known yet. So they have to wait and meanwhile the best they can do is to interview some seeds, Stuart Bingham, the defending champion being the main man. Inevitably as well they will discuss Ronnie…

Here are two interviews by Stuart

Ronnie O’Sullivan: Stuart Bingham says Stephen Hendry is still greatest

By Owen Phillips

BBC Sport

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Ronnie O’Sullivan was beaten by Stuart Bingham in the second round of the 2015 World Championship

2016 World Snooker Championship

Venue: The Crucible Theatre, Sheffield Dates: 16 April – 2 May

Ronnie O’Sullivan must match Stephen Hendry’s World Championship title haul to be considered snooker’s greatest player, according to reigning world champion Stuart Bingham.

Hendry, who retired in 2012, has seven Crucible titles to his name, while O’Sullivan has won snooker’s showpiece event on five occasions.

“Ronnie is the best player to ever pick up a cue,” Bingham, 39, told BBC Sport.

“But to be the greatest player you have to beat the records.”

O’Sullivan, 40, is looking to go within one world title of the Scot, who won a total of 36 ranking titles, when this year’s event gets under way on Saturday.

Bingham added: “Hendry was a born winner; he only loved winning and he was more ruthless than anyone. Ronnie is the most talented and the best in the world, but to be the greatest ever you need titles.”

The Rocket’s aura

Bingham beat O’Sullivan on his way to lifting snooker’s biggest prize in Sheffield for the first time last year and he is in no doubt that the unpredictable talents of the 28-time ranking event winner make him the man to beat once again.

“He is the only person in the game who has the aura that Stephen Hendry and Steve Davis had,” Bingham added.

“Whatever tournament he enters, he is probably going to be favourite – and rightly so. He is the best player in the world.”

Stuart Bingham had only ever gone beyond the second round of the World Championship once in eight attempts until his run at the Crucible last year

Believing you can topple a class act

Bingham said the game’s best players were capable of toppling O’Sullivan, but it was also a matter of believing it, and lasting the distance at the 17-day tournament.

“Anyone now in the top 16 will fancy their chances,” the Basildon-born potter said. “But, when it comes down to the crunch, to actually beat Ronnie, it’s a different ball game.

“I remember saying to Ronnie last year: ‘How have you won it five times?’ I won it last year and it took me three weeks to get over it.

“How he has done it five times I will never know. It just shows you what a class act he is.”

And this one from BT sport

Stuart Bingham: If Ronnie O’Sullivan is mentally right, we’re playing for second

Stuart Bingham predicts the Betfred World Championship could be a procession for Ronnie O’Sullivan if the five-time winner is hungry for a sixth title.

Stuart Bingham predicts the Betfred World Championship could be a procession for Ronnie O’Sullivan if the five-time winner is hungry for a sixth title.
Defending champion Bingham toppled O’Sullivan in the quarter-finals last year before knocking out Judd Trump in the final four and flooring Shaun Murphy with a fightback in the final.
He cannot face O’Sullivan until the final this year, after the pair were kept apart in the draw.
But Bingham accepts O’Sullivan, who has landed the Masters and Welsh Open trophies already this year, remains the man to beat.
“Whatever tournament Ronnie enters, he’s going to be favourite,” Bingham told Press Association Sport.
“He’s the best player in the world at the moment so if he’s mentally right everyone’s playing for second. He is that good.
“There’s maybe four or five people who can stand up to him and beat him, and I saw he could play Shaun in the quarter-finals. Shaun is one of those who on his game can beat anyone.”
As he prepares to head back to Sheffield and tackle his first-round match on Saturday’s opening day, Bingham revealed he has been on a daily diet of playbacks of his surprise Crucible success.
“It’s been maybe about 350 days since I lifted the title, so it’s about 300 times that I’ve watched it, it’s been near enough every day,” he said.
“I was so in the zone at the time that it seemed to fly by. I remember potting championship ball and hearing the crowd erupt, and that stays in the memory bank, but it all happened too quickly and I can’t believe it’s been a year already.”
The Basildon cueman, now 39, will be aiming to crack the notorious ‘Crucible curse’.
No world champion has won his first two titles back to back since the tournament moved to its current home in 1977.
He knows the danger too that comes with being the man in possession, having caused one of the greatest snooker upsets on his World Championship debut in 2000. Bingham ended the reign of seven-time winner Stephen Hendry on the opening day that year, and the Scot never triumphed again in Sheffield.
The Essex potter knows that having turned from the hunter to the hunted, he cannot afford to let his focus slip once beckoned into the arena at 10am on the opening morning as the reigning world champion.
“Obviously I’m going to be nervous but I’ll hopefully settle down as quick as possible,” Bingham said.
“It may take me two or three frames to forget where I am and what I am, and just try to get on with the job in hand.
“I remember playing that match 16 years ago against Stephen Hendry and the first thing on my mind was not to get whitewashed, and as soon as I won that first frame I settled down and was enjoying the whole match.
“That’s what I did last year to win it, so that might be the key, to just go out there and enjoy myself.”
Bingham promised wife Michelle a new home and a new car after scooping his life-changing victory.
As it turned out, he upgraded his wheels and Michelle was passed the keys to Bingham’s old car.
“Well, I got the new car,” Bingham said.
“I ended up getting an (Audi) RS6, and she had my (Audi) Q7 – that ain’t a bad hand-me-down. The new house is happening in the middle of May, and it’s got a nice snooker room at the bottom of the garden which is a win-win for both us.”

I can’t say I agree with Stuart here in either of those interviews.

To me the “greatest” debate is tedious and vain. If only World titles count, then why not Joe Davis rather than Hendry? After all he won the World Championship 15 times, didn’t he?  The structure of the game was different, the opposition as well. Yes, true, but the same could be said about Hendry, who was already a World Champion when the game was opened, who had won it six times when Ronnie was only 20, Williams and Higgins 21… and who, for whatever reason,  won only two majors after that despite being only 27 at the time.

The  simple thing is, all of Joe Davis, Steve Davis, Stephen Hendry and Ronnie are greats of the game, all of them stamped their mark on their era, all of them were game changers during their time.

The other thing I disagree about is that the World Championship could be a procession for Ronnie. The World Championship is NEVER a procession for anyone, it’s a very long tournament, it’s a lot of frames over 17 days, it’s the elite of the game competing in it. It’s very,very hard to win, whoever you are.

Ronnie will be at Sheffield Doc/Fest on Monday 13 June 2016

Here is the event website, where you can find information about the various speakers and performers, as well as buy tickets

And this is the excerpt related to Ronnie’s participation:

RONNIE O’SULLIVAN IN CONVERSATION

Mon 13 Jun / 17:45 / Crucible Theatre

ronnie

©Tom Jenkins

We welcome the maverick and phenomenally gifted snooker player Ronnie the Rocket back to Sheffield for a talk with Guardian journalist Simon Hattenstone. Never hiding the fact that he came from an imperfect background and daring to be critical of the snooker world at large, Ronnie O’Sullivan has always been an incredible player and fascinating public figure. Hear about the documentaries that have inspired him throughout his life and snooker career.

 

Casablanca – First Snooker Legends in North Africa

Megarama Ain Diab, Casablanca – 9 April 2016

The exhibition first part was a match, best of five,  between Morocco and England , each country represented by 2 players. England won 3-1 but the Morrocan team did itself proud, Choouki even took a frame off Jimmy with an excellent 60+ break. A lot of credit goes to the Sheffield Academy in Casablanca that provides excellent facilities – they have three star tables – and support to its players, and who were the hosts of this event, the first of its kind in North Africa.

The second part was a challenge match between Ronnie and Jimmy, a best of seven which Ronnie won 4-1. The players agreed to play a 6th frame, which Jimmy won with a great 128. Ronnie had 3 centuries during the evening.

It was a great night and the Moroccan fans and organisers made everyone feel wonderfully welcome. Thank you!

Here is the facebook album with all pictures of the evening

Ronnie tweeted yesterday:

I love Morocco, and the Arabic culture, what an amazing place this is heres my view from my hotel room

Casa9

And today, his friend Mike, who was with him here tweeted:

So long Casablanca we had great time @ronnieo147 @Snookerlegends @jimmywhite147

SoLongCasa

Ronnie was clearly impressed by the hospitality, and rightly so, but maybe there is another side of the city he didn’t get the opportunity to witness. I took a long walk in Casa yesterday, and here is my “tourist” picture album on facebook. A contrasting city, where splendour mixes with sheer poverty and misery.

Pictures of the Ronnie v Jimmy match