Ronnie beat Ali Carter by 10-7 yesterday evening to become the Masters Champion for a record extending 8th time. He is now both the youngest and the oldest winner of the prestigious invitational event. Maybe a bit surprisingly, it’s the first time he wins the UK and the Masters in the same season
Congratulations Ronnie!
Ronnie O’Sullivan became MrQ Masters champion for the eighth time in his career, after beating Ali Carter 10-7 in a thrilling final at Alexandra Palace.
At 48 years old, victory sees O’Sullivan surpass Stuart Bingham as the oldest ever Masters champion. Bingham was 43 when he defeated Carter in the 2020 final. That means O’Sullivan is now the oldest winner of all three Triple Crown events.
After his win at the UK Championship in December, O’Sullivan has now given himself an opportunity to win all three Triple Crown events in a single season for the first time in his career. He will achieve that feat if he wins the World Championship at the Crucible in May.
It’s a record extending eighth Masters triumph for the Rocket, who surpassed Stephen Hendry’s previous record of six when he defeated Joe Perry in 2017. He’s now won an unparalleled 23 Triple Crown titles, five clear of Hendry’s 18.
German Masters champion Carter suffers his fourth defeat in four Triple Crown finals. As well as today’s result, and his loss to Bingham four years ago, he was runner-up in two Crucible finals to O’Sullivan in 2008 and 2012. Carter leaves North London with the consolation of the £100,000 runner-up prize.
The evening session began with Carter holding a 5-3 advantage, after emerging ahead following a rapid afternoon of play. He took the opener this evening to extend his cushion to three frames at 6-3.
At that point the Rocket hit the after burners, making breaks of 58, 64 and 53 on his way to three on the bounce and parity at 6-6. The pair then went in for the mid-session interval, which appeared to come at the right time for Carter, who needed to wrest back momentum.
When play resumed, Carter regained his foothold in the tie, crafting a sublime 127 to edge back in front at 7-6. That century was his ninth of the tournament, which is a new record for the event. It moved Carter ahead of O’Sullivan who made eight in 2007 and 2009.
O’Sullivan responded by controlling the 14th to draw level once more. There was then a dramatic frame which swung back and forth, before Carter crucially overcut a pink to the middle. That allowed O’Sullivan to pounce and hit the front for the first time since the opening frame of the match.
The 40-time ranking event winner then compounded that mistake from Carter with a steely 89 to move one from victory at 9-7. Carter had a number of chances in the 17th, but failed to make any count, with the Rocket getting himself over the line for yet another momentous victory and the £250,000 top prize.
“I don’t know how I’ve won this tournament to be honest with you. I’ve just dug deep. I’ve tried to play with a bit of freedom and tonight I just thought I had to try to keep Ali honest. If he was going to win it, he was going to have to scrape me off the table. I just wanted to see if he had it at the end. That was what I was thinking coming into the evening session, could he get over the line?”
Ronnie O’Sullivan
Eight-Time Masters Champion
O’Sullivan added: “Ali didn’t play great tonight. He played better this afternoon, but tonight he let me off the hook a few times. He was aggressive today, but tonight he didn’t take on some of the balls I thought he might take on. That just gave me a little bit of breathing space and I did what I could and I tried to make the most and see what happened.
“I’ve had an amazing career. I love playing and I love competing. The crowd have always been good to me over the years. That is the one thing that I take from my career, the support that I’ve had all around the world. Not just here in London. To all the snooker fans out there. Thank you for your support over the years. I’ll keep trying until I can’t pot any more balls.”
Carter said: “It was a good week. I’m gutted I lost the final. It is all about winning at the end of the day. Before I rocked up here last week I’d have taken the final. There’s a lot of good things to come for me and I’m heading in the right direction.”
Ali Carter also set a record during this Masters: with 9 centuries during the event he betters Ronnie’s previous record of 8.
The quotes I put in bold, that’s very encouraging for us fans. That said Ronnie also said that he will probably take some extended period of rest after the World Grand Prix. It’s unsurprising but it means that he will probably withdraw from the 2024 German Masters wich is disappointing for the fans in mainland Europe.
As Ronnie himself would put it … it is what it is.
Here are the scores
Here are more images shared on social media during and after the match.











And videos shared by Eurosport on their YouTube channel
What many fans don’t realise is that Ronnie is not a naturally confident person and that makes his achievements even more remarkable.
Speaking to Eurosport he said this:
“When I was 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, I thought I was even better than I am now, to be honest,”
“Technically I was. Technically, I felt I was much better [with] more consistency. These days, I’m more in and out and it’s got better since 2001.
“I’ve had to work on the technical side just to keep things tight, as tight as I can. I have some good spells, good months, good years sometimes, but then I have some awful months and awful years.
“I just accept that’s how it is and I just try and play my way through it. Hopefully it comes good at some point but it’s quite a struggle the game for me at the moment, confidence-wise.”





Congratulations Ronnie, what a great feast! I have to say, his break-offs were great in the evening. And just loved the way he played then.
He certainly deserves his break, I wonder if the Players” Championship will also fall into it, because he likes those ITV-events. Apparently that would mean missing a Chinese event too and I can only applaud that: he complained about the back-and-forth trips, so maybe he learnt some lessons. Missing teh Welsh and the German don’t surprise me whatsoever.
His book is full of memories how much better he was when young. Very interesting reading.
And lately I’ve seen so much about projected end-of-season rankings. OK, of course there is the year that passed and also the tournaments played. But how do these projections assign points to tournaments not yet played? Thanks if someone can enlighten me.
There are two “types” of points that can be subtracted or added in advance. For the three tournaments of the ITV series – WGP, Players and Tour Champs – even the first round losers get their ranking points. And, of course the points that will come off, gained two years before an event are known too. Other than that they can’t possibly predict anything.
Thanks, I really think that this projected ranking is a big guesswork.
Twitter post from Ronnie: https://twitter.com/ronnieo147/status/1746667689236414518
Stat pictures:



Sad to hear yesterday that the elbow is horrible that’s why he was unable to hold the trophy. But his family is very cute as always!
Well done Ronnie it was a really hard fought win!
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEYYYYYYYYYYYYYY 8) 8)
Another fantastic week! 🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂