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.

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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.”

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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.

Another interview with Ronnie – slightly different and therefore interesting.

This one is slightly different, in that, willingly or not, Ronnie reveals how apprehensive he feels about the World Championship under social distancing rules, and what worries him most. Reading this we also get a better understanding of how he tries “not to care” in order to cope with his own anxious nature.

Here it is, done by radiotimes:

Ronnie O’Sullivan on the “simple life” and World Snooker Championship: “I’m a danger, but an early exit suits me fine”

Ronnie O’Sullivan spoke exclusively to RadioTimes.com ahead of the World Snooker Championship live on Eurosport.

Ronnie

Ronnie O’Sullivan wants to win the upcoming World Snooker Championship – or fall at the first hurdle.

The Eurosport pundit – who will feature during their live coverage as well as playing in the tournament – was typically frank and honest about life in lockdown and returning to the table in an exclusive chat with RadioTimes.com.

O’Sullivan is adored for his unrivalled achievements and unconventional style, though he has thoroughly enjoyed his time away from snooker during lockdown, and claims he barely practised at all during the break.

He said: “If someone said to me it’s in the bag, guaranteed, all you’ve got to do is turn up I’ll go, ‘Sweet,’ but it’s not like that.

“It takes a lot of preparation, blood, sweat and tears. I like to just go there and enjoy it.

“If I’m on, I’m a danger. If I’m not, an early exit suits me fine because I don’t want to go all the way to Sheffield and get beat in the final. That’s the worst result, it takes years off your career.

O’Sullivan admits the 17-day tournament is a daunting prospect with certain areas of his standard preparation out of his control, including the food he eats, as players must adhere to strict social-distancing rules.

“You can’t stay in the hotels you’d normally stay in. Usually I’d rent a house with my own food and a few friends with me and we’d just turn it into a holiday. The snooker is a bit of an add-on.

Ronnie

“All those things I could control, I’m not going to be able to do that stuff. Potentially, that’s quite worrying for me. How do you spend 17 days in an environment, eating food you’re not used to? It’ll be tricky.

“Some people live off Dominos pizza and deep-fried burgers and fried chicken, for them, eating a bit of Ryanair food in the hotel – that’s what the catering is like – they’re stomach’s going to deal with that whereas me, I’m probably going to make myself feel ill from that after a day.

“The resources World Snooker have isn’t great, so I imagine they’ll go down the low budget end, so I’m not sure how – health-wise – I’m going to cope with that. It’s all new. Normal, but new.

“It’s about whether it means that much to you anymore, if you want to go to prison for 17 days, sweat it out and go through that then great, but some people might not feel like that.”

O’Sullivan featured during the Championship League tournament in Milton Keynes at the start of June, but spoke about his love for the simple life lockdown allowed him to lead.

Ronnie - Betway UK Championship - Getty

The 44-year-old said he missed snooker “for about three minutes” and barely practised at all, and while O’Sullivan still loves the game, he enjoyed a “fantastic time” away from the table.

“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.

“What it has taught me, in some ways, don’t prepare for anything, just play, oh, there’s a tournament next week, oh it’s the World Championship, oh, yeah, I’m going to go for that one. But trying to build anything up in your mind and putting so much emphasis on it, you end up stopping enjoying what is meant to be an enjoying.

“Before Milton Keynes, I’d done about six or seven hours practice, that was all I’d done since February, but I was doing a lot of practice in the mirror. I have this mirror in my house and I’d cue up for about half an hour every day just to make sure everything was all in line. That’s all I was doing.

“It sounds crazy to say, but I’ve had an absolutely fantastic time [in lockdown]. Life’s got even more simple.

“I’ve always enjoyed the simple life and always thought there was something wrong with me for wanting to enjoy a simple life but actually I’ve come to the conclusion it’s good to be like that.

“I rediscovered my running through the forest. You can’t go out to restaurants – not that I ever liked to – but it’s just made that impossible. Nice little takeaway sitting in my car eating it with the missus has turned out to be highlight of the week.

“It’s just the simple things, you know? People think, ‘Oh, you’re a bit of a weirdo,’ but actually I think most people come to the point of thinking it’s actually quite nice to get fish and chips and sit in your car or the top of a hill with a nice view and just enjoy the scenery.”

Now O’Sullivan is back under the spotlight, all eyes will be trained on him for more box-office performances that have seen him become the most-celebrated player in the history of the game.

 

Another – long and typical – interview with Ronnie …

This was published in the Daily Mail yesterday

Ronnie O’Sullivan insists he WILL play at the World Championship even if crowds are let in as ‘the Rocket’ is ready to put up with 17 days at the Crucible for just one reason — the world title

  • The Rocket struggled with having to self isolate in an on-site hotel room
  • He faces living under strict rules at World Snooker Championship in Sheffield 
  • O’Sullivan has compared spending time in a cell to being in a bio-secure bubble 
  • He has also voiced concerns about crowds being allowed back into the Crucible 

By DAVID COVERDALE FOR THE DAILY MAIL

Ronnie O’Sullivan is talking about the time he was locked up rather than locked down.

‘I was 17 and they thought I’d abducted somebody,’ explains the five-time world snooker champion matter-of-factly.

‘There were 30 police vans surrounding me and they locked off the whole of Chigwell. It was like a scene off the FBI show on Sky.

 

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Ronnie O’Sullivan faces living under strict rules at World Snooker Championship in Sheffield

‘They stuck me in the back of a van and I was sitting there thinking, “What does abduction mean?”. I’d just come back from three days at Champneys Spa and I was going to watch a boxing match in Brentwood.

They put me in a white suit, took my car away for forensics and kept me in a cell. They did a proper job. And then they let me out 24 hours later saying it was mistaken identity. I was like, “OK, fair call, nice one, try not to make that mistake again”.’

O’Sullivan laughs as he finishes sharing his bizarre but previously untold tale. The reason it has finally come out in the open is because the 44-year-old is comparing spending time in a cell to being in a bio-secure bubble, of which his only experience so far was a negative one.

When competitive snooker returned last month in Milton Keynes, the Rocket struggled with having to isolate in an on-site hotel room while waiting for the results of his Covid-19 tests and only being allowed to eat what was delivered to his room.

‘I did 16 hours in a cell once and it was better because I got to choose my own food,’ quipped O’Sullivan at the time.

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The Rocket struggled with having to isolate in an on-site hotel room during the pandemic

And speaking exclusively to Sportsmail, he again jokes how prison would be preferable to having to abide by those same strict restrictions for the 17 days of the World Snooker Championship in Sheffield, which begins on Friday.

While rules have been relaxed for the Crucible, players must limit their social contact as they will be tested for coronavirus before the tournament and the quarter-final stage — and anyone who is positive will be disqualified. ‘I don’t know how I’m going to deal with it,’ says O’Sullivan, who is in fine form as he gurns for the cameras at the Woodford Wells Sports Club, near his home in Essex.

‘I don’t really love snooker that much to go through that suffering. When I go to tournaments, I like to go for a run, go to the gym, meet friends, get the right food in me.

‘I am very funny with what I eat and I am also used to going running every day, seven or eight miles. That has been my medicine for the last 20 years.

‘A happy snooker player is a player that will play well. An unhappy one is not going to play as well.’

O’Sullivan also has concerns about crowds being allowed back into the Crucible, as the Government on Friday announced the tournament will be used as a test event for the safe return of fans.

Despite previously threatening to pull out if spectators were present, he has now confirmed to Sportsmail he will play. But O’Sullivan says he would rather lose in the first round than be beaten in the final.

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The 44-year-old has compared spending time in a cell to being in a bio-secure bubble

‘Why would you want to waste 17 days when you can only waste one day?’ he asks. ‘Going to Sheffield, it’s either win it or nothing. Getting to the final is no consolation.

‘I’d much rather bow out in the first round than lose in the final because then at least I’ve got 16 days to not have the battle scars and just get on with life.’

SHOULD the Rocket pocket the £500,000 prize money for winning the Worlds, he knows exactly what his first buy will be.

‘I’m looking at getting a campervan,’ reveals O’Sullivan, who recently sold his £130,000 60ft canal boat because he never spent a night on it. ‘Me and my mate are thinking of getting one and then going around Europe doing obscure running races.

‘My girlfriend has said that if it’s just like the boat and doesn’t get used, then she won’t be too happy.

‘But she knows I’m serious about my running. If I can manage my schedule enough and make use of it, then that would be something I’d like to do.’

Running — the title of his 2013 autobiography — was O’Sullivan’s salvation in the 2000s as he recovered from alcohol and drug addictions and a battle with depression.

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Players will be tested for coronavirus before the tournament and the quarter-final stage

He joined the Woodford Green Athletics Club and regularly took part in road and cross-country races, proudly boasting a personal best of 17:04m over 5km and 34:50m over 10km.

O’Sullivan had let his running take a backseat over the past decade but, after piling on the pounds at the start of lockdown, he has caught the bug again and has shed more than a stone and a half. ‘I was on the steak-and- kidney pie diet for the first few weeks,’ he grins. ‘I thought, “If I am going to be sitting here for three months and I can’t go anywhere, let’s see what happens if I start eating whatever I want”. It was like a social experiment.

‘So I was banging in the old steak-and-kidney pies and just going for it, mate. I was eating them like, “Bosh, bosh, bosh”.

‘But all of a sudden, I woke up one day and I was like, “Jesus Christ, your diet really is important, I’ve got to sort this out”. I didn’t like what I was seeing so I just thought I’d get back into running because I’ve had nothing else to do.

‘I was nearly 14st 8lb and I’m down to 13st now in the space of 10 weeks. I am probably running six days a week, averaging seven miles a day.

‘I have gone back to the running club and I am the slowest of the lot, just hanging on, but eventually I’ll be flying again. I’m trying to get my body used to it and putting myself through the punishment.’

Because he has got back into running, Eurosport pundit O’Sullivan describes lockdown as the best three months of his life. But he hopes it leads to a cultural change in this country, where people spend less time commuting in cars to work and more time exercising.

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O’Sullivan has voiced concerns about crowds being allowed back into the Crucible

As a nation, I think we should focus on being a lot healthier,’ the world No 6 says, this time with a much more serious tone.

‘What all this has taught me is that if, God forbid, you get any illness, if you are fit and strong you are more likely to pull through. But if you have obesity problems, that makes you vulnerable.

‘If people can work from home a bit more, that three hours that they’re using commuting, they can use to exercise. I am not going to be travelling to work.

‘Driving to the snooker club used to take an hour and a quarter of my day to get there and back. I have just decided that I am never going to waste an hour and a quarter driving to the club because I can get so much done in that time. If I want to hit a few balls, I will just use my friend’s table around the corner.

‘It’s like if Usain Bolt decided to come out of retirement. He would probably think, “I’m really s*** now”, but we would look at him and think he’s amazing.

‘So I look at myself and think I don’t really need to train properly, I don’t need to be a slave to it. The way I’m doing things now, I’m happy. It is working well.’

HE may no longer be a slave to the baize, but do not let that fool you into thinking O’Sullivan is ready to retire, even if he has threatened it many times. ‘With my game, I could probably play until I was 55, comfortably, and maybe even 60,’ he says. ‘I look around at the competition, I see what is coming through and there is not really a lot about. I hardly practise and I’m still getting to finals and winning tournaments and I am a grandad.

‘I still enjoy the battle. I call it the mustard and I enjoy smothering myself in the mustard, because whatever I do after snooker, it’s not going to be mustard.

RonnieRecords

‘Snooker niggles at me and I feel that I need that niggle. I’m not ready to let go of the niggle but I can deal with it.

‘A lot of my ups and downs when I was younger were down to the perfectionism that came with playing a sport. It became an obsession, but I have learned to manage that a lot better.

‘I have enjoyed my snooker more in the last 10 years than I ever have done because I just see it as a game with sticks and balls — and I back myself every now and again to do something great.’ In the eyes of many punters and according to most statistics, O’Sullivan is the game’s greatest.

He is the only player to have racked up 1,000 century breaks, he has earned the most career prize money and shares the record for the most ranking titles of 36 with Stephen Hendry.

The one stat he trails Hendry in is world titles — five to the Scot’s seven. But O’Sullivan grins: ‘It’s not really important. I suppose I’ve got to let him have one record, I can’t take them all.’

O’Sullivan’s Crucible crowns came in 2001, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2013, but he reckons he wasted almost a third of his near 30-year career because of his hellraising off-the-table antics, which at one stage saw him check in to rehab at the Priory.

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‘The Rocket’ has labelled discussions on allowing fans of the sport back in as ‘insane’

I had a mad few years where I over-indulged and I was in no fit state to compete or win tournaments,’ he admits. ‘I do regret it. People say, “Oh, don’t have regrets”, but I wish I hadn’t gone through that phase The last thing you want to do when your head feels like it’s in a jam jar is go and play snooker.’

O’Sullivan, though, doubts whether he would have surpassed Hendry’s haul even if he had not been such a wild child. ‘To win it five times is beyond what I thought I’d do,’ he says. ‘I’m not greedy. I’m not like a Hendry or a Michael Schumacher or a Tiger Woods who are driven by wins.

‘I’m more a luxury person. I like an easy life and if it comes and it comes easy, I’ll do it. If it doesn’t come easy, then let one of the others have it.’

The sport of snooker is lucky to have their luxury item and will not be the same once he is gone, a point O’Sullivan agrees with.

‘I’m not saying snooker wouldn’t survive and no one is bigger than any sport,’ adds O’Sullivan. ‘But I feel like I have been the fore-runner for snooker in many ways and brought a lot of excitement and a lot of different fans to the sport. I am sure that is down to the energy that I play with.

‘When you put the golf on, there is a different energy when Tiger Woods is playing in an event. I’m not saying I am the Tiger of snooker, but it’s always better to have Tiger wearing his red shirt on a Sunday.’

How the snooker world would love to see O’Sullivan wearing his black shirt and dickie bow on the final Sunday in Sheffield in four weeks’ time.

Well that’s a bit of everything – typical Ronnie – nothing really new either, but the good news that he will play at the Crucible.

How far he will go, and how he will cope, nobody knows, not even him. But at least he’s giving it a try. And, IMO, there is a lot of  what he said here that’s about easing the pressure rather than about a lack of desire. Nobody – NOBODY – can become the best at any sport if they are not competitive beasts, and that never goes away.

 

Eurosport Build-up to the Crucible with more Ronnie’s memories

Eurosport continues their build-up to the 2020 World Championship with more “Ronnie Crucible memories”

This one is about his bust-up with Alain Robidoux at the Crucible in 1996 

Ronnie O’Sullivan: ‘People thought I was taking the mickey when I started playing left-handed’

Young Ronnie Crucible 1996

Ronnie O’Sullivan admits he wished he began playing left-handed earlier in his career despite causing controversy at the Crucible due to his ambidextrous wizardry.

The five-times world champion lost 16-14 in the 1996 World Championship semi-finals to Peter Ebdon, but his campaign was overshadowed by a bust-up with Canada’s Alain Robidoux in the first round in Sheffield.

O’Sullivan completed a 10-3 win over Robidoux, who was furious when his 20-year-old opponent began playing shots with his left-handed having a constructed a 8-2 lead overnight.

The 1997 World Championship semi-finalist accused O’Sullivan of being “disrespectful” even though his left-handed play has become almost as reliable as his right-handed stance in the ensuing 24 years.

Robidoux continued playing in the ninth frame of the match despite trailing by 43 points with only the pink and black on the table. He refused to shake O’Sullivan’s hand at the end of their fiery encounter, but later apologised for misreading the situation.

“I wish I had started playing left-handed sooner,” O’Sullivan told Eurosport. “I was playing so poorly with my right hand that I should have switched. I knew that I could pot balls with my left hand. But I was aware that people might have thought I was taking the mickey.

“It just got to the point where I wish I had wished I had done it sooner because it was relaxing me. Alain didn’t take it too well. I could understand that at the time. But once I started, it soon became acceptable.

“I beat Peter Ebdon 6-1 in the semi-finals of the Premier League in Kettering a year later playing with my left hand. People quickly realised that I could play as well at times with my left as my right,” said O’Sullivan, who is seeded six for this year’s tournament which begins on Friday 31 July.

“I won seven frames against Stephen Hendry playing with my left hand in a 10-8 win in the final. And he was world champion at the time. It was unfortunate for Alain, but he apologised to me a couple of years later and said he didn’t realise I could play as well as with my left. I accepted his apology. And we were good friends after that.”

In the more recent one, Ronnie remembers 2004 as the “Golden Era” of snooker

Ronnie O’Sullivan on his toughest ever opponents – ‘It was a golden era for snooker’

Ronnie v Paul Hunters Masters 2004 Final

Ronnie O’Sullivan feels you have to go back 15 years to discover snooker’s true golden era despite rising standards and prize money in the sport.

The five-times world champion – who could win a record £555,000 for a sixth world title next month – pinpoints the season-ending rankings of 2004-2005 to get a true reading of green baize greatness.

In O’Sullivan’s opinion, that was as close to snooker utopia as you could wish to see with seven-times world champion Hendry still competing at the top level and Hunter – who tragically died in 2006 after battling cancer – lifting three Masters titles in the early part of the decade.

With Higgins yet to win another three world titles, Williams fresh from lifting the second of his three Crucible trophies and former Masters and UK champion Stevens competing in the second of two world finals, O’Sullivan believes that period should be celebrated as the halcyon days.

Ronnie - John Higgins WC 2001 Final Handshake

“I’ve always said that snooker enjoyed a golden era when Hendry, Higgins, Williams, Stevens, the great Paul Hunter and myself were battling it out. I truly believe that was the best top six ever,” said O’Sullivan.

“For me, getting through Hendry, Higgins and Williams in their prime was almost impossible. To beat two of them was so, so tough. Nobody has made me fight as tough as that trio in their prime. In some way, the players these days go for their shots a lot more.

“They are much more aggressive. They miss a few balls to let you in, and are less focused on safety. The games are much more enjoyable for me these days than years ago when you had several players you didn’t really like playing because you knew they could match you.

“A lot of the top players try to win frames at one visit. In some ways, those games are easier to play in. You either get taken out early, or you can feed of it to enjoy the battle.”

For thos who wonder about the numbers presented in the part I put in blue, here is the explanation: the World Champion will get £500 000 for his efforts, the highest break prize money will be £15 000 and there will be a £40 000 bonus for a 147, should there be one. Here is the link to the relevant WST annoucement.