Ronnie O’Sullivan said he was suffering dizzy spells despite thrashing Marco Fu 6-0 with a sublime performance to ease into the quarter-finals of the Masters.
The 42-year-old, looking to extend his record number of Masters titles to eight, hit three century breaks.
Fu did not pot a ball in the opening four frames, with his only five points coming through a foul by his opponent.
O’Sullivan scored a total of 649 points to 35 for Fu in a match which had just an hour and 22 minutes of playing time.
“To be honest with you I’m really struggling. I’ve got a virus or something, and I feel very dizzy,” said O’Sullivan.
“I was just playing off instinct. I thought ‘don’t stop, don’t think, just pot balls’. I’ve been feeling like that the last five or six days.
“I think it’s maybe a lack of magnesium, that’s what my nutritionist told me. I’ve been eating well the last four months and maybe overdone the exercise and made myself a bit ill.”
Restricting their opponent to just 35 points in a best of 11 is a new record. The previous record was 39 … which was what Ronnie allowed Ricky Walden in the QF, here in Alexandra Palace in 2014. And a number of those 35 points were actually “scored” by Ronnie in fouls… Heaven knows what would have happened if he was fully fit!
Seriously, Ronnie was absolutely fantastic today and got a standing ovation when leaving the arena.
and here is the report on Worldsnooker:
Ronnie O’Sullivan fired three centuries and four more breaks over 50 in a marvellous display as he thrashed Marco Fu 6-0 in the first round of the Dafabet Masters.
Fu scored 35 points in six frames and had a top break of just 8, though in truth there was little he could do against an opponent in imperious form. Runs of 120, 121, 50, 74, 112, 75 and 53 helped O’Sullivan seal victory in just 80 minutes in front of a spellbound sell-out crowd at Alexandra Palace.
The Rocket goes through to face Mark Allen in the quarter-finals on Thursday afternoon. Chigwell’s O’Sullivan is aiming for his third Masters title in a row and eighth of his career, having set a new record of seven crowns last year when he beat Joe Perry in the final.
Playing arguably the best snooker of his career at the age of 42, O’Sullivan has won three titles since October, at the English Open, Shanghai Masters and UK Championship. The last of those put him level with Stephen Hendry on 18 Triple Crown victories, another record he can surpass this week. If he maintains today’s form, O’Sullivan will be almost impossible to stop.
“When I get going I’m pretty decent,” said O’Sullivan after his 68th Masters match, of which he has won 52. “The bigger the tournament, the more the big players rise to it. There’s Mark Selby, me and John Higgins who are comfortable with being the best player in the world. Everyone else has spells where they win, and then the pressure gets a bit much for them and they can’t consistently win the big events. Maybe they don’t relish a situation where they are favourites.”
O’Sullivan also expressed his sadness about the death of Jethro Salmon, a young table fitter who passed away this week. He said: “It’s the most horrendous thing, to lose someone at the age of 25 who has been on the circuit with us. Before the match there was a feeling that it is a really horrible day. My heart goes out to his family, we’re with them all the way. The snooker circuit is one big family and we’ve lost a member.
“I’m not a philosophical person but sometimes you have to realise what is important, and things like snooker, how many Masters I have won, how many Worlds I have won – it really doesn’t matter. What’s most important is that you live life to the maximum because you don’t know what is around the corner.”
Fu said: “I struggled a little bit today but if I was on my game then I still would have been beaten 6-0, Ronnie played really well. I’m not too disappointed about the result because of the way he was playing.
“He is probably unstoppable. He was hitting the ball very well, he was on form straight away. His level of play doesn’t surprise me anymore.”
Here are some more images thanks to Tai Chengzhe
Here is the match, with full BBC coverage
and the ES pundits coverage
Preview:
MSI:
Review:
And after his match, Ronnie apparently did some filming with Neal Foulds…
Not sure bringing a dizzy guy at the top of the roof is such a bright idea, uh?
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