The 2024 International Championship – Day 5 offered interesting QFs

Today provided really interesting quarter-finals matches in Nanjing. Here is the report by WST:

Resurgent Ding Topples Crucible King Wilson

Ding Junhui had won just three matches in ranking events this season before this week’s International Championship, but has found his game in Nanjing and reached the semi-finals with a 6-4 victory over World Champion Kyren Wilson.

Ding will face Xu Si in the semi-finals on Saturday, after Xiao Guodong meets Chris Wakelin on Friday. It’s the third time ever that a ranking event has featured three players from mainland China in the semi-finals – and one of those occasions was last month’s Wuhan Open. 

China’s greatest ever player Ding is quickly recovering from a poor start to the campaign and is now just two wins away from a 15th ranking title and first since the 2019 UK Championship. It’s a surprise defeat for Crucible king Wilson who has already won the Xi’an Grand Prix and Northern Ireland Open this season and had been hunting his fourth piece of silverware in six months. 

Breaks of 57, 72 and 84 helped world number nine Ding build a 4-1 lead. Wilson battled back to 4-4 with 57, 70 and 69, but 37-year-old Ding finished superbly with 129 and 123 to take the last two frames.

I could really feel the support from the crowd – they wanted to see me perform well and get a good result,” said Ding, who is on home turf in China’s Jiangsu Province. “Kyren is World Champion and one of the most consistent top players at the moment, so this wasn’t an easy win. If I hadn’t played as well as I did today, it would have been tough to beat him.

At 4-4, we both wanted to get that one-frame lead. It was crucial for momentum, the scoreline, and adjusting our mindsets. People might think that a poor start to the season affects the whole year. But sometimes things don’t go your way, and that’s out of my control. I’ve always approached each season like this, often starting to find form a bit later.

For Chinese players, there has been high expectation and pressure on them over the last few years. Lately, they’ve been working extremely hard. Success doesn’t come immediately after turning professional, and it’s not easy to meet everyone’s expectations. It takes patience to allow players to grow.

Xu came from 5-3 down to edge out Gary Wilson 6-5 to continue the best week of his career, having already made a 147 and knocked out Judd Trump. From 3-3, Wilson made 105 and 136 to go 5-3 up, only for Xu to take three in a row with 58, 81 and 68 to reach the second ranking event semi-final of his career.

Wakelin is enjoying his most consistent season so far and took another leap forward with a 6-5 win over John Higgins. The match was pulled off at 5-5 earlier in the day but when they returned, Wakelin capitalised on a safety error from Higgins to make an excellent match winning break of 62.

Wakelin, who knocked out Shaun Murphy and Mark Williams in the previous two rounds, is through to his fourth ranking event semi-final and second of the season having reached the same stage of the English Open. Victory over Xiao would boost the Englishman into the world’s top 16 for the first time and make him a seeded player for the UK Championship.

The Ding v Wilson match was played in great spirit and mutual respect. The two of them are great ambassadors for snooker and they offered the fans a very high quality match. Between them they scored ten breaks over 50. Kyren is a wonderful World Champion1. His demeanour on and off the table is impeccable. He gives every match his best and every opponent respect.

Xu Si is really the surprise package of the week. He’s not spectacular, he doesn’t show much emotion but he’s been extremely efficient at the table.

Chris Wakelin looked very solid mentally against John Higgins. The match was pulled off at 5-5. That’s never an easy situation for the players. John Higgins expressed his frustration, and looked unhappy when they returned. Chris Wakelin just went on with the job. The decision to pull the match off with 32 minutes available before the next session was criticised on social media but, to me, it was the right call. A decider is always tense and can be lengthy. Between sessions they have to get one group of fans out, do some cleaning and allow the new group of fans in. This takes time, especially in a a big venue like this one. There is a lot of pressure in every decider, no need to add “time pressure” to it.

I didn’t see the fourth QF match, but Xiao Guodong has been scoring very heavily during his QF match against Jackson Page.

Meanwhile Ronnie was out and about in Nanjing. He posted some pictures, saying that he’s disappointed to be out but feeling well. That’s great to read because he looked utterly miserable some weeks ago.

  1. unlike his predecessor … ↩︎

2 thoughts on “The 2024 International Championship – Day 5 offered interesting QFs

  1. The decision to hook the players off at 5-5 probably favoured Wakelin, who had started to struggle. But neither player was at their best. Ding, Xiao and Xu played very well. The difference with Xu is that this week he’s managed to finish matches well – in the past he has tended to collapse in the big match.

    It is absolutely no coincidence that 3 Chinese players have reached the semi-final, as also happened in Wuhan. Home support does count, as Ding said. The fact that it’s often different players each time is interesting: it shows they are pushing each other on.

Comments are closed.