More about Stephen Hendry’s return

The announcement yesterday that Stephen Hendry is returning to the professional game was of course a big, big talking point.

It was of course all over the press, so here are a few links you may want to follow

BBC: Stephen Hendry: Seven-time world champion says Crucible return would be ‘incredible’

Eurosport: Stephen Hendry wants to temper expectations, but believes he can compete

And this excellent interview for “A Bola” by my very good friend Antonio Barroso.

The original is in Portuguese, but you can probably get a reasonable translation using google.

In short…

  • Stephen had been working with Steve Feeney before the lockdown and was starting both to enjoy playing again and hitting the ball well. Their work was interrupted by the lockdown, but he went back to practice just ahead of the Seniors 2020 World Snooker Championship, where he reached the semi-finals. Stephen is never satisfied with his game, but recognised that he was playing better and missing the buzz of competing.
  • His return to competition was discussed during a round of golf with Barry Hearn and Mark Williams. BH of course wanted an swift decision … and Stephen is still not sure he understands all the implications of what he has agreed to.
  • He will definitely pick and choose. It’s not a full time return, and he won’t be practising 8 hours/day. Also, he does not want to go to qualifiers. But Barry Hearn warned him that he has to play otherwise he won’t get another chance.
  • Stephen is determined to prepare seriously for the events he decides to enter. He believes that he can still compete, and that, except for Ronnie and Judd Trump, there is nobody on the tour playing at a higher level than the one he had in his prime. He knows that he will be an underdog, and he doesn’t want to put pressure on himself, by entertaining high expectations. But he dreams to be able to play at the Crucible again, to walk down the stairs, and fell the buzz emanating from the place and the crowd.
  • For the immediate future he just wants to be able to play well, enjoy it and see where it takes him. He admits that if he plays badly and embarasses himself, it will be hard to take.
  • His first event will probably be the UK championship. Being at the bottom of the rankings, he’s likely to play one of the very top players on the TV table in the first round. He relishes the challenge, but is not sure how it will go.
  • He insists that the comeback has nothing to do with Ronnie taking his records away from him.

Now, there were too many reactions on social media to mention them all . But I can’t resist to share Mike Dunn’s take on Hendry’s return

MikeDunnWhiteShark

There were fans arguing that those spots should go to deserving young players instead of returning “past glories”. But of course, there is a commercial side to it: Stephen will put bums on seats, he will get lines in the media. He still has many fans. On thing that is often overlooked is that it’s those players who attract sponsors and audience who make it possible to offer decent prize money for all. Every player on the tour benefits from what they bring.

Interesting article and great interview with Ronnie talking life, pressure, expectations and the younger generation.

The Independent published this nice article today 

It covers only a  very small part of a fantastic and fascinating interview published by the Blank Podcast. The link to the full interview can be found in the article and it’s well worth the listen.

Ronnie O’Sullivan: Snooker’s younger generation needed a ‘kick up the a***’

Reigning world champion provoked controversy when he claimed that snooker’s younger players ‘are not that good’

Ronnie O’Sullivan insists he wasn’t trying to offend snooker’s younger generation but give them a “kick up the a***” when he claimed they “are not very good” during last month’s World Championships.

O’Sullivan clinched his sixth title at the Crucible, becoming the tournament’s second-oldest winner at 44, and stirred controversy en route to victory when he claimed: “If you look at the younger players coming through, they are not that good really. Most of them would do well as half-decent amateurs, not even amateurs. They are so bad.”

However, speaking on at The Blank Podcast, O’Sullivan said his comments had been overblown and were in fact an attempt to “inspire” the younger players and provoke them to “prove him wrong”.

“They’re not good enough…whatever I said. I think it’s okay to say stuff like that, I wasn’t slagging anyone off,” he said. “In fact, I was hoping that in some ways it would inspire a lot of the younger generation to kind of go ‘you know what I’m going to prove him wrong’. Because that’s all I’ve done all my life when I was a kid growing up, I’d get knocks and every time I got a knock that just made me more and more determined to what to become better and a better player so for me a knock was fantastic.

“So yeah, I’m knocking them, but I’m also hoping that it gives them a nudge to go you know what I’m going to go and watch a Tiger Woods documentary, I’m going to go and watch a Michael Jordan documentary and see what it takes to be the best and then once I’ve studied them I’m going to take that into my world and I’m going to become the next snooker player I can possibly be. And that’s what I’m saying.”

O’Sullivan singled out Kyren Wilson – who he thrashed 18-8 in the final in Sheffield – for praise but admitted he believes the calibre and quantity of players coming into the game are still in decline.

“Every player on this tour is capable of beating anyone on their day but it’s not good enough to just have a good day, you’ve got to have good months, good years, good decades,” he continued. “We’re not talking about being good enough on the day, we’re talking about having a good career really and days aren’t enough. You have to have good months and years to hang around long enough and that’s what I’m hoping by saying what I said in a way is going to give these youngsters a kick up the a***.

“There are a couple on the circuit; Kyren Wilson is definitely one of them and another guy is Louis Heathcote, I spot that they have what it takes to hang around and get the most out of their career. I just wish there was more players like me, John Higgins, Mark Williams, Steven Maguire, Barry Hawkins that generation of players, I just wish there was an influx of those players coming in but I just don’t see it.”

The story about Ebdon made me laugh.

The whole interview is excellent. Every young aspiring sportsperson should listen to it and most of the advice applies to life in general, not just sports.

Ronnie seems to be in a very good place.

And I’m happy because he pretty much perceives the reasons for the young professionals’ level relative “weakness” the same way I do. It’s not all their fault, and frankly it’s just common sense: to improve the situation invest in the junior amateur scene and go back to a tiered system in most if not all tournaments. Allow for progressive improvement.

Simon Hattenstone interviews Ronnie …

Simon Hattenstone and Ronnie have known each other for years… and they are friends. Simon was with him at the 2007 Masters, in the middle of controversy after he had walked out of his match against Stephen Hendry at the UK championship. Simon helped him through the writing of his biographies. He knows Ronnie inside-out and accepts him as he is. Ronnie in return trusts him.

After winning his sixth World title, Ronnie was interviewed by Simon for The Guardian

‘I was the king of sabotage’: Ronnie O’Sullivan on controversy, comebacks and becoming a carer

Ronnie at Home wit 6th trophy
Ronnie O’Sullivan at home, with his trophy for winning this year’s World Snooker Championship. Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

 

The greatest, most charismatic snooker player of all time prefers long-distance running. He discusses drugs, breakdowns, victory – and his unexpected new career path

Simon Hattenstone
Sun 23 Aug 2020 14.00 BST

Ronnie O’Sullivan is driving over from Essex and says he’s bringing a friend. “Gloria’s with me. She’s brilliant. She picks me up when I’m properly on the floor.” It’s only two days since he won the World Snooker Championship – his sixth triumph in the sport’s biggest contest. Why would he be on the floor?

“You must be happy,” I say, when he arrives at my house – he pocketed £500,000 along with the trophy. He laughs. “You know what? I got up this morning and I felt a bit low. And I remembered every time I win a big tournament it puts me on a low. But I’ve accepted it. It’s just part of any high.” Typical Ronnie.

 

O’Sullivan and I go back 19 years. We met just after he had won his first world title, hit it off, and I helped him write two books. No sportsman has ever worn his angst on his sleeve quite like him. To be fair, there has been plenty to have angst about – in 1992, the year he turned professional, aged 16, his father, Ronnie Senior, was jailed for murder. Four years later, his mother, Maria, was jailed for tax evasion, leaving O’Sullivan to look after his younger sister, Danielle. Then came drugs, breakdown and despair. If this sounds bleak, O’Sullivan is also one of the warmest, funniest, most generous people I know.

Today, he is wearing shorts and an old T-shirt full of holes, sprigs of chest hair poking through. Gloria is tiny, smartly dressed and 72 to his 44. They have been close friends for 30 years. She is recovering from a triple heart bypass and oesophageal cancer.

O’Sullivan has changed very little over the years. He could still pass for a Gallagher brother, but occasionally, when he’s knackered, he looks like Aloysius Parker from Thunderbirds. In winning the World Snooker Championship in Sheffield, he secured a record-breaking 37th major snooker title. He was always regarded as the sport’s most naturally gifted player; now the consensus is that he’s the greatest.

Ronnie is called the Rocket for his speed and power. But there is also a sublime grace to his playing – the way he makes the cue ball dance, the delicacy with which he picks off balls and opens up the pack, his balance, the ability to swap from right to left hand depending on his shot or mood. In a sport not overly blessed with charismatic players, he has been the personality of snooker for a quarter of a century.

Then there are the verbals. Every time he opened his mouth in Sheffield he made headlines. Asked why older players like him were still winning, he said it was because of the poor standard of the youngsters. “Most of them would do well as half-decent amateurs, not even amateurs. They are so bad … I would have to lose an arm and a leg to fall out of the top 50.” Sponsors winced and the pundits apologised, saying Ronnie will always be Ronnie.

He was only stating the bleeding obvious, he says today – it’s bonkers that he should win the world title at 44. “I’m getting worse and I’m still winning as a part-timer. It’s an old man’s game now.” He grins. “As I get to 60 I’m going to be in my prime! When I was 28 I thought: ‘I’m going to retire at 30.’ The shelf life used to be about 15 years, now it’s about 50. I’m not sure it’s a good thing though. It’s more depression and anxiety for me.” He has always had a love-hate relationship with snooker. He only plays when he fancies these days, and his critics say he disrespects the sport. But they have always said that.

O’Sullivan is gasping for a cuppa and insists on making it himself. “I said to my mate: ‘How do you get your tea so good?’ He says it’s all about pouring the milk slowly.” He pours it painfully slowly, ever the perfectionist. He is still thinking about the game’s slipping standards. “A lot of the players came up to me and said, ‘You’re 100% right’.”

RonnieLailaOBE

Ronnie O’Sullivan with his partner, Laila Rouass, after receiving an OBE in 2016. Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

That wasn’t his only controversial statement. He said he preferred playing at Sheffield’s Crucible theatre with no audience. Again, he says, this makes perfect sense. “My biggest fear is embarrassing myself, and with no crowd there’s no one to embarrass myself in front of. But when somebody’s paid for a ticket and I’m stinking the gaffe out, that’s my worst nightmare.” There was a socially distanced audience for the final. “When they put a crowd in for the final I struggled with it. I thought that if I play bad, how much of a letdown that would be.” He doesn’t mention that he reeled off eight frames on the trot to secure victory.

At his age, he says, he knows he can only win by guile. O’Sullivan studies other sporting greats for inspiration, and explores the mental side of the sport with the psychiatrist Steve Peters. “I said to Steve: ‘I’m not going to win this through talent.’ I watched Tiger Woods win Augusta and he ain’t gonna blast them away winning by 15 shots any more. It’s not about ability, but about who’s got the balls to get it over the line. I said we’ve got to find a way where my mental skills are good enough to sweat it out, be patient and not sabotage. Because I was the king of sabotage.”

Often, he simply didn’t want to be there. In his 30s he became obsessed with middle-distance running. “A lot of the time I would think: ‘I don’t actually want to win this match because I’ve got a five-mile cross-country race I want to win back in Essex.’ Running became more important than snooker. I’d much rather be running in Woodford in October in mud than be in the final of the Northern Irish open in Belfast.” He grins. “Although I love Belfast and playing there.”

Gloria listens as he talks. O’Sullivan says that as well as being one of his most loyal friends, she is also one of his fiercest critics. I ask her where he most often goes wrong. “The friends he chooses,” she says.

When I first met him he was verging on the socially phobic, often terrified of talking to people. In his mid-20s, he ended up in the Priory, suicidal, and was treated for drug addiction. Since then he has, by and large, remained clean. How has he changed? “I’m less scared of people now. And I’ve learned not to be so trusting. I’m no longer interested in fair-weather friends.” Were there many? “Yeah. I was always a bit of a people-pleaser, so I’d go out of my way to overcompensate, and it was draining.”

He says his partner, the actor Laila Rouass, has helped toughen him up – as well as Gloria, of course. “Laila’s just a bit more streetwise than me, a bit more savvy.” A few years ago, he got conned out of £125,000 in a business deal and it floored him. “I was gutted … devastated. It took about three years to get over it – not the money, the trust. I became distrusting of everything and everybody.”

That’s always been his problem, Gloria says, surrounding himself with bad ’uns. “I’m the first one to slag him off if he’s wrong, ’cos that’s what friends are about.” What does she slag him off for most often? “For being stupid, for being too soft-hearted. I tell him to pull himself together and grow a pair of balls.”

O’Sullivan says that is true. “When I surround myself with shit people, she’ll be like, ‘Get the fuck out of here’, to them. I never know it’s going on. She won’t let anyone take a liberty with me. I’m a bit soft and she’s not.”

A year after he was conned he had another breakdown – again at Sheffield, in 2016. “I was in hospital in London in between my first and second round at the World Championship. I was doing too much work, living out of a suitcase, booked too much in. I couldn’t move.”

Now, he is in a good place. He came off medication when he realised it was making him moody and he was taking it out on his son Ronnie. (O’Sullivan has three children.) “I had a go at little Ronnie once ’cos I was on these pills, and it wasn’t his fault. I thought: ‘I’m not letting medication turn me into an irritable old man.’”

RonnieRunning

‘I’d much rather be running in Woodford in October in mud than be in the final of the Northern Irish open in Belfast’ … Ronnie O’Sullivan out running in Birmingham. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock

He is sticking with natural serotonin – running. In lockdown he got himself a coach and has not looked back. “I can run for an hour, 7.45- to 8-minute miling. Running is my drug.” He is convinced running makes people happy. “I’ve never seen [Joshua] Cheptegei look unhappy. How can you look unhappy after a 26-mile run? Running just gives you a natural high.”

I ask him for his highlight at this year’s World Championship. His nose twitches with delight. “Running. When I was up there I’d wake up and think: ‘Fuck, I’ve got to do this today’, then at 7.45am I’m running through the peaks and I’ve forgotten about my snooker. I’ve had breakfast, had a shower, had a great run, and I think: ‘Oh, I’ve got to go and play a few games of snooker’, so if the snooker goes shit I’ve already had a good day.

“Running for me is the perfect thing ’cos they are just nice people. It’s not like cycling, where you’ve got to spend £10,000 on a bike. You get a lot of arseholes in that sport because they’ve got money and they think money is the all-important thing. I can’t stand people like that. You don’t get them type of people in the running world.”

I ask him about the future, expecting him to talk about books, endorsements, punditry and a bit of snooker. “The one thing I thought I’d excel in was being in the care industry,” he says. Is he serious? He nods. “I can empathise with people in addiction. It could be addiction, mental health, autism, anything. You’re in the CQC game, so it’s about providing a safe environment and getting people on their feet.

“I was in rehab in 2000 and it was the biggest life-changer for me. It was tough, but what I needed. Without the 12 steps, without taking myself out of society, without going to a treatment centre, maybe I wouldn’t have got to where I am today.” Maybe you wouldn’t be here full stop, I say. He nods. “Yeah, totally.”

He empathises with people who are vulnerable, he says. Would he be an active carer? “Yeah. I’m not going to say I’m going to change people’s nappies, but I want to provide a safe environment for them and make their life as happy as you can … We’re starting off small. One place, six or seven beds. It will probably be a place for people with mild disabilities who don’t need 24-hour care.” He expects to settle on the premises in the next few months. “When I finish playing snooker I want to train as a counsellor. I want to understand the business and the mental health side.”

Ronnieat16

Ronnie O’Sullivan as a 16-year-old snooker player. Photograph: Jim Hutchison/ANL/Rex/Shutterstock

What’s behind all this? “I’ve had enough of arseholes. And when I look at these people who need a care home, they just want a roof over their head, three meals a day, you give them a job to do, you take care of them. I’ve had enough of the dog-eat-dog thing. I just want to be in a business where you’re taking care of people.”

“I think he’ll be good at it ’cos that’s where his heart is,” says Gloria. “You were so good to me when I was ill. I think it frightened you a bit.” Lest I think she’s soft, she loses the sentimentality. “He’d earn money from the homes. We all want money, we’ve all got to live.”

O’Sullivan bursts out laughing. “Nobody loves a pound note as much as Gloria!” Anyway, he says, he can run care homes and still play snooker. And maybe there will even be time for a bit of reality TV. He’s considering I’m a Celebrity now that the Australian outback has been replaced by a castle in Wales. “It’s not like Big Brother where you’re destroyed. The worst that happens is they eat a few bugs and come out saying: ‘I had a great time in there.’”

If O’Sullivan ran care homes what a contrast it would be with his mad/bad boy image. So much of that is a media construct, he says. “If I’d been a bit savvy I’d have had a good agent. With people like [David] Beckham, you see what they want you to see of them … I think people now see me and think: ‘He’s not actually a bad fella, you know, he’s not as crazy as everybody thinks.’”

He turns this over in his head. Some people do still think he’s a bit off the wall, he adds – and he’s happy with that. “We all fit into some sort of box. And I appeal to the crazy gang, the nutcases.” He shouts out suddenly, like an excitable fan. “Yeaaaaaaaah! Go on Ronnie!”

 

Ronnie speaks to CGTN Sports ahead of his second round match against Ding.

Ronnie spoke to CGTN Sports ahead of his second round match at the Crucible.

O’Sullivan reveals emotional connection with Ding Junhui ahead of World Championship showdown

CGTN

 

RonnievDingUK2019jpg Ronnie O’Sullivan (L) shakes hands with Ding Junhui after the fourth round of the UK Championship at The Barbican, York, England, December 5, 2019.

“If Ding (Junhui) looks at his career, he’ll say he’s probably got a great balance – he’s been super successful on the table, but he hasn’t been a slave to the sport,” observed snooker great Ronnie O’Sullivan on Thursday ahead of their blockbuster tie in the second round of the World Championship.

The five-time champion, arguably the best player in the world, has a soft spot for the boyish Chinese star. The heartwarming scene of the English veteran and Ding wrapping in a tight embrace after a classic battle at the World Championship quarterfinal in 2017 still lingers in many fans’ memory. “I love him, he’s such a lovely guy,” said O’Sullivan, explaining that long hug.

It will be the third meeting between the pair at the championship, each having won one of their previous encounters. Facing a potentially explosive showdown, O’Sullivan is relishing the “tranquility” at the Crucible in northern England, amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.

“My whole life has been about keeping it quiet and as simple as I can… I don’t go out to restaurants, takeaways are fantastic for me; it’s kind of how I’ve lived my life. Now I can go to snooker tournaments and still have that tranquility,” he told Eurosport.

RonnievDingRespect
Chinese star Ding Junhui sees world number 1 Ronnie O’Sullivan as his snooker idol. /VCG

“I’m a little bit in that bracket where I like to enjoy my life. There’s always a trade-off. I like to be healthy, live a good lifestyle and that means I can’t play in every tournament, otherwise my lifestyle wouldn’t be how I’d want it.

“Ding probably falls into that category as well. He gets really excited by the really big tournaments, but probably doesn’t want to be on the road 24/7. He drives his own car in many ways, and I respect that.”

Championship droughts weigh heavily on the 33-year-old Ding, a 14-time ranking event winner who is still searching for his first world title. During a brief interview with CGTN Sports Scene earlier this week, O’Sullivan predicted that Ding will eventually break his duck.

“I think Ding’s got a very good record and is a very, very reliable player. He’s delivered the goods for a good 15, 16, 17 years now,” he said.

“Obviously he would love to win the World Championship because as a player growing up and as a professional, you always get asked that question ‘Why haven’t you won the World Championships?’ That’s a horrible question to be asked when you are as good a player as Ding is.

“I had that for quite a while and when I won it for the first time it was a big relief. I think, for Ding, he’s more than capable of doing it, and I’m sure he will one day, I just hope it’s not this year, you know.”

DingAction
Ding Junhui aims to break his duck at the World Championship. /VCG

On Thursday, O’Sullivan said that time may be running short for Ding if he wants to taste the glory.

“I’m sure he’d love to get his hands on the world title, but each year you get older, it gets harder,” he noted. “Some players can play well into their 40s like me and John Higgins and Mark Williams, but we’re exceptions to the rule.”

Yet Ding remains upbeat about his prospects at this year’s showpiece event.

“Sometimes I need to learn the new things to control the game,” he said. “I’m looking forward to the second round, to improving my game again. I’m looking forward to winning.”

This is a short video excerpt that was shared on social media.

Ronnie played very well in the last 32, and this may be the best opportunity he’ll get to win another World title. He hates the hassle that comes with his status in the game, particularly in this tournament. The huge demands of the media, not being able to take a walk without being asked for autographs of selfies every three steps he takes, the constant weight of expectations … all that is a huge burden and one he’s been carrying since 28 years now. There is very little of it this year because of the pandemics.

But then, the same can be said about Ding who has been propelled to stardom at just 18 and has been carrying the hopes of his nation, China, ever since. Having been in the media room at the Crucible for six years, I have seen by myself how much pressure and expectations the Chinese media are putting on the shoulders of this man. It’s crazy really. They aren’t there this time.

Those two are friends, almost “brothers’. This goes back to the 2007 Masters Final, where Ronnie showed a lot of empathy in comforting his very distraught young opponent. He brought him to his own dressing room, made tea for them both, and also brought in one of his close friends who happens to be Chinese, in order to be able to communicate with Ding – who at the time didn’t speak English – and help him through this difficult moment. Many fans believe that the then very young Ding was upset because he was heavily beaten, but I have been told by reliable sources that there was more than that. He was also badly abused by members of the audience, including Chinese spectators that were probably angered because they had hefty bets on him to win.

I hope that this will be a good match, and one they can enjoy. I want Ronnie to win this, of course, but if he loses to Ding, I will then be 100% supporting Ding in his quest for a maiden World title.

Ronnie starts playing at the Crucible today

Ronnie will start his 2020 Word Championship campaign today.

Yesterday, Hector Nunns posted this on twitter:

RonnieCovidTest

A couple of days ago he was interviewed by Phil Haigh again. It’s a very honest and open interview, and one that is heartbreaking by mainy aspects. Ronnie might be ruthless at the table, but in real life, he’s a very sensitive, emotional person. Obviously, that doesn’t make his “job” easier.

Here are some excerpts:

‘I’d never say it’s too easy because I’d never disrespect the game and we all have our own pride in performance and our own doubts,’ continued the Rocket.

‘Don’t get me wrong, self-doubt has crippled me all my life so I’d never take for granted the game or whoever I’m playing, because sometimes I don’t know who they are and you get pleasantly surprised.

‘They end up coming out, playing brilliantly and you think, “Who is this geezer?” Then six months into the season you find out that guy hasn’t won a frame or a match.

‘They all come in excited that they’re on the tour, but after six or nine months of getting bashed up by [John] Higgins, [Mark] Selby and [Judd] Trump, slowly they crawl back into their shell and it’s not a good place to be. It’s like, “Welcome to the big boys,” you know.

‘I’ve played them before, they’re looking at me and they look like they want to cry. I’m looking at them and thinking, “Mate, you’ve got to play me now and you look like you want to be anywhere but here.” ‘Then you bash them up 4-0, they trundle off, you look at him and think, “Is that really nice?”’

‘Yeah, ever since I was a kid I always thought everyone was better than me,’ said Ronnie.

‘My dad used to say, “Are you mad?” But I thought, nah, he cues better than me, he’s better at this or that.

‘I’ve always kind of had it, but a lot of my success has been driven from fear. Fear of failure, fear of not being good enough, fear of having to work harder to be as good as the next guy. In a way it’s driven me on but I’ve realised it’s not healthy.

‘Since working with Steve Peters I’ve learned how to turn that around and have a life, but still compete on the table and not be driven by fear.

‘I play now because I want to play and not because I have anything to prove. I realise it’s a tough sport, a tough game and it’s a roll of the dice a lot of the time. As long as I keep rolling a few sixes, it’s all good.’

‘I quite enjoy having no crowd, because you don’t have to perform for anybody,’ Ronnie explained. ‘As a sportsman, especially one who people expect to make 147s, people think your cue’s a wand and you can just turn it on like a tap, there’s a lot of pressure involved for you to deliver.

‘If I don’t deliver, you can feel the disappointment in the air. Without a crowd it takes away that, if I play well, great, if I don’t at least no one’s wasted their ticket money, they’ve just paid their licence fee, and there’s plenty of other things to watch on the BBC.’

‘The last 20 years my mental health has been based around fitness and running, that’s been quite well documented, how running has helped me cope with the stresses of sport and life,’ he said.

‘I’m not saying I’m a special case, I think a lot of people have ways to cope with the stresses of life and found that running, especially with what has been going on, they’ve become more active and it’s improved their life.

‘As far as on the snooker table, that’s out of your hands, you’ve got an opponent that’s equally as ferocious as you. If it’s not your day then there’s not a lot I can do about that sometimes. But with the running and the eating, the last 20 years, that’s been the cornerstone of my longevity

‘I don’t necessarily think it’s made me a better player or enhanced me. I just look at myself now at 44 and think I’m glad I kept myself in good shape because I feel alright, I feel I’ve got another five, six, seven, 10 years or however long I want.

‘But I’ve never just trained for snooker, I’ve trained for mental health, physical health, just the benefits from running. Running is the hard bit, you never feel like going for a run but 10 minutes in you feel fantastic, and for the rest of the day. I’ve tried a lot of drugs, but no drug comes close to that.

‘A gym doesn’t do it for me, I like to be out in nature. For me a gym is like a concrete jungle, yeah there is a place for it, but just as a strengthening exercise, but not for my endorphins.

‘Running through the forest, I had four or five deer run out in front of me the other day and I was like “Wow!” It’s all about the outdoors, I think I should have been born as Alan Titchmarsh.’

Ronnie faces Thepchaiya Un-Nooh, who is the highest ranked qualifier in the draw. Last year, Thepchaiya nearly knocked Judd Trump out in the first round and he would probably have done if it wasn’t for a serious slice of bad luck in the decider. Theppy has won two matches last week, he will be sharp. Ronnie comes into this “match cold”. It will be a difficult match for him, and he could well lose it, even trying his hardest. However, playing someone like Theppy, who is fast and plays an open game, should help him. The absence of crowd, as well as a reduced media presence, also eases the pressure a bit, and Ronnie seems to be in a positive state of mind. It should be a good match.

Good luck Ronnie!

 

More interviews with Ronnie …

You would expect that Judd Trump, the defending Champion, would be the center of attention ahead of the World Championship, but, so far, the media seem to be chasing Ronnie instead.

So here are more interviews in the press yesterday

Ronnie had not kitchen during the lockdown but still spent his time cooking

O’Sullivan cooking up culinary storm in lockdown

Ronnie

The five-time world champion has relished his time in his makeshift kitchen during the break from snooker, whipping up all sorts of innovative dishes alongside his fiancée, Laila Rouass.

O’Sullivan is no stranger to the intricacies of cookery and has developed a long-term passion for food, releasing a cookbook – Top of Your Game: Eating for Mind and Body – alongside nutritionist, Rhiannon Lambert, last year.

The Rocket practices what he preaches and despite his lack of kitchen, has loved rustling up a range of tagines, tray bakes and Asian dishes over the last three months.

“I’m obviously quite into my Asian food so I’ve made a lot of Chinese dishes and things with Indian spices,” he said.

“I like a lot of plain food as well, so just roasted food, roasted vegetables, roasted sweet potato, roasted chicken.

“I obviously season that very well, and it’s been fantastic – we’ve been making a few tagines, so we’ve been eating some fantastic food and it’s been great, and really good fun.

“But I haven’t had a kitchen since September, so we’ve kind of made a kitchen in the house, which has been brilliant!

“I’ve got this little ninja cooker which is fantastic, some camping stoves and just built this kitchen from nowhere.

“Laila’s been good because she’s put it all together, and we’ve just enjoyed getting by.”

O’Sullivan has enjoyed a glittering career with a cue in hand, adding 31 ranking events to those World Championship triumphs of 2001, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2013.

The Rocket is also in the illustrious club of being a Triple Crown winner, reigning supreme in the UK Championship no fewer than seven times and matching that number with his Masters triumphs between 1995 and 2017

O’Sullivan is currently ramping up preparations for a tilt at a sixth World Championship glory, being ranked world No.6 heading into the Crucible after a mixed season on the circuit.

The 44-year-old loves a challenge and says that’s been the key to his success – both on and off the table.

“A new kitchen comes in another few weeks and that will obviously be really nice, but in some ways I like the challenge of things aren’t perfect,” he added.

“How do you manage, how do you overcome it and how do you find peace within that? I love a challenge, you know.”

Ronnie had a great time during the lockdown

O’Sullivan hails lockdown as ‘best three months for a long time’

Ronnie O’Sullivan says lockdown has been the ‘best three months’ he’s had for ‘a long time’.

The Rocket has been spending his time during the snooker lay-off in various ways from his Essex home, running, cooking and watching Netflix as the countdown to this year’s Betfred World Championship intensifies.

O’Sullivan says the break has enabled him to rediscover his passion for running, subordinating the importance of snooker and enabling him to re-evaluate life’s priorities as he enters the twilight of his career.

That positive outlook has been embodied in O’Sullivan’s TV consumption and the world No.6 has relished keeping things simple when he tunes into the box.

“I’d probably say it’s been the best three months I’ve had in a long time, it really has!” the 44-year-old said.

“I’ve watched a lot of stuff on Netflix, and I’ve turned my Sky off because I didn’t want too many channels to choose from!

“I just went to the freeview channels while in lockdown because I find sometimes, you’ve got so much choice you end up just flicking through them and you don’t really give anything a chance.

“I thought if you minimise the amount of channels I’ve got to make the most of it – surely there’s one channel out of 30 that I’m going to enjoy!”

O’Sullivan is gearing up for a tilt at a sixth World Championship title, having not progressed past the quarter-finals at the Crucible since 2014 and enduring a mixed season on the circuit.

The Rocket could only muster an 18th-place ranking in the one-year calendar and therefore missed out on qualifying for the recent Tour Championship, also crashing out of the Championship League after a 3-0 defeat to world No. 14 Stuart Bingham.

O’Sullivan has sought to broaden his horizons in lockdown, however, as he reaches the end of a glittering stint at the highest level that has seen him romp to 36 ranking event titles.

And he’s loved letting off some steam to keep his mind healthy at a time that poses challenges for us all.

“I’ve not really [picked up any new hobbies in lockdown] – I try and keep my life pretty simple,” he added.

“I’ve been getting into a lot of podcasts and really enjoying them, which have been fantastic – running podcasts and a lot of business podcasts.

“Little things like that just trying to keep my mind healthy, in what’s a situation that can be quite harmful for you given what we’ve all found ourselves in.”

Ronnie wouldn’t want his kids to play snooker 

Ronnie O’Sullivan tells his kids: “Don’t you dare go into snooker”

Ronnie O’Sullivan has dissuaded his children from getting into snooker.

Ronnie

Ronnie O’Sullivan has warned his children away from getting into snooker and urged them to “take football up… become a lawyer” or start the “next Amazon” company.

The Rocket will return to the Crucible once again for the World Snooker Championship at the end of July as a pundit for Eurosport – who will air live coverage the tournament – as well as a competitor.

In an exclusive chat with RadioTimes.com, maverick superstar Ronnie O’Sullivan spoke of his love for snooker and the simple life, but has also dissuaded his kids away from following his career choice.

He said: “To be honest with you, I wouldn’t encourage my son to play snooker. I would say take football up, or play golf, or play tennis, or Formula 1.

“Get involved in an industry where there’s a lot of glamour. I’ve already told both my children ‘don’t you dare go into snooker’. It’s bad for your health. Become a lawyer or an accountant or whatever, try and produce the next Amazon company, a bit more exciting than potting balls in some leisure centre.

“I like to play and I enjoy playing when I’m not preparing for anything and there’s no pressure and no big tournaments coming up. I love snooker. But once you start to think, ‘Is my game in good shape? Have I played enough? Do I need to do this?’ that’s when it becomes a job then.”

O’Sullivan claims he practiced for around “six or seven hours” in total on a table during the enforced lockdown break, but spent plenty of time putting himself through drills to keep his technique in check.

Ronnie NI Open 2019 Final

Asked whether he missed the game during the enforced lockdown break, O’Sullivan responded in typically wry fashion.

“Yeah… for about three minutes. And then I got over it.

“Sometimes I’d just practice my bridge hand to see if that feels good. Sitting here talking to you, I’m practicing with my bridge hand!

“I don’t need to go on a table, a lot of it is just drills, and if it’s all drilled in, it’s like a golf swing, the club’s just an extension of your body, like the cue. If you get everything set up right, and you get everything going at the right speed and timing, in theory, you don’t actually need to practice.

“All my life I’ve looked for the easy, softer options, I’ve always looked for a technique that doesn’t need a lot of working on, it’s reliable.

“Like an Audi car, it’ll get you everywhere and do it very well, but it’s not a Ferrari, it’s not a Ford either, it’s somewhere mid-range and gets the job done.”

O’Sullivan still has a hunger to win the World Snooker Championship, but once again, if he is to do so, it will be on his own terms.