Ronnie beat Ross Muir by 5-1 in his first round held-over match at the 2026 World Open in Yushan.
Here are the scores for that match:
As you can see, Ronnie played pretty well and scored heavily when in the balls. He didn’t make many mistakes. I can’t say that Ross made many mistakes himself because, more often than not when he made one, it was ruthlessly punished and he didm’t get another chance.
Here are the last two frames of the match shared on Youtube by WST.
Ronnie was due to play Ishpreet Singh Chadah in round 2, but Ishpreet has withdrawn, so, next for Ronnie is a round 3 match against Matt Selt on Wednesday.
Ronnie O’Sullivan eased through his opening clash with Ross Muir at the World Open in Yushan with a 5–1 victory, but afterwards admitted that restoring his game to the level he wants would be the “biggest achievement” of his career.
The Rocket has recently embarked on a quest to rebuild his game in a bid to rediscover his top form before his career is over. Earlier this season he admitted that his one remaining goal in snooker is to win a record breaking eighth World Championship.
O’Sullivan came close to perfection in today’s encounter with Scotland’s Muir. The Englishman deposited 15 reds and 14 blacks in the fifth frame, before going in off with the 15th black to end his run on 113. He went on to fire past the line with 114 in the next to progress. With his last 64 opponent Ishpreet Singh Chadha having withdrawn from the event, O’Sullivan now progresses to the last 32, where he will face Matthew Selt.
“I got here a week early just to do some practising on my own. I’ve been working really hard on my game. I know I haven’t played a lot of tournaments, but I’ve been working because my game has been in such a bad place. It isn’t like I’ve had my feet up while everyone has been playing. I’ve decided I really need to attack this now. I have one last throw of the dice really. The last three years have been awful in terms of confidence. I’m trying to work on that now and see if I can get back to delivering the cue freely,”
“I’ll commit to two years to work on it and try to prolong my career. Cueing how I was cueing, there was going to be no longevity in it. I’ve been working harder than I ever have done, it just hasn’t been on TV. It has been behind closed doors. I’m trying to attack it rather than hope something changes. I’m breaking it down and trying to recoach myself.
“I was saying to a friend the other day that if I manage to get out of this it would be my biggest achievement in snooker. If I can feel how I did six or seven years ago, that would trump anything. Seven World Championships, eight Masters, this would rank higher than any of those achievements. I’m under no illusions how difficult it will be but I’m not going to retire because something I tried didn’t work for me. I’m going to get back to my natural instinct of playing and recoach myself in some sort of way.” said O’Sullivan.
Ronnie has achieved what he has in his career so far BECAUSE he’s a perfectionist, although this constant quest for perfection has also been his undoing at times, and a torture… but he is who he is, it’s his core nature, it won’t change. He has to live with that nature through successes and disappointments, through bliss and despair at times … and we, fans, live it with him.
Thank you for sharing this Ben. I had just read it myself and thought about sharing it … but I came second 😉. Of course he does take it seriously, maybe even too seriously at times. He’s an anxious person by nature and tends to put a lot of pressure on himself.
I’m really impressed by how hard he still tries, even though he has already achieved everything and doesn’t need to prove anything to anyone. It’s a pity that SightRight (I think that is the certain method he refers to) didn’t work for him and may even have harmed his game. I remember that back then I also felt Ronnie could benefit from that method after what Mark Williams had achieved.
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Ronnie always tried to improve during his career, he’s never satisfied. He’s a perfectionist. It’s both a quality and a curse. He’s never stops working on his game but he’s never happy either.
Great to see him back. And for those who doubt that Ronnie takes it seriously anymore, just read this article. He is obviously trying hard:
https://snookerhq.com/2026/03/16/ronnie-osullivan-2026-world-open/
Thank you for sharing this Ben. I had just read it myself and thought about sharing it … but I came second 😉. Of course he does take it seriously, maybe even too seriously at times. He’s an anxious person by nature and tends to put a lot of pressure on himself.
I’m really impressed by how hard he still tries, even though he has already achieved everything and doesn’t need to prove anything to anyone. It’s a pity that SightRight (I think that is the certain method he refers to) didn’t work for him and may even have harmed his game. I remember that back then I also felt Ronnie could benefit from that method after what Mark Williams had achieved.
Ronnie always tried to improve during his career, he’s never satisfied. He’s a perfectionist. It’s both a quality and a curse. He’s never stops working on his game but he’s never happy either.