2020 English Open – Ronnie beats Ryan Day by 4-1 in the last 64 round

Ronnie played a lot better than he did in his first match to beat Ryan Day by 4-1 in the last 64 round of the 2020 English Open. His next opponent will be Matthew Stevens.

Here are the scores:

EnglishOpen2020L64ROSScores

The clearance that Ronnie did to steal the fourth frame is about as good a break as you will ever see.

Here is the report by WST:

O’Sullivan – It’s Weird With No Crowd

Ronnie O’Sullivan admits he’s still getting used to playing in tournaments behind closed doors, but on the table he was too good for Ryan Day as he won 4-1 to reach the third round of the Matchroom.Live English Open.

O’Sullivan felt the warmth of the Crucible crowd in August when he won the World Championship for the sixth time, but since then all events have been played without live fans. Players who usually thrive on the atmosphere have had to adapt.

EnglishOpenL64ROS-1Breaks of 68 and 56 gave O’Sullivan the first two frames today, before Day pulled one back with a 105. O’Sullivan made a superb 39 clearance to lead 3-1 then finished the match in frame four with tremendous pots on the green, brown and blue.

“I played ok,  I missed a few balls,” said 44-year-old O’Sullivan, who now meets Matthew Stevens in the last 32. “It’s weird with no crowds, certain players need an atmosphere to get up for it. When you play a good shot you excite yourself and you don’t need the crowd to get you going. But when you are struggling you need a crowd to force you to find something. We’ve got to get used to it.

“I’m still looking for a cue action, I think as snooker players that’s all we really do. We’re always trying to find a way to try to hit solid shots and play in an efficient mode.”

And Phil Haight reports on Ronnie speaking to Peter Cohen about the young players as well as the comments he made at the Crucible. Here are excerpts:

The world number two wants his remarks to encourage young players to show more commitment and more consistency and prove him wrong.

‘In some ways, I was hoping that it would inspire a lot of the youngsters to work a bit harder,’ he told Pete Cohen’s podcast.

‘I care about the game, I look at youngsters and sometimes you can’t get through to them. Sometimes the best way to get through to youngsters is to give them a little bit of a knock.

‘That’s what worked for me when I was younger, whenever someone said I couldn’t do something, it inspired me to do it.

‘I just think winners think like that. If someone says you can’t do something, you first ask “why?” Then think “I’m going to show them.”

‘You get a lot of players that come on the circuit and everyone goes, “anyone can keep anyone” and yeah, anyone can beat anyone on a given day, but it’s not okay just beating me on a Monday, you’ve got to beat me Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.

‘Anyone can beat anyone on a day, that’s a given, but it’s not about days, it’s about having good months, good years and good decades, if you want to be a true sportsman.

‘Otherwise, what are you? You’re just a pain the arse, every now and then you upset the apple cart.’

Interestingly, and related, Hector Nunns tweeted this after Ronnie’s match yesterday:

Hector Nunns tweet 14.10.2020 - Ronnie about Chang Bingyu

 

2020 English Open – Day 2

Day 2 at the 2020 English Open started the same way as day 1 with a WST statement aboud Covid-19 positive tests … as I expected.

Peter Lines has tested positive for Covid-19 at snooker’s Matchroom.Live English Open in Milton Keynes and has been withdrawn from the event.

He had come into contact with his son Oliver Lines, so Oliver has also been withdrawn.

Peter Lines was due to play Luo Honghao in the first round on Tuesday, so Luo receives a bye to the second round of the world ranking event.

Oliver Lines tested negative then beat Noppon Saengkham 4-1 in the first round on Monday. He was due to play Anthony McGill in the second round, so McGill receives a bye to round three.

All other players and officials tested at the event on Monday had negative results.

Peter and Oliver Lines will now undergo a period of self isolation and will receive the support of WST.

Since WST events restarted in June, strict Covid-19 regulations have been and continue to be followed, under UK Government guidance.

It’s a real shame for Oliver who had won his first match. He didn’t take it too well and it’s understable. But his fathere Peter was maybe even more unhappy. Here is what he had to say to Phil Haigh:

Peter Lines laments ‘kick in the teeth’ for son Oliver as Covid-19 ends their English Open campaigns

2017 UK Championship - Day 8
Peter Lines and son Oliver were forced to withdraw from the English Open (Picture: Getty Images)

Peter Lines returned a positive Covid-19 test at the English Open on Tuesday morning forcing him out of the event, but he has been hit harder by the ‘sickener’ of son Oliver having to withdraw as well, despite returning a negative test result.

It is a desperately unfortunate situation for both, but Oli will feel especially aggrieved in sporting terms as he had already won his first round match with an impressive 4-1 defeat of Noppon Saengkham.

Oliver tested negative before his first round match on Monday, with Peter only arriving in Milton Keynes later on Monday and a positive result confirmed on Tuesday morning.

The father and son, who live together in Leeds, had not seen each other since Saturday morning, but that was enough for Oli to be forced to withdraw.

Peter, who fortunately is showing no symptoms, explained the story to Metro.co.uk: ‘No, no symptoms I feel fine. The test came through about 7 o’clock this morning.

‘It’s a weird one, it’s a bit raw at the moment. Not so much for me, but for Oliver who has passed the test, to have to pull out is an absolute sickener.

‘Oliver has no symptoms, his test came back negative, he played his first round match and won, but obviously because he spent some time with me last week, they’ve said he had to pull out.

‘I hadn’t seen Oliver since Saturday morning and I didn’t get there till yesterday. There’s a 48 hour period where they ask if you’ve seen anyone and I hadn’t, but because we live together they went back further.

‘We suggested him getting tested again but they said no because it could take four or five days for it to come out for him

‘Even if you passed again tomorrow, it could not show up till Wednesday or Thursday so he had to pull out, which is an absolute sickener for him because he’d won and played well.’

Oliver had made breaks of 110 and 70 in the impressive win over the Thai star, which followed some encouraging performances in the recent Championship League.

The 25-year-old won back his tour card through Q School over the summer and is starting to show some form, so this is especially frustrating for the Yorkshire family.

‘He’s been working really hard to get his game back on track so it’s a kick in the teeth for him,’ said Peter.

‘He’s been working really hard the last few months, he’s sort of teamed up with Ken Doherty, working with him a little bit for some pointers and advice and it’s going really well.

‘He’s really knuckled down, he’s started to show the benefits of it, but it’s another kick in the teeth but he’ll be alright and he’ll be back.’

Lines, 50, is certainly not arguing the decision, it is just a frustrating one for him and his son as their early season is disrupted by the positive test result.

Not only are both out of the English Open, but both must now go into 14 days of isolation.

‘It is what it is, they can’t risk shutting the whole tour down, so there’s nothing you can really do about it. We won’t be the last ones this season, there’ll be a few others,’ said Peter.

‘It’s unprecedented times, they’ve got to make decisions on the spot, some will be right, some by wrong but they’ve got to try and do the right thing.

’14 days we’ll be at home from now, not do anything, not even leave the house, nothing.’

2017 World Snooker International Championship - Day 2
Oliver Lines has been forced out of his second round clash with Anthony McGill (Picture: Getty Images)

Stuart Carrington had tested positive for Covid-19 on the opening morning of the tournament and both he and Sam Craigie, who he had come into contact with, were forced to withdraw as well.

Carrington and Craigie travelled to the tournament together, which is something the Lines men had avoided, but they all suffered the same fate.

‘Carrington and Craigie travelled together to the comp, we went separately,’ explained Peter. ‘Oliver had been down in London practicing and I got the train down there on my own, stayed on my own, done the right thing, but rules are rules aren’t they?

‘We’re in an awkward position as professionals who live together because if one fails the other is definitely getting kicked out, it’s an awkward one.

‘Our next tournament is in about four weeks so hopefully we’ll be okay by then.’

The Lines duo should be back and ready to play at the German Masters qualifiers in Milton Keynes on 10 November.

Meanwhile the beneficiaries in Milton Keynes were Anthony McGill who is into the third round with two byes as he was due to play Craigie and then Oli Lines, while Luo Honghao is into round two after Peter withdrew.

Now about what happened at the tables…

Here are the reports by WST

Morning and afternoon sessions:

Shaun Murphy was barely able to practise before his Matchroom.Live English Open meeting with Robert Milkins but showed his class in the final frame to win 4-3 and book a place in the second round.

Murphy lives in Dublin so every time he arrives in Ireland from the UK he has to self isolate for 14 days due to Covid-19 restrictions. That has left him short of table time, but he had just enough in his locker to fend off the challenge of Milkins in Milton Keynes.

Former World Champion Murphy made a break of 122 in the opening frame and went on to lead 3-1. Milkins made a 103 in frame five and took the sixth for 3-3, then had first clear chance in the decider but made just 11 before mis-cueing as he attempted to pot a red to a baulk corner. Murphy responded with 65 which proved the crucial contribution as he set up a last 64 match with David Lilley.

“I’m relieved,” admitted world number eight Murphy. “Rob had a good chance in the last frame, it surprised me when he miscued. There has never been anything wrong with my bottle. Sometimes I’m too aggressive but that’s the way I’ve always played, I’m 38 now and too old to go more negative. I’ve got six to ten more years in the game and I’m at the stage where I’m just going to enjoy it and go for my shots.

“For myself and the other players from Ireland, when we travel home from England we have to stay in our houses. I’ve had two weeks between the European Masters and this event without being able to hit any balls. It’s hard to then come here and try to perform to a high level. I came over a day early and had a couple of hours practice at a club in Sheffield. It’s not where I want to be as a sportsperson but it’s out of my control.

“When there’s a run of events in November and December I’ll potentially stay in England for a few weeks. No one wants to be away from their kids for that long but I’ll have to kiss them goodbye and see them when Santa comes.”

McLeod And Gilbert Bust-Up

Rory McLeod beat David Gilbert 4-2 in a bad-tempered clash which included a heated exchange towards the end of the fourth frame. After Gilbert fouled on the green, McLeod felt he should have been awarded a free ball. Referee Mark King disagreed, while Gilbert also felt it was not a free ball.

McLeod eventually accepted the decision and later cleared from green to black to win the frame for 2-2. He took the next two with breaks of 64 and 46 for victory.

Reflecting on the incident in frame four, Gilbert said: “He thought it was a free ball and it wasn’t. Rory tries to be intimidating all the time but it wasn’t a free ball and that was that – the referee called it right. He didn’t intimidate me – you can’t intimidate me – but he tried to put pressure on the referee.

“Rory said to me he was disappointed in me – he obviously wanted me to agree with him and I would have agreed with him if I thought he was right. I’m not a cheat in any kind of way. I think he’s bang out of order for saying that but I’m not too bothered either. That’s not the reason why I got beat today – I got beat today because I’m just playing awful and that’s it.”

McLeod responded: “It was clearly a free ball. I asked David to come round and have a look and he just flat refused to, he just said he’d take the referee’s word for it. I’ve known David a long time but the etiquette he had in that match, not just in that incident, was horrendous. I’ve never known him to be like that.

“I haven’t got issues with David now – it’s just a situation which could have been dealt with a lot better by all parties. Why would I try and intimidate him? That’s just not my way. He’s a top 16 player and he’s more intimidating than I would be in that position.”

Round-up

Kyren Wilson saw off Dominic Dale 4-2 with top runs of 51, 75 and 59, while Jamie Jones beat his namesake Duane 4-2 with a top break of 103.

Jack Lisowski made breaks of 67, 83, 55 and 65 in a 4-2 defeat of Li Hang, while Germany’s Simon Lichtenberg edged out Anthony Hamilton 4-3 with a match-winning 52 in the decider.

Nigel Bond was 3-2 down against Ashley Hugill and 60-0 down in frame six, but stole that frame with the help of two snookers, and then made an 86 in the decider.

The situation of the Irish players is a difficult one and surely explains some of the results we got in the first round over the last two days.

This is the Gilbert v McLeod incident:

It’s hard to judge from the camera angle.

You can only admire Nigel Bond even if he’s hard to watch at times. What a fighter!

Evening session:

Louis Heathcote couldn’t convert a 3-1 lead into a shock victory over Judd Trump as the world number one hit back to edge a 4-3 success in the first round of the Matchroom.Live English Open.

 

The clash between last season’s Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year proved an exciting battle as Heathcote looked to be in charge for long spells, but the 23-year-old wasn’t able to finish the job. Trump goes through to the last 64 to face Yuan Sijun.

Bristol’s Trump started well with a break of 75 in the opening frame, but then lost a scrappy second. Heathcote compiled breaks of 68 and 53 to lead 3-1, and he had a match-winning chance in frame five but under-hit a red to a top corner on 32, leaving it short of the pocket. Trump made an 86 for 3-2 then got the better of a fragmented sixth frame to force the decider. A run of 61 helped Trump over the winning line.

“Louis will be very disappointed because he had chances,” said 31-year-old Trump. “I started well but then it went scrappy. I made some good long pots in the last frame and fell over the line in the end.  At the last tournament (the European Masters) I blew everyone away up until the semi-finals but then lost. So it can be better to start slowly. I’m still in it and I can’t play worse than I did today.

“In terms of the season, we don’t know what’s around the corner. But one day we’re going to wake up and everything will be back to normal with lots of big tournaments, so I’ll be prepared for that.”

Titanium Helps Higgins Show Mettle

John Higgins, who has recently switched to a different chalk and titanium ferrule, scored a 4-2 win over James Cahill. The Scot now meets English wild card Connor Benzey.

Four-time World Champion Higgins made a 122 in the second frame to lead 2-0. Cahill, renowned for scoring wins over the likes of Ronnie O’Sullivan and Mark Selby, fought back to 2-2 with 78 and 92. But Higgins took the last two frames with 67 and 57.

“I changed to Taom chalk a while ago and I’m now playing shots I could never play before,” said 45-year-old Higgins. “Robert Milkins, who usually uses the same chalk as me, came up to me in the practice room and said I should give it a go. In the last couple of weeks in practice I have not had a kick or bad bounce so I am totally sold on it now.

“I am using the titanium ferrule now as well and that has also made a difference. Stephen Maguire had it and I noticed how well he played with it. I feel good about my game, if you can add these little things that make an improvement then it helps.”

Louis Heathcote should have won that match. In my opinion he collapsed under pressure. He was 3-1 up and in the balls, leading by 32-0. He badly underhit a red that did not reach the pocket, leaving Judd Trump bang in the balls, with a red nearly over a the pocket. Judd made only 9 from it, missing the blue off its spot only three shots later and leaving Louis in the balls, only for Louis to inmmediately miss a red with the rest. The red didn’t even get near the pocket. You can’t do that against a top player. They smell blood, they take confidence from it and crush you.

What WST did not report…

Simon Lichtenberg got an excellent win against Anthony Hamilton. There was a break over 50 in five of the seven frames they played, and most young players struggle against very experienced, hard match player like Anthony.

Alexander Ursenbacher also registered a good win: he beat Graeme Dott by 4-2. Alex seems to be playing faster recently.

Zhao Jianbo beat Michael White by 4-3. I watched that match and somehow I always felt that Zhao was the one in control. It’s sad, and hard to understand, what happened to Michael White. He won two ranking titles, at 24 years of age he was in the top 16 and now he’s lost his tour card and looks very unreliable at the table.

Jak Jones beat Elliot Slessor by 4-1. Elliot Slessor won the first frame, that lasted an eternity … maybe someone can find out how long exactly. Then Jak Jones took four on the trot – in what felt like less time than was required for the first frame alone – with breaks of 100, 105 and 80.

Mark Davis beat Daniel Wells by 4-1, but, without watching the match it’s hard to draw any conclusion from the score. Daniel Wells, who had tested positive at the European Masters about three weeks ago, had to self isolate and, probably, came to this match rusty and unprepared.

 

 

2020 English Open – Ronnie beats Brian Ochoiski in the Last 128 round, plus a pre-tournament interview.

Ronnie won his first game of the season yesterday, when he beat Brian Ochoiski, the 21 years old amateur from France, in the last 128 round of the 2020 English Open.

Here are the scores:

EnglishOpenROSL128Scores

Ronnie looked very rusty and nervous at the start of the match, whilst Brian started brilliantly. He took full advantage in the first frame when Ronnie missed a long pink to the yellow pocket. He won the second frame with a wonderful century, and he was first in again in the third frame. The shot that turned the match around was a missed long pink in the yellow pocket by Brian, ironically, the exact same shot that Ronnie had missed in the first frame. Ronnie didn’t win the frame from there, but he made a good 51 and that settled him. From then on, it was pretty much one way traffic although Ronnie will need to improve if he is to go deep in the tournament.

Ronnie said something interesting in his post-match interview: he changed his shot selection and approach to the match because Brian wasn’t responding to his “normal ” shot selection the way he expected. Ronnie then allegedly decided to “go for eveything”, just a Brian did. I’m not sure about that though, because Ronnie actually did play quite a number of excellent safeties. His weakness, as always when not match-sharp, was his long potting.

Brian’s excellent performance overall shouldn’t surprise anybody. In the European Masters,  last month, he had taken Jack Lisowski to a decider. In the Championship League Snooker, he had managed a draw with Joe O’Connor, taken a frame from John Higgins, and finished third of his group, earning his first “professional” prize money. Yesterday, he scored his first century in the professional game. He’s still learning. He comes from a country where snooker is’nt big. He’s still raw, but his talent is evident. He’s definitely one to watch, this season and beyond, and we will see plenty of him because he came second on the 2020  Q-school Order of Merit, so he is likely to be invited in most tournaments this season.

Here is the report by WST:

O’Sullivan Battles Through French Resistance

Ronnie O’Sullivan ended up pretty in pink as he came from 2-0 down to beat Frenchman Brian Ochoiski 4-2 in the first round of the Matchroom.Live English Open.

World Champion O’Sullivan, wearing pink varnish on his fingernails to help raise awareness for breast cancer charity Future Dreams, was in danger of an early exit in Milton Keynes but clicked into gear after losing the first two frames.

EnglishOpenL128ROS-2Talented 21-year-old amateur Ochoiski took a tight opening frame then showed his potential with a superb break of 105. He had two early chances in frame three, but a missed pink on 9 proved a turning point. O’Sullivan made 51 in taking the frame then compiled runs of 113, 55 and 52 in winning the next three.

World number two O’Sullivan, who won this event in 2017, will face Ryan Day or Mark Lloyd in round two on Wednesday.

“Sometimes you have to find the right style of play for a certain opponent,” said O’Sullivan. “Tonight there was no point in me playing the right shot, because then he didn’t play the shots I thought he would play. So I thought I’d play the same game as him and go for everything.”

As for the nail varnish, O’Sullivan added: “A friend asked if I would wear it and I thought ‘why not’? I actually really like it. Anything to help the needy and the vulnerable out. It’s good to get behind great causes and great charities. It’s something I have never been involved with before, but I thought it was a great idea. If it helps create awareness for breast cancer that can only be a positive thing.”

This is Ronnie’s tweet about his fingernails painting ahead of his match

EnglishOpenPinkNailsROSTweet

Ronnie was interviewed by Eurosport… it made for  spooky viewing at times 👻

And he was interviewed by WST as well of course

Also, ahead of the match, Phill Haigh reported on an interview that Ronnie did with his long time friend Peter Cohen.

Ronnie O’Sullivan may never play the Masters again and could miss World Championship

Ronnie 6th WC
Ronnie O’Sullivan is happy to miss snooker’s biggest events (Picture: PA)

Ronnie O’Sullivan would not be disappointed if he never played in the Masters again and suggests he could miss future World Championships when crowds return to the Crucible.

The Rocket withdrew from the Masters this year, saying he simply didn’t want to deal with the media commitments and requests for tickets that come with the London event.

His fans hoped that it was just a year off from the tournament, but the 44-year-old may never return to the event he has won seven times in the past.

Having won his sixth world title in Sheffield this year, with either no crowd or a very limited number of spectators at the Crucible, O’Sullivan is more determined than ever to cut out the stresses of big events on the calender.

This could mean that he never contests another Masters, and he has even hinted that the World Championship could be removed from his diary when fans return.

‘For this year’s World Championships, there was no visitors, no guests, no one at the stage door, I could get in and out of Sheffield and I’ve never felt so relaxed there in my life,’ O’Sullivan told Pete Cohen’s Mi365 Podcast.

‘It wasn’t snooker, it was the stuff that surrounds certain tournaments. That was the reason I didn’t play in the Masters, because it’s a huge circus there.

‘Doing that was stopping me actually enjoying playing and for me it’s all about the playing side of it. So I decided to not play in any tournament that snooker wasn’t the priority.

‘So now, low-key events and the China events, I know the travelling can be quite hard, but once I’m there, my time’s not used up in that way, they allow you to just play snooker. They are the biggest events as well, and I do like China.

‘I won’t play a lot of the events where the circus is around, unless I like the town.

‘So York [UK Championship], I have to accept the circus there because I really love York and it’s a real good holiday for me.

‘London, the Masters is a no-no for me, if I never played in that again I wouldn’t be disappointed.

Ronnie 2017 Masters
Ronnie O’Sullivan last won the Masters in 2017 (Picture: Getty Images)

‘World Championships is a bit like that, unless Covid is still lingering around next year then I’d quite look forward to the peace and quiet in Sheffield that I had this year.

‘I’m a lot happier when I do what I want to do and set my own rules.’

It would certainly be a big surprise if O’Sullivan did not return to Sheffield next year to defend his world title and try to equal Stephen Hendry’s record of seven triumphs at the Crucible.

While he may prefer the event without a crowd involved, Hendry’s is one of the few records the Rocket has yet to break and he will almost certainly attempt to match it in 2021.

However, having skipped the Masters this year, it may well be that the Alexandra Palace crowd will have to go without O’Sullivan again in future.

The reigning world champion is in action in the English Open on Monday night, in his second event of the season when he takes on Brian Ochoiski in round one in Milton Keynes.

Nothing really new in the interview, but confirmation that Ronnie will very likely play in York, probably not at the Masters, unless “no crowd” prompts a change of mind … as for the World, well, his sponsors might have something to say about it, as they did last season. That said WST has put Crucible tickets on sale, but only in limited numbers. So clearly they still expect restrictions to be in place come April 2021.

 

Test or no test? It’s a testing question

This article by Desmond Kane, speaking with Gary Wilson, caught my attention yesterday:

GARY WILSON ON TESTING TIMES: WHY SNOOKER COVID-19 RULE CHANGE IS POSITIVE NEWS

Former World Championship semi-finalist Gary Wilson tells Desmond Kane why he feared being forced to take another Covid-19 test with snooker’s organisers updating the guidelines on Thursday to fall into line with other major professional sports.

Desmond Kane

In normal times, the only test Gary Wilson would be worrying about before the English Open is the one 15-year-old Ukrainian prodigy Iulian Boiko will provide in the first round on Tuesday night. But these are far from normal times. For society or professional sport.

In the year of the pandemic, it seems difficult to remain positive. Especially when you are positive.

World number 18 Wilson is attempting to refocus his season after being forced to withdraw from the European Masters – the first major ranking event of the season – on Tuesday 22 September before his match with Duane Jones after a Covid-19 test came back positive despite being blissfully unaware of his plight.

The fall-out saw his fellow professionals Elliot Slessor and David Lilley also pulled from the event after he enjoyed a spot of dinner with them at the Marshall Arena in Milton Keynes, the somewhat surreal new temporary home of snooker behind closed doors.

A similar fate befell the unfortunate world number 55 Daniel Wells before he was due to face world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan in the European Masters opening round after he tested positive. Contact with Michael White saw his fellow Welshman deprived of a place in the event despite being well.

The double whammy for Wells was turning up at the Championship League last week after self-isolating for 10 days only to re-test and still return a positive outcome on Friday 2 October.

The asymptomatic Wilson – the potting pride of Wallsend in North Tyneside – had no idea he was carrying coronavirus as well as his cue case, but is hoping to avoid a similar fate with the first of the Home Nations series breaking off on Monday.

“I’m absolutely fine thankfully. I tested positive a couple of weeks ago and did my self-isolation period,” Wilson told Eurosport. “In the meantime, me and Dan Wells have been texting each other because we were obviously in the same boat.
“He was fuming the other day because he tested positive again and then it has all came out when he’s done more research that you shouldn’t be really tested again until 42 days after you’ve tested positive.

“That information has come from public health in England and he has passed that information onto Jason Ferguson (the chairman of the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association). Jason has been sympathetic about the situation and is trying to clarify it.

“So I’ve told the snooker authorities that I don’t really want to turn up to the English Open and have to do a test again on Monday.

“The information is pretty clear from medical people that you shouldn’t be doing tests until six weeks after you’ve tested positive because there is still the risk of dead viral cells in your body.

“It has been on the news lately. It is actually a fact that you can no longer be contagious or have the illness, but can still test positive because of the dead viral cells in your body.

“That is what has been going on this week basically. The WPBSA are trying to come to some agreement with medical officers that we shouldn’t need tested again so soon after testing positive.

“Dan has missed out twice basically. He shouldn’t have been tested at the Championship League and I’ve got a test coming up on Monday that I shouldn’t have to test according to the stated medical advice.”

Since this interview, Wilson and Wells – who faces Mark Davis in the first round – have got the clarity they require with the players being informed by the sport’s authorities on Thursday they will not have to undergo another test enabling them to participate in the English Open without the stress of being forced to withdraw.

“Any player who tests positive will NOT be re-tested for a period of 30 days from the date of when the positive test was taken unless the player is demonstrating symptoms of the virus,” said World Snooker Tour in a statement released to the players on Thursday “following lengthy consultation with our Chief Medical Officer (CMO), plus other senior medical consultants familiar in the Covid19 pandemic.”

“1. The above policy is similar to that applied by other professional sports bodies, for example, the English Football League, who have adopted the same government guidelines but with a re-testing period of not before 90 days since the positive test,” said the statement.

“WST will continue to review this situation and will make changes to this policy if it is felt appropriate to do so and in consultation with our CMO.”

Wilson – who lost to Judd Trump in the World Championship semi-final in 2019 after defeating Mark Selby during a glorious run – believes it is right snooker tightened up the regulations in conjunction with the relevant medical advice.

The ardent Newcastle United supporter points to the guidelines Premier League and golf are adhering to as both common sense and caution in being safer than a bout of Selby safety play.

“It’s 100 percent we shouldn’t be tested so soon,” commented the 2015 China Open finalist. “As far as I’m concerned, if me and Dan get tested again it’s not really acceptable.

“There are other sports that are different because they are outdoor sports like football and golf. Snooker is a little bit different because it is indoors, but football is saying 90 days after the first positive test you don’t get tested again.

“They are kissing and cuddling on the field and have 90 days after a positive test. If they can implement that rule in the Premier League, and I think golf is 30 days, what is snooker doing? If the evidence is there that you shouldn’t get tested for 42 days, there is every chance I could come down again, test positive and get kicked out of the event for no reason.

“I’m hoping a bit of common sense will apply here.

“I had a four-hour drive down to Milton Keynes, got my test, stayed in the hotel overnight, tested positive then got back in the car back up the road for the self-isolation period.

“The WPBSA gave us all £200 as a goodwill gesture for travelling expenses the last time which was kind of them, but nobody wants to go through this. No test is the only way forward for me.”

While Wilson tested positive before embarking upon his period of self-isolation at home, his fiancée Robyn was tested and returned a negative outcome.
“It has been a serious illness for some people, but I never even knew I had it. All I had was a tickly throat. I possibly had tiredness, but that’s a hard one to determine because everybody feels tired at time,” explained Wilson.
“I can remember thinking I was going to bed a bit earlier a few nights, but you never really know if that is a symptom.

“The tests are probably right that I did have it, but I was very mild. At the most, a tickly throat.

“No headaches, cough or flu-like symptoms so for me it was just a case of doing your 10 days isolation as per the recommendation after the test just to be sure and I got out of self-isolation last Friday before going down the club on Saturday to start practising again.

“I’ve been absolutely fine and so has my partner Robyn. We’ve been sharing same bed etc, and she has had a test that came up negative.”

“It’s a bit of a strange one,” opined Wilson, who has made over 150 centuries in his career. “Some people don’t seem to catch it or catch it and don’t know they have it.

“It makes me wonder if I had it. I have absolutely no idea where I would have caught it. There is nothing that stands out. It is just something random.
“Me, Elliot and David had food the night before. I was asked that question when I came back positive and obviously couldn’t lie about it. I feel a little bit guilty, but there was nothing much I could do about it.

“We were all doing social distancing and following the regulations. It is just unfortunate that we’ve all had to sacrifice a tournament because of it.”

Like his fellow professionals, Wilson, 35, is adapting to the new normal of trying to perform without fans amid an outpouring of hand sanitizer, one-way arrows around venues and a face mask looming as closely as his chalk. A jobsworth’s dream, but a living pestilence for professional sport.

“It’s going to be a very strange season, but thankfully as a player there are still lot of tournaments there to play in,” said the straight-talking cueist, who is hoping his wedding to Robyn can still go ahead next spring.

“You just have to make as much money as you can because it’s not really about pleasing fans at the venue. Nobody knows where this will all end.

“You can understand why they’ve moved the events to Milton Keynes. The Championship League in June there was really strict, everybody adhered to the rules and there was no room for anybody to step out of line in any respect.

“Everybody was scared at the time, but I think that gave the players a lot of confidence because the venue was so clean.

“From a business side, it makes sense to keep the events there. It saves them a fair bit of money and allows them to keep the tour going for the rest of the season.

“We’ll still have the UK Championship in York, but it’s understandable to stop moving about at the moment. We’ve just got to be thankful that the sponsors have stayed on board.

“I’ve got full praise for (World Snooker Tour chairman) Barry Hearn, World Snooker Tour and Matchroom for all their efforts to keep the sport ticking over. ”
Desmond Kane

The fact that this disease comes in so many forms – ranging from being asymptomatic, to being deadly, or leaving people with permanent debilitating health issues – is the reason really why tests MUST be done and everyone has to be extra cautious.

Now of course, if a person who has tested positive, and is over the disease, will stay positive for a while even though they aren’t contagious anymore, common sense has to prevail IF re-infection can be excluded in the immediate aftermath of the disease because immunity has been gained.

Martin Gould on Ronnie, Yan Bingtao, Jamie Clarke, Aaron Hill and more …

We have a few day ahead of us without actual action at the table. I will take the opportunity to go through some articles/news that came out in the past weeks.

The first of those is an excellent interview with Martin Gould, by Phil Haigh.

Here is the interview by Phil Haigh:

Ronnie O’Sullivan comments can drive you mad, I did call him a few names, admits Martin Gould

gettyimages-Robbie
Ronnie O’Sullivan’s comments at the World Championship caused a huge stir (Picture: Getty Images)

Martin Gould was far from happy with Ronnie O’Sullivan’s disparaging comments about lower-ranked players in snooker, so much so he was preparing a winner’s speech to fire back at the Rocket.

During this year’s World Championship O’Sullivan said he would have to ‘lose an arm and a leg to fall out of the top 50’ in the world, such is the cavernous gap in talent between him and the players at the lower reaches of the rankings.

The 44-year-old, who went on to win his sixth world title at the Crucible, was more commenting on the younger players in the game and the lack of talent emerging, but his barbs were felt by anyone outside the top 50.

Gould was ranked at number 60 at the start of the World Championship and was not happy at all with the Rocket knocking him.

The Pinner Potter has been in sparking form since July and has climbed to #36 in the world, thanks largely to a run to the final of the European Masters.

The 39-year-old beat John Higgins, Judd Trump and yan Bingtao en route to the finale in Milton Keynes and had prepared a speech that was aimed at putting O’Sullivan in his place, were he to beat Mark Selby in the final.

‘I had a little speech ready for the final if I’d beaten Mark, because it would have meant I’d have beaten Higgins, Bingtao, Trump and Selby,’ Gould told Metro.co.uk.

‘So I was going to cheekily say, “I’ve got rid of them lot, now all I’ve got to do is tie an arm and leg behind Ronnie’s back and see if he can beat me.” Because at that point he said that, I was in the ranking bracket that he was talking about.’

Gould would narrowly lose the final to Selby in a 10-9 classic, but it was another big step to recovering his best form, which he had lost over the last two seasons as he battled depression and injury.

The former world number 12 doesn’t think he was the specific target of O’Sullivan’s remarks, but does admit they wound him up.

‘I did call him a few names, I won’t lie,’ said Martin. ‘It’s just Ronnie being Ronnie, really, just take it with a pinch of salt and laugh about it.

‘I’m pretty sure he wasn’t actually including me in that bracket, I’ve played him a fair few times.

‘Ronnie’s just one of those types of people, he puts bums and seats, he can criticise people, but everyone still loves him. It’s just Ronnie being Ronnie, you can’t knock him.

‘He can drive you mad with some of his comments but people shouldn’t criticise him because he might just pack it in one day and the game…well it wouldn’t die, but it needs him.’

gettyimages-Martin Gould
Martin Gould is in fine form at the start of the new season (Picture: Getty Images)

Gould followed up his run to the final of the European Masters by topping his first Championship League group to book his spot in the next stage of the competition.

He is enjoying a career resurgence as he nears 40, but he does feel there are some bright young things on the baize, particularly impressed by China’s Yan Bingtao, with the 20-year-old now up to number 12 in the world.

‘For me, Yan’s going to be someone who’ll be around for a long, long time yet,’ said Gould. ‘He just looks very, very good indeed and he will cause some damage. ‘The European Masters was the first time in three or four attempts that I’ve beaten him. He beats himself up when he plays a bad shot, seems to find it difficult to keep emotion in check, but different people do different things with that, each to their own.

I could definitely see Yan winning another event this season, adding to his tally.’

Gould is also a fan of Welshman Jamie Clarke after his headline-grabbing performances at the World Championship as he knocked out Mark Allen and then narrowly lost to Anthony McGill in a feisty epic.

‘Jamie is going to have a good season, I think,’ Gould said. ‘The only thing I thought, with what happened at the Crucible, I thought maybe Jamie was getting a little bit big for his boots at time.

jamie-clarke
Jamie Clarke won a lot of new fans at the Crucible this year (Picture: REX)

‘I hope and pray that’s not the case because he’s a lovely kid and I don’t want to see him get overconfident. But he looked very solid and started to score heavily as well, which is a massive plus. He’s got an all-round game so I can see him doing well.’

One youngster who has done more than most to start proving O’Sullivan wrong is Aaron Hill, the 18-year-old who knocked the Rocket out of the European Masters in the second round with a superb performance.

‘I’ve never really seen Aaron Hill play, he looks good, looks useful, but he was on the table next to me when he beat Ronnie so I was concentrating on my own game,’ said Gould of the young Irishman.

‘It’s only his first year so we’ve got to give him a little bit of time to see what he’s capable of.’

Martin is right about the fact that Ronnie wasn’t thinking about him when saying what he said, no more than he would include Stephen Hendry or Jimmy White in his critiscism of the “under top 50” level. Martin has been in the top 16, and is a ranking event winner. Martin knows it and still felt hurt, and it motivated him to prove Ronnie wrong, which, I’m sure, is exactly what Ronnie wanted to see.

Ronnie, for all the ups and downs, loves his sport, it’s been his life for the best of the last 35 years, and he is genuinely concerned by the fact that hardly any young player has come through over the last 10 years. The top 16 has essentially remained the same.

Martin is full of praise for Yan Bingtao, and rightly so. He is the exception, he is the only one who came through the flat draw system to reach the top 16 at a young age. Martin’s assessment of  Yan’s emotional reactions when not playing well is interesting too. It’s the mark of a perfectionist. Being a perfectionist is both a blessing and a curse. It’s a blessing because it constantly fuels the motivation to get better. It’s a curse because it can lead to never ending dissatisfaction and totally unjustified self-deprecation. Eh Ronnie?

Yan is not helped by the constant criticism he gets from some commentators and I can’t help to think that if a 20 years old Brit was playing at the level Yan is playing, those same commentators would not be so harsh on them, on the contrary. They would see them for what they are, a young player still “searching” their best self at the table and sometimes unsure about their shot selection or strategy.

Martin is also right about Aaron Hill. He looks a very promising prospect, and him beating Ronnie, is a great story and one that could have a huge impact on the state of snooker in Ireland. But it’s too early to make a prediction on his future career. He’s only at the start of his first year. He hasn’t any battle scars yet. I don’t wish that on Aaron, but the current flat draw system has destroyed many young players’ enthusiasm and faith in their ability. It takes a very strong character to keep that going when you get beat more often than not in round 1, because, more often than not, you face a top player, and then you struggle financially, because you get nothing for your efforts, even if you pushed the world number one to the last black in a deciding frame.

 

Ronnie tells Hector Nunns that he is anxious about covid-19 after players tested positive last week.

Ronnie spoke to Hector Nunns about his covid-19 related fears after players tested positive earlier this week.

RON EDGE

Ronnie O’Sullivan admits feeling ‘vulnerable’ and ‘paranoid’ over failed coronavirus tests

Hector Nunns

RONNIE O’SULLIVAN says snooker’s first failed coronavirus tests last week have left him “paranoid”.

Two players tested positive for Covid-19 at the European Masters, and three others that had come into contact with them were also sent home.

Ronnie
Positive coronavirus tests in snooker have made Ronnie O’Sullivan “paranoid”Credit: Getty Images – Getty

Several high-profile players including Mark Selby and Stuart Bingham reckon events at Milton Keynes have been a real jolt and a wake-up call for the Tour

And as a result of rising infections and recorded cases the Government has moved to reimpose restrictions — including delaying the return of spectators.

Six-time and reigning world champion O’Sullivan, 44, is famously one of the most health-conscious players on the circuit.

The world No 2, who saw his scheduled first-round opponent Daniel Wells test positive, stopped shaking hands with opponents last year — long before the pandemic.

Ronnie is due to play next in the Championship League Snooker on October 5. During the first week of that competition there were no tests. If there are no tests next week either, I would not be surprised if Ronnie withdrew.

Regarding the second part of the 128 men 2020 CLS next week, there were some changes to the fixtures: Click-here-for-the-updated-fixtures

2020 Championship League Snooker (2) – Day 4

Day 4 in Milton Keynes saw Matthew Selt and Shaun Murphy progress.

Here is the report by WST:

Shaun Murphy and Matthew Selt won their respective groups at BetVictor Championship League Snooker to progress to Stage Two, where they’ll join Zhou Yuelong and Dominic Dale in Group B.

Murphy met Martin O’Donnell in what was a group decider, although just a point was enough for the former World champion, while O’Donnell needed the win.

Both players had earlier beaten Jimmy White and tour rookie Peter Devlin, but Murphy had done it without dropping a frame, meaning he would finish ahead of O’Donnell should the final match be a 2-2 draw.

However, that didn’t come into it as Murphy saw out a 3-1 win to advance to the next phase of the tournament.

“I am pleased that my game seemed to be there today, I hit some really nice shots among some bad ones and I am through to the next phase,” said Murphy, who was visibly limping at the table during his matches.

“I suffer from Achilles tendonitis and it’s something which has flared up since lockdown. When it comes it is very, very sore and there’s not much I can do about it. I felt it flare up when I was practicing yesterday and tried to ice it as much as I could. It’s painful but we are so fortunate in these times to still have tournaments to come to that you have to just keep pushing on.

“I was chasing snookers in the last frame and didn’t know I was through at the time. I didn’t realise when he missed the pink in the last frame how important that was.”

On table two, Matt Selt took top spot in Group 8 with 3-1 wins over Gao Yang and Si Jiahui before drawing 2-2 with Ben Woollaston to confirm his place in the next phase.

BetVictor Championship League Snooker continues on Thursday with coverage of both tables available at Matchroom.Live.

FINAL GROUP STANDINGS

Group 7

P W D L FW FL +/- PTS
Matthew Selt 3 2 1 0 8 4 4 7
Si Jiahui 3 1 1 1 6 5 1 4
Gao Yang 3 0 2 1 5 7 -2 2
Ben Woollaston 3 0 1 1 4 7 -3 1

 

Group 8

P W D L FW FL +/- PTS
Shaun Murphy 3 3 0 0 9 1 8 9
Martin O’Donnell 3 2 0 1 7 4 3 6
Jimmy White 3 0 1 2 3 8 -5 1
Peter Devlin 3 0 1 2 2 8 -6 1

Again, I only watched one table yesterday, table 2 where group 7 was competing.

For some reason, I found it rather hard to watch. There was little fluency. Matthew Selt played OK. Both young Chinese players showed great potting ability, but were lacking in all other aspects, especially Gao, which is entirely normal given that he’s only 16 and this was his first outing as a professional. Si Jiahui showed great resilience.

What happened to Ben Woollaston since his Welsh Open final in 2015 is hard to understand. I had some hope that he might be coming back when he made to the final Group in the 64 men CLS last June and nearly won it, but now here he is finishing last of the group, with one draw and two defeats. Maybe he just gave priority to spending time with his young family during the inter-season break and didn’t practice much? Still it’s worrying, especially as he also lost heavily in his first match in the World Championship qualifiers in July.

Also regarding Anthony Hamilton … here is the link to a very good interview with Phil Haigh

I picked those two excerpts – bold added by me

‘Obviously Matchroom and World Snooker are run by the same person [Barry Hearn] so it doesn’t make much sense to me,’ Hamilton told Metro.co.uk. ‘ I was down to play this Sunday in the Championship League then the Monday next week in the European Masters. In 24 hours the policy changes, within the same venue.

You’re not supposed to say anything about it, but it’s absolutely nuts, it doesn’t make any sense at all.

and

The former German Masters champion has dismissed the suggestion that he was just out to win some prize money in qualifying, but is not surprised that the WST chairman saw it this way.

‘I fully expected it because we know what Barry’s like,’ Anthony said. ‘For him to be philosophical or phlegmatic about it would be the opposite of what he normally is.

‘I pulled out of the the World Championships before I knew I’d get any points or money and I thought I’d get a fine as well. At the time I probably thought it was 80% likely I’d not get the prize money, the points and I’d get a 500 quid fine on top, and despite that I thought  it was the right decision to pull out.

‘I knew that there would be a crowd, but I foolishly, naively assumed that the safety measures would be more stringent. I assumed there might be a glass partition like in NHL, or maybe no one in the first six rows, something like that.

‘I only saw the seating plan on the day I was travelling to Sheffield for testing, that was the first time and that was the day I decided it was not safe. I got really anxious about it and just felt I had to do the right thing for me.

‘He [Hearn] made his mind up that that’s the way I was thinking but he’s just making his own news.

‘Come on, I haven’t been to the Crucible for 12 years, why wouldn’t I want to play? At 49 I may well not get back there again, it doesn’t make any sense. I’m doing alright for money, I’m not falling off the tour. If I didn’t want to play I wouldn’t have entered, I’m not that sort of guy.

‘But unfortunately for me Barry’s got all the platform to say this and that and I didn’t think it was worthwhile putting my point out there, you get in a tit-for-tat with him, you’ll come off second best.