Northern Ireland Open 2016 – Day 1 aboard the Titanic and a happy Ronnie wins in last 128

A number of top players are giving this one a miss – Mark Selby, Stuart Bingham, Neil Robertson, Judd Trump and Ali Carter either didn’t enter or withdrew – but both last Saturday’s finalists are in Belfast and both were playing , impressively well, on day 1.

It was a bit of a mixed bag and a strange day at the Titanic: 30 matches were played and 15 were won by the lowest seeded player, which is very unusual. Here are the results:

All detailed results are on Cuetracker as usual.

Day 1 action report by Worldsnooker:

Tuesday 15 Nov 2016 12:11AM

Ronnie O’Sullivan and Jimmy White will meet in a tantalising last 64 clash at the Coral Northern Ireland Open after both secured wins on day one in Belfast.

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The Rocket wasted little time in his 4-1 victory over world number 117 David John. The five-time World Champion took just under an hour to secure the win which included runs of 131, 86 and 133.  That set up a first ranking meeting with the Whirlwind since the 2010 World Open.

O’Sullivan remarked: “Jimmy’s one of my best mates on the circuit. He’s a great player. I’m just enjoying playing at the moment. It doesn’t matter who I’m against, but I haven’t played Jimmy in a long time.

“I had four or five days at home the other week practising which I think really helped. I feel like my game is coming together bit by bit, but I’m giving myself to January or February for it to come.

White secured his second round berth with a tense 4-2 defeat of Welshman Gareth Allen.

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The Whirlwind trailed 57-19 in the opener before making a classic counter clearance of 47 to go 1-0 ahead. He snatched the second frame on the final ball as well, holding his nerve to clear the colours. As the game progressed it became more tense. With White leading 3-2, both players missed chances as the balls went into tight positions. However, it was White who eventually got over the line to seal his place in the last 64.

John Higgins extended his winning streak to nine matches with a 4-0 demolition of Paul Davison. The Wizard of Wishaw’s season has burst into life over the last couple of weeks, claiming back to back titles at the inaugural China Championship and the Champion of Champions event where he beat Ronnie O’Sullivan in the final.

Higgins made contributions of 71, 70 and 107 as he made light work of the world number 92.

I’m feeling really good,” said Higgins. “I know every tournament is different but I kept playing roughly the same way that I’ve done in the last couple of tournaments so really pleasing.

“Any win against Ronnie in a final is a special occasion. That was another one. I know he didn’t play his best but it was still pleasing to win 10-7.

Luca Brecel recorded one of the best wins of his career against Shaun Murphy. The talented Belgian played some inspired snooker as he limited his opponent to just eight points throughout the match.

The 21-year-old made contributions of 83, 83, 117 and 55 to progress. Until now last year’s German Masters runner-up Brecel had struggled to find his best form in 2016/17. However, a win over Jamie Cope in the last 64 will ensure his best run of the campaign.

Here is Ronnie’s match if you wish to watch it (again):

2016 Northern Ireland Open: Ronnie O’Sullivan – David John

I thoroughly enjoyed it, watching it this morning. Ronnie pulled some really outstanding shots out there, but the one thing that still worries me a bit is that he almost always leaves something from his break-off and this could cost him when he comes against the top players. However, himself was quite happy with the way he played as you can hear from this snippet on Eurosport.

 Images courtsey of Tai Chengzhe – Thanks Tai! 

I traveled most of the day, so the only match I was able to watch “live” was Jimmy White versus Gareth Allen.

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This was in total contrast with Ronnie’s match: Jimmy played some fantastic shots, but he also played some real shockers and, worryingly, his form seemed to deteriorate as the match went on. There was little consistency in Jimmy’s game. Gareth Allen was, quite simply, very poor: although at a point he had potted more balls and scored more points than Jimmy, he consistently badly missed the key shots.

Other than that I only saw a bit of John Higgins dominant performance against Paul Davison when at the Brussels airport: indeed the match was on a big screen there for all to enjoy!

Ronnie reveals what happened at the Crucible last April … and talks about his book.

Today, the Times and Sunday magazine publishes this interview and it’s both disturbing and heatbreaking …

You’ll need a subscription to read it on the site, but the subscription is free.

The Interview: Ronnie O’Sullivan

“I cracked, smashed my cue, broke my hand, cried, I was so weak”

Matt Rudd

November 13 2016, 12:01am, 

The Sunday Times

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It’s the World Snooker Championship in April 2016, the biggest tournament in the calendar, but Ronnie O’Sullivan, the greatest snooker player of all time, is in his dressing room, crying. His cue lies on the floor in pieces.

He had just won his first-round match and he’d won it with relative ease. But as soon as it was over, he had stormed out of the Crucible arena without explanation. When the time came for his obligatory post-match interviews, he was a no-show.

“I’ve not spoken about this before,” he says when we meet several months later at the Romford snooker club where he practises, “but I’ve got nothing to hide. I was having a breakdown. At the end of that match, I couldn’t shake hands with that guy. I couldn’t even look at the crowd. I couldn’t face anybody.

“I’d had the worst 18 months I’d had in a long time. Not because of snooker, but through personal circumstances. I was in a very difficult position, all to do with money.”

In February, O’Sullivan tweeted that he’d been conned out of £125,000 by a bankrupt businessman, but that, he says, was just the start of it.

“And it all came to a head at the World Championship. That’s how it is. It’s the biggest tournament you can play and it doesn’t matter who you are, you start to feel the pressure. And I cracked.”

“I got back to my dressing room, smashed my cue and punched a wall. I thought I’d broken my hand. It was my way of saying, ‘I’m out.’ Because I was out. I broke down, crying. I was just so weak. My two friends who were in the dressing room with me said I wasn’t going out to speak to the press.”

O’Sullivan was scared of the repercussions. “That’s the fear that’s put into the game. If you don’t fulfil your obligations, they say, we’re going to make an example of you.” But his friends insisted. Instead, they spirited him out of the Crucible, out of Sheffield and away.

Since bursting onto the professional stage as a precocious 16-year-old, O’Sullivan has always been the man to beat. He is Ronnie the Rocket, a genius at the table, fast like Hurricane Higgins but precise like Stephen Hendry. He is the game’s superstar. Its saviour. Box-office gold.

He has struggled with the expectation that goes with it, though. His life has always been about coping — coping with the pressure of his career and a string of personal traumas. And sometimes he doesn’t cope. Sometimes he teeters on the brink of madness.

To understand why, we must go back to 1992, the year he turned professional and the year his father was found guilty of murder. Ronnie Sr had been his mentor — relentless, like Emmanuel Agassi or Earl Dennison Woods. “If I won something and thought I was the bee’s knees, my dad would say, ‘Forget it, that’s history. It’s over. To be a champion, you need to win the next one.’ ”

Throughout his childhood, Ronnie Sr drove the car while Ronnie Jr ran behind it. Three miles a day, come rain, come more rain. “I hated it,” says O’Sullivan. “I never wanted to do it, but he made me. I think he knew that if I didn’t have that strict discipline instilled in me as a youngster, I could easily have gone off the rails.”

All the same, he says his childhood was a happy one. His parents met at Butlins — his father was a chef, his Sicilian-born mother, Maria, a chalet maid — and Ronnie’s early years were spent in relative poverty on an estate in the East End. But then his father, whom he has described as a cross between Del Boy, Joe Pesci and Ray Winstone, got into adult entertainment. He built up a string of sex shops in Soho and the family business became lucrative. It allowed them to move from Ilford to the plusher part of Chigwell. It also meant there was space for a snooker room at the bottom of the garden, which his father built for him when he was just seven.

“It didn’t mean nothing to me then, but when I think about it now it was quite a colourful childhood,” he says. “Our garage was always filled up with boxes of magazines and videos. I think I sold my first adult film when I was 10. It was just a business.”

When he wasn’t helping out, he was practising under the keen eye of his father. And then, one day, his father was gone, sent down for stabbing Charlie Kray’s driver to death after an argument in a Chelsea nightclub.

“At the time, I thought it was totally crazy,” he says. “An 18-year sentence and it was just an accident. It was a fight between two people. There was no premeditation at all.” Not long after that, his mother also went to prison for tax evasion. O’Sullivan and his eight-year-old sister, Danielle, had lost their stable childhood.

The effect on O’Sullivan was profound. For the next two decades, he searched for a means of escape. First, he took the most obvious route with drugs and alcohol. He would clean up in time for tournaments and relapse as soon as they were over.

When he is in the zone, playing savant-like, he is unbeatable. He has 28 ranking titles to his name, second only to Hendry. Even so, he is the first to admit that his career has been hampered by outside intrusions. “I’ve probably lost a total of seven years from my career just from being all over the shop,” he says. “I was in hot water almost every tournament.”

In 1996, he was found guilty of assault after an official at the Crucible asked his guest to leave the press room. The same year, he upset a Canadian opponent by playing (and winning) left-handed. In 1998, he was stripped of his Irish Masters title after testing positive for cannabis. He almost forfeited a match in 2005 for putting a towel over his head while his opponent was at the table. He’s been sanctioned for walking out of tournaments, playing in his socks and making lewd comments at press conferences during tournaments.

“Look, there’s no smoke without fire,” he says after we’ve run through his rap sheet. “For a long time, I didn’t know how to restrain myself from something that I knew was going to cause controversy. And I didn’t care about the consequences.”

Throughout all of this, he also experimented with Christianity, Islam and Buddhism. In 2003, he had to deny reports that he had become a Muslim. He also joined various support groups — anything with an “Anonymous” at the end. And the search wasn’t entirely fruitless. He found love at Narcotics Anonymous and for a while he was happy. But after eight years and two children, that relationship ended in 2008. After a “sapping and drawn-out” custody battle in which O’Sullivan sought and won greater access to his young son and daughter, he made a big decision. He would escape altogether. He would quit snooker.

“I’ve made my decision,” he told the BBC on the eve of winning the World Championship in 2012. “This might — might — be my last time here.”

For the next year, he returned to the discipline he had hated as a child. He fell in love with running, the anonymity of it, the way it released endorphins. By the end of the year, he was training every other day, winning county-level races. When he wasn’t running, he was volunteering on a smallholding farm in Epping Forest, looking after pigs. “I have been doing about three days a week,” he said at the time. “It has been kind of the complete opposite to what I was going through the last couple of years in snooker. I didn’t want stress.”

Of course, he couldn’t stay away for ever. He returned to the World Championship the following year and won it again with virtually no preparation. The break had done him good — or so it seemed, until that night at the same tournament earlier this year.

Today, it is difficult to imagine O’Sullivan smashing up his dressing room. The 40-year-old is relaxed, happy even. He chats with the candid honesty of a man who has spent a lot of time in therapy, which of course he has. But that day in April, his mindset was altogether more fragile.

After his friends whisked him out of his dressing room, he checked in at the Nightingale Hospital, a private mental-health facility in central London. For the first three days, he refused any drugs that would make him feel drowsy. He had to be back in Sheffield that weekend for his next match.

He slept for three days straight, only to wake on the Thursday still feeling exhausted. He couldn’t talk. He couldn’t summon the energy to leave his room for a cigarette. That was when the doctor put her foot down.

“You’ve got thoughts going round and round,” she said. “We need to slow that down.”

Eventually, O’Sullivan capitulated. He took the anti-anxiety drugs the doctor had been trying to prescribe, and began to feel better. The cycle of negativity was broken. The following day, he was on a train back to Sheffield. On Saturday, he lost a deciding frame to Barry Hawkins. It was the first time in 11 meetings that Hawkins had come out on top. But this time, O’Sullivan made it to the post-match press conference.

What is obvious is that O’Sullivan is not best left to brood, which is a problem because there is plenty of time to brood when you’re playing snooker. He needs to be occupied. He’s tried drugs, drink, running, religion and pigs. For the last year, it has been writing. For O’Sullivan is now a crime writer. Or at least he’s been working closely with a crime writer to produce his first novel.

They say that everyone’s first novel is semi-autobiographical, and Framed, a “gritty whodunnit set in the dog-eat-dog underworld of 1980s Soho”, is no exception. Frankie, the hero, runs a snooker club. When his brother is accused of murder, he sets out to prove his innocence.

“I can’t get away from the fact that my dad was in prison, and that I’ve had my ups and downs,” he says. “So a lot of what’s in the book relates to me. The setting is my setting. I grew up in Essex, but Soho was like a second home. I remember when I was about 10, we went on a school trip up Soho and we were walking past one of those shops with the streamers in the doorway. I put my head in and said, ‘All right, Tony, how you doing?’ ”

“Whenever I was on holidays, my dad would take me with him and he’d drop me off at the Ambassador club on Dean Street. After I’d practised, we’d wander around for a couple of hours. He had several sex shops around Wimpole Street, Walker’s Court, Dean Street and Old Compton Street.”

The novel’s setting is autobiographical, but so is Frankie’s suspicion of authority. It’s telling that the most unpleasant villain of the piece is not the evil crime boss or any of his sadistic henchmen. It’s a weasel of a detective called Snaresby, identifiable by the excess of bad aftershave he wears.

Even before his father went to prison, O’Sullivan had been brought up to be suspicious of the police. “He instilled in me that it was us against them,” he says. “In the early days, they’d raid the shops and try to make life difficult for him. [O’Sullivan Sr was always skirting close to the boundaries of the Obscene Publications Act — when he was ordered to put “modesty stars” on certain photographs, he put them on the model’s knees and elbows.]

“Some people got an easy ride and got left alone, but not him. Why do some people get stung and not others? Who knows why? Then, when he went away, I got dragged along with the idea that it was me and him against the system.”

When his mother also went to prison, his distrust of authority only increased. “I thought, fair do’s with dad, you do the crime, you do the time. But then they took mum, and everyone was saying they wouldn’t because Danielle was only eight, but they did anyway. And that was really hard to take.”

At the age of 17, O’Sullivan and his friends were arrested for abduction. “I didn’t have a clue what they were talking about, but apparently I had kidnapped some woman,” he says. “We were completely innocent, but I spent a night in a police cell. Of course, it made the papers and you had to read right to the end to get to the phrase ‘wrongly accused’. That was when I really became convinced that it was us against the Establishment.”

Soho, where my dad had sex shops, was like a second home. And I can’t get away from the fact that he went to prison

The novel has clearly been therapeutic for O’Sullivan. And that’s the whole key to understanding why snooker’s most gifted player is also famous for being its bad boy. Snooker is all about the pressure and how you handle it. As he puts it: “It’s not an endorphin sport. It’s about controlling your emotions. A thought goes in and you go, ‘Shh!’ Then another. Then another. When you get back on the table, the only reason you pot is because you left your emotions in your seat.”

In a 2007 semi-final against Mark Selby, a notoriously cautious, attritional player, O’Sullivan resorted to counting the minute, raised dots on the handle of a spoon whenever he was off the table. He couldn’t watch his opponent, but he couldn’t look away either. “By letting them know that this guy’s pissing you off, you give off a scent that you’re not up for it,” he says. “So I counted the dots instead. I could have sat there until three in the morning if I had to. Because there were 108 dots and, if I miscounted, I had to go back to the beginning. And if I did count 108 dots, I could still say, ‘Hold on, there might have been 109. I’d better start again.’ ”

If you took the snooker table away, this would be a textbook example of insanity. “It was total madness,” he agrees, laughing. “I know that.”

Six months on from his breakdown in Sheffield, O’Sullivan is still working with the renowned sports psychologist Steve Peters, the man he credits with helping him cope with the pressure of the game. But nothing he has said during our afternoon together suggests he ever enjoys it.

When I ask if he would encourage his nine-year-old son, a third Ronnie, to play, he reels at the idea. Football, yes. Snooker, no way. In fact, he wouldn’t encourage anyone’s children to play.

I’ve probably lost seven years just from being all over the shop. I was in hot water almost every tournament

“Any other sport you like, I tell them. Football. Tennis. Golf. Stay away from this game. Because somewhere down the line you’re going to wake up one day and think, ‘F*** me.’ Stuck in a room on your own, six days a week, five hours a day, not really speaking to anyone. It ain’t very healthy for your development as a person.”

Is there anything he enjoys about snooker? “The one thing I’m happy about in this job is that I can choose the hours I work. I’m my own boss. And I suppose it’s allowed me to travel and get away from where I live. But that’s it.”

In which case, why doesn’t he chuck it all in for good? “Well, I suppose I could,” he says. “Kind of. I could live well within my means. But I’ve still got two young children, still got a girlfriend [he became engaged to the actress Laila Rouass in 2013], still got people who want to be looked after.”

And, of course, he still likes to win the game it sounds as if he hates. “Yeah, it’s a complete paradox. If you look at the practice and you look at the travelling and you look at the times you’re just sitting in a hotel smoking when you don’t want to be smoking, thinking, ‘Oh, I could be home now, in the forest, doing a run’ — but you’re in China, with jet lag, walking round like a zombie for six days, you get pissed off and you think, ‘What am I doing?’

“But then you have those moments when it clicks. You get on the table and it goes and you just think, ‘I am flying. This is what I do.’ ”

John Higgins beats Ronnie to win the Champion of Champions 2016

John Higgins put an end to Ronnie’s unbeaten record in the Champion of Champions yesterday, beating him by 10-7 in the Final.

Images by Worldsnooker (on twitter)  and Tai Chengzhe – Thanks Tai! 

Ronnie edged the first session by 5-4, but, really, there was nothing to separate the players: both made a few mistakes and both scored when in the balls. You could feel that they were both a bit tense and, maybe, tired. Bizarrely, John was the one with the highest pot success, and, Ronnie was the one with the best safety success.

The second session was different: whilst Ronnie continued to struggle with concentration at times and to make the odd mistake, John came out with the type of form he had shown the day before, and that made a lot of difference. There is no doubt that John was the better player in that session and deserved the win. So, I can only say: congratulations John Higgins.

Stephen Hendry did say something interesting  before the second session: he stated that whilst both players have huge respect for each other, their  mindset was different. Ronnie, he said, would be acutely aware of John’s ability and it might affect him, John would have none of those doubts and be confident he can beat him. I believe that this is very true. The only way to make John Higgins doubt, and falter, is to put him under real pressure, to bully him at the table, and Ronnie was not able to do that yesterday.

If you look at the stats, you will see that it was a high quality match, despite the mistakes:

Scores(John Higgins first): 75(75)-0; 19-69(68); 74(74)-3; 1-100(88); 0-90(90); 79(79)-0; 74(65)-4; 29-88(61); 48-82; 62(60)-23; 64(63)-21; 0-77(74); 88(83)-0; 0-134(130); 76(76)-0; 86(86)-1; 113(58)-0

John made 10 breaks over 50 in 10 frames he won, Ronnie made 6 breaks over 60, including a magnificent 130, the only century of the match, in the 7 frames he won. That’s some standard.

All detailed results from the tournament are on Cuetracker as usual.

Here are the players quotes after the match (source Worldsnooker):

I am delighted to put my name on the list of Champion of Champions winners,” said Higgins. “It has been a good two weeks and you have to roll with it when it is going for you.

“I can’t speak for Ronnie but I was buzzed up coming into play. I just wish my old man was still here to see me take part in these finals,” Higgins added, referring to his father John who passed away in 2011.

“I thought I had missed the boat at 5-4, he missed a couple but I never took advantage. I was thinking, is that going to give him confidence and then he will go on a roll? I stuck with it and felt great coming into tonight.

“When I play like that, there is no greater feeling. You get in the balls and think you are going to clear up at every chance. I missed a couple at the end but potted a good long red to swing it back my way and finish it off. There is no better feeling than doing it in front of a packed audience, playing against somebody as good as Ronnie.”

O’Sullivan, still seeking his first title of the season, was gracious in defeat. He said: “Well played to John, he played fantastic all week – he was by far the best player of the week. I tried to hang on in there today and make a game of it. John is on a roll at the minute, he is really starting to play as he did a few years ago, so for me he is probably the best player in the world at the moment with the way he is playing.

“I need to find some consistency if I am going to win tournaments again. It is ok playing in spells but you get found out playing players like John. Against most players I might have had a chance of winning but against world-class opposition I made too many mistakes.”

Watch the match (again) here:

And the punditry

MissingClip 2016 CoC: preview of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – John Higgins match (Session1)

MissingClip 2016 CoC: review of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – John Higgins match (Session1)

MissingClip 2016 CoC: preview of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – John Higgins match (Session2)

MissingClip 2016 CoC: MSI of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – John Higgins match (Session2)

And the Trophy ceremony with interviews of both players:

MissingClip 2016 CoC: review of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – John Higgins match (Session2, trophy ceremony)

As usual when Ronnie loses, there were some totally uncalled for posts on social media, claiming that he couldn’t be bothered, and had given up. I can only suppose that many of them come from sore “betting” losers. If you’re not bothered, you don’t get to a final, and you are not down on yourself after losing, like Ronnie very clearly was. Ronnie played properly throughout, was very patient and never surrendered to the temptation to push the boat out. He wasn’t good enough on the day against a high quality, on form, John Higgins. It’s that simple.

Champion of Champions 2016 – Day 5 – Ronnie and John Higgins win their Semi Final

Yesterday, we were treated with two great semi-final:  John Higgins beat Ding Junhui in a deciding frame, Ronnie got the better of Mark Allen by 6-2 with an outstanding performance.

Ronnie and John have played each other countless times and Ronnie is slightly ahead in their head-to-head. More importantly, maybe, is that they have met 16 times in a final, with Ronnie winning 10 for 6 to John, including their sole World Final in 2011.

Here are the official reports from the event website.

Higgins Into Final

John Higgins progressed to the final of the Dafabet Champion of Champions, edging out Ding Junhui in the deciding frame of a high-quality best-of-11 encounter at Coventry’s Ricoh Arena.

Scotland’s Higgins will now face the winner of this evening’s semi-final between Ronnie O’Sullivan and Mark Allen over 19 frames tomorrow.

mg_4388-300x200Higgins and Ding kept in touch with one another throughout the match, sharing the first ten frames to set up a decider. Ding made four centuries along the way, including a 135 in the second frame and a 142 to take a 4-3 lead after the seventh.

The Dragon’, at the Dafabet Champion of Champions as 6-Reds and Shanghai Masters champion, could have gone 5-3 up in the eighth. Higgins had taken a 60-1 lead but was pegged back to SCORE before eventually taking the frame on the pink.

In the decider Higgins rattled off a quick 28 before missing a blue he would normally expect to make, but the Scot took his chance at his second visit and wrapped the frame up at 69-1 with a closing 41.

The ‘Wizard of Wishaw’ only joined the line-up for the tournament last week, and the China Championship winner was delighted to continue his rich vein of form despite a classy performance by Ding.

“I am over the moon,” said Higgins. “The last three or four times I have played Ding he has played like that, so I knew I had to play really good myself to have a chance. It was a good game.

mg_4382-300x200“I enjoyed watching Ding play – he made four centuries and he was totally flawless. Ronnie and Steve are the greatest break builders the game has had and Ding is probably like Steve Davis – he is never more than four or five inches away from the object ball in each break, and you just sit and admire it.

“I know how good a player Ding is, so to beat him in that way and the way he played, it is one of your best wins because we all know how good he is.

“I will try and ride this form as best as I can, and hopefully I will play well tomorrow. Ronnie against Mark will be a great game tonight, Mark is a player who isn’t frightened of anybody and with conditions the way they are, that will suit Mark Allen with the little touch shots, little cannons and little flicks – he will be deadly there tonight and it will be a great game.”

The Dafabet Champion of Champions continues with the second semi-final between O’Sullivan and Allen this evening. The best of 19 final takes place over two sessions on Saturday.

Rampant Ronnie Sets Up Higgins Final

Ronnie O’Sullivan played mesmerising snooker as he raced into the Dafabet Champion of Champions final, beating Mark Allen 6-2 to set up a clash against John Higgins at Coventry’s Ricoh Arena tomorrow.

The five-time World champion scored breaks of 130, 124 and 109 on his way to victory – the sold-out crowd also treated to two tonnes from Allen, who will feel he barely had an opportunity to prevent ‘The Rocket’, who was displaying some of his very best snooker.

cocrosallen2When the Northern Irishman did have opportunities early in the match, he took them. Breaks of 100 and 109 kept him level with O’Sullivan at 2-2 at the interval. But after the break the Essex man scored quick breaks of 73, 129 and 109 to speed to 5-2 ahead and in the eighth frame he confirmed his place in the final.

O’Sullivan raised a laugh from the crowd as he literally threw the towel in after a 59 break in the final frame saw him seal his place in Saturday’s showpiece. It will be the 17th time ‘The Rocket’ has met Higgins in a final but the first since the 2007 Premier League; O’Sullivan has won ten of the previous 16.

“I felt in control of my game, which was nice because it has been a bit of a struggle lately,” said O’Sullivan. “Mark is a really top match player and he has been cueing really well for a few years, so I had to play well tonight to beat him.

“The first four frames I probably wasn’t playing a good enough standard to win it, but I played well after the interval.

“John and I came through at the same time, so we will have played each other quite a lot between us and he is an amazing player. John is the man in form. He has played steady all season and took it up a notch and played brilliantly in China.

“He is at the stage at the moment where he is very comfortable with his game and he will want to ride that wave as long as he can. I will have to play good, solid, snooker tomorrow.”

cocrosallen1

Allen commented: “That is what it is taking to beat me right now, so I have to take the positives out of it. I don’t feel that I made that many mistakes, one or two loose safeties, but against the top players that can be the difference.

“He never looked like missing. It is a match I have lost 6-2 but I enjoyed it. That is what you want to play snooker for, to play the very best players, on the biggest stage, in the big tournaments. Sometimes you have to hold your hand up and say your opponent was too good. If he plays like that he is going to be hard to stop.”

The Dafabet Champion of Champions final takes place over 19 frames on Saturday, with nine frames played in the afternoon session from 1pm and the matched played to a conclusion from 7pm in the evening session.

Ronnie’s Cue&A feature before the match … and some banter about his new book.

 2016 CoC: Ronnie O’Sullivan’s Cue&A

Ronnie v Mark Allen Semi-Final:

MissingClip

2016 CoC: preview of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – Mark Allen match

2016 CoC: Ronnie O’Sullivan – Mark Allen

MissingClip

2016 CoC: MSI of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – Mark Allen match

MissingClip

2016 CoC: review of the Ronnie O’Sullivan – Mark Allen

Obviously, Ronnie is not a fan of the 128 at the venue, nor he is a fan of the conveyor belt type of snooker event. The way he expressed himself, I expected outraged reactions on social media. I didn’t happen: actually other pros, including lower-ranked players, expressed their agreement with what he said.

Not long to wait …

Ronnie’s new book and first crime novel will be out next week, on November 17 and he has been promoting it these last days  … he knows how to treat his editors . They got some of the very best cakes in town!

Let’s hope the book is as good as the cakes! Anyway, I’m VERY curious.

Champion of Champions 2016 – Day 4 – John Higgins wins Group 2

Here is the official report on the event website:

Higgins Completes Final Four

John Higgins continued his rich vein of form as he beat Judd Trump to reach tomorrow’s semi-final of the Dafabet Champion of Champions where he will face Ding Junhui. It was the Scotsman’s first win over Trump in four attempts this season and he was good value for the win with a determined all-round game.

mg_4166-300x200Higgins had won the inaugural China Championship last Saturday, beating Stuart Bingham to claim the top prize, and he shook off any traces of jet lag with a strong showing. After a dull 31 minute opener, the match hit a gear as Higgins compiled a break of 112 to take a 2-0 lead before Trump came back at him with runs of 47 and 56 to take the third and 60 to square the match at the mid-session interval.

Higgins took the next two to move into a 4-2 lead before a run of 90 put him one away from victory.

Trump, who hadn’t done much wrong, trailed 52-0 in the eighth frame but a break of 79 reduced arrears. A 65 in the next made things interesting at 4-5 but Higgins saved his best to last with a 143 total clearance to take the win.

“I was feeling confident and going for my shots, trying to give Judd a game, and it worked for me,” said Higgins after the match.

mg_4175-300x200“I feel as if when I get in the balls I feel better than I did ten or 15 years ago. Sometimes when you are feeling confident and your eye is in you make it easier for yourself than the times when you are always out of position and every shot is hard. Just now, it looks as if I get to build some decent breaks.

“When we went to China the tables played really well; I got to the quarters of the International Championship but came up against an inspired Ding, and last week I kept it going and played well – that gave me some confidence.

“You have to ride the crest of a wave and enjoy it because you know sooner or later you will go back to normal and you are missing everything.

“Judd has never beaten me over 11 frames or more; he has beaten me over best of sevens and best of nines. I am trying to keep that in my head and try to keep the positives that he hasn’t beaten me over a best of 11, or 17 or 19.

“Ding is back playing the way we know he can play and it will be a tough, tough game.”

In the day’s opener Higgins had beaten Shaun Murphy 4-2 to progress. Although there were no big breaks it was good quality stuff. The highlight being a superb 48 from Higgins to help overturn a 77 points lead in the third frame, after conceding 42 points with seven fouls on the pink.

Trump enjoyed a 4-3 win over up-and-coming Anthony McGill in an outstanding meeting that produced three centuries – all from Trump – and plenty of mid-sized breaks. It was fitting that the decider was won with a 132 total clearance from the Bristol man.

Play continues tomorrow afternoon with the two semi-finals. At 1.00pm with Ding Junhui v John Higgins followed by Ronnie O’Sullivan v Mark Allen. Both matches are the best of 11 frames.