A very, very nice interview with Ronnie

The snippet I published yesterday is part of a nearly 20 minutes interview with Ronnie on Radio 5. Many thanks to Silvry, who unearthed the whole interview and pointed it to me; here it is for you to listen to. Ronnie’s bit starts at about  2:10. The interview will remain available on the BBC Radio 5 site for another 29 days.

It’s great stuff, don’t miss it. Ronnie explains how he came about “Framed” and gives the listeners a very good insight on his perspective on life and his snooker.

 

Ronnie’s life in a film?

Not for the first time, the media suggest that a film could be made about Ronnie’s life. It seems that Ronnie has indeed taken a step towards making this a real possiblility. Here is what he told BBC5 today

O’Sullivan told 5 live:

“I’ve sold my life rights away to a company in America and a company in England so it’s down to them now whether they want to produce it or not”.

After being asked who would play him he said Jack O’Connell “is quite up for playing the part” and it would be “fantastic” if it happened.

Watch the full clip here

There are quite a few similarities between Jack O’Connell’s life and Ronnie’s. Indeed both had a troubled youth and both “lost” their father as teenagers, albeit in different ways. Both have Irish ancestry and were raised as Roman Catholics.

Ronnie got it wrong though … Jack is from Derby, not Sheffield, but, hey! It’s only half an hour away by train!

 

Paperback “Framed” launched

bradford15june2017

Going by the many comments on twitter the event, and Ronnie’s story telling skills, were highly appreciated, as was the fact that he made himself available for  the fans. It was packed and VIPs were treated to a signed cue. Ronnie BTW wasn’t the only sporting celebrity in the room …

Pictures shared by Jason Francis on twitter:

And today, they paid a visit to the Northern Snooker Center in Leeds, owned by the Lines family, and home of many pros. It’s a beautiful club.

Ron&PhilLeeds16.062017

image shared by David Grace on FB

And in the evening he even played some snooker at Hanging Heaton CC

report on this exhibition by the Dewsbury Reporter

Snooker legend O’Sullivan thrills sell out crowd with exhibition

One of the greatest snooker players of all time thrilled a sell out crowd as Ronnie O’Sullivan played an exhibition at Hanging Heaton Cricket Club last Friday.

The event had taken 12 months to plan by club steward Pete Jagger and attracted snooker players and followers from across the area as over 170 people packed into the clubhouse.

Huddersfield based family run business the Billiard Company installed a professional standard table into the main function room, with O’Sullivan playing eight frames against local players.

BBC snooker commentator John Virgo compared the evening and provided commentary to all eight frames.

The five-time World Champion produced an entertaining display and maintained his superb record of making a century break in every exhibition he has ever played.

O’Sullivan faced former English CIU Champion Wayne Cooper in a best of five match, which saw both men produce some excellent snooker. O’Sullivan produced a brilliant 79 clearance break to take the first frame but Cooper fought back in style as he made a magnificent 80 break to level the match. The third frame was nip and tuck as O’Sullivan built a 64-point lead but Cooper twice forced snookers only for The Rocket to close it out and win 96-40. O’Sullivan had the crowd on the edge of their seats as he potted five reds and five blacks at the start of the fourth frame only to see his hopes of a maximum 147 break ended when he missed the sixth black, although he went on to win 77-0 and establish an unassailable 3-1 lead. Cooper began the fifth and final frame superbly as he potted five reds and five blacks before missing a difficult long red. Cooper added a 42 break later in the frame to win it 83-15 and earned him high praise from O’Sullivan.

Hanging Heaton member Chris Swaine won an inter club competition for the once in a lifetime chance to play a frame against O’Sullivan. Swaine earned rapturous applause when he took a 1-0 lead before O’Sullivan went on to win the frame 98-14.

O’Sullivan then met Bradford’s Mark Slater, winner of a qualifying tournament. Breaks of 46 and 51 from O’Sullivan, sandwiched between a 29 break by Slater, saw him take the frame 97-29.

O’Sullivan saved his best for the final frame of the evening as he met Wakefield St Michaels player Anthony Hebblethwaite. After a cagey opening which saw O’Sullivan 9-2 ahead, The Rocket produced a stunning 108 break to the delight of the crowd.

As O’Sullivan left to a standing ovation, Virgo announced that his final break had maintained a record of making a century in every exhibition he has played. A snooker cue, donated by The Billiard Supply Company, and signed by O’Sullivan raised £450 in an auction, which will be donated to cancer charities. The winning bidder was Joe Brennan of Chem Scaffolding Ltd.

Ahead of the paperback “Framed” launch …

bradford15june2017

Ronnie will be in Bradford tonight, speaking about his life, and this event is part of the promotion around the launch of the paperback version of his first novel “Framed”.

In the same context, yesterday, he was at the BBC2 studio, for an interview, which is now available on the BBC2 site as a podcast. Many thanks to Silvry who was first on the ball and spotted it!

It’s a nice, down to earth interview, where Ronnie explains that, as weird as his childhood environment might have been, it was normality for him as a child.

Pictures shared on Facebook by Jason Francis:

 

 

Double Kiss – Ronnie’s next novel news

It’s coming … this was in the press today

Pan Mac to publish Ronnie O’Sullivan’s next novel

Published May 22, 2017 by Katherine Cowdrey

Pan Macmillan has poached Ronnie “The Rocket” O’Sullivan after his debut, Framed, published last year with Orion. Pan Macmillan will publish his sequel, Double Kiss, in November.

The follow-up will take readers back to the summer of Euro ‘96 and gangland Soho, drawing on the five-time world snooker champion’s own personal experiences of Soho, his parents’ time in prison and of the hedonistic ‘90s club scene.

Like Framed, Double Kiss will again follow protagonist Frankie James “struggling to stay out of trouble”. But whileFramed was about the “dog-eat-dog underworld” of 1980s Soho, its sequel will be set in the ’90s.

Victoria Hughes-Williams, senior commissioning editor, acquired world rights (excluding China) in a two-book deal, from Jonny Geller at Curtis Brown. Author Emlyn Rees, who also worked on Framed, will again be collaborating with O’Sullivan to write the book.

O’Sullivan said: “When Jonny suggested I come to Pan Macmillan with the new crime series, I was really up for it, because I love working in the book industry, everyone is so passionate about what they do. The team at Pan Mac are great and I can’t wait to work with Emlyn Rees again after the success of Framed and will look forward to November when Double Kiss hits the shops.”

Hughes-Williams said: “We were bowled over by Ronnie’s infectious energy and warmth when he visited Pan Mac last week. He’s a legend of the snooker, and indeed sporting, world but his enthusiasm for books, and his commitment to making Double Kiss a success, was genuinely exciting. We could not be more delighted to welcome him to Pan Mac.”

Double Kiss will publish in hardback on 16th November 2017. Pan Macmillan will also publish the audio edition to his first book in the series, Framed, on 15th June 2017, read by Nick Moran.

About a piece about Ronnie …

I found this article via twitter.

It’s interesting and well written but it makes me feel very uneasy. First because I’m not sure that Ronnie would agree with the content or condone the author’s interpretation of his choices and quotes, not to mention her use of them to support what are essentially her views, not his.

First 2009/10/11 were amongst the worst seasons for Ronnie, and probably amongst the worst years too, with him breaking up from his then partner Jo Langley. It’s only in 2011, in April 2011 to be precise, that he started working with Steve Peters. And it was – and still is – real hard work. To change your perspective on life you have to work on yourself, it doesn’t come just like that and no psychiatrist or counsellor has a magic wand. It takes commitment, it takes time and it takes an iron will to change.

Next I’m not sure that Ronnie getting interested in politics has anything to do with his battles against depression at all. For me, knowing the person a bit, it has to do with a fundamentally generous, human and sensitive persona combined with the fact that working with Steve Peters has indeed given him perspective: snooker isn’t the alpha and omega of his life anymore. He’s got perspective and interest in other things, life in the first place.

Finally, without denying the fact that poverty and insecurity do indeed cause anxiety and aren’t easy to cope with, I strongly believe that, whatever the circumstances, your life is essentially what you decide to make of it and shaped by how much efforts you are ready to put in it (and before anyone jumps at me, my family was far from rich or upper class, very far from it: needing the doctor meant no meat for a month, not even bacon. I still got a PhD in maths … by commuting 5 1/2 hours every day for 4 years – the time I needed to get my first Masters and a job – to be able to attend Uni because we couldn’t afford a car or  to rent a room, getting up dayly at 4 am, to be there in time, never back home before 9 pm, working like hell on week-ends to catch up with the work I couldn’t do during the week. Yes, that was how “lucky” I was to to be able to study, and I was “lucky” to learn 4 languages too). Life is definitely NOT shaped by how much you earn. I’m a mathematician, and as it happens, I have, in my 30+ years career, worked on statistics about mental health in Europe (among many other stats). Well, in the Scandinavian countries, that have the highest scores when it comes to people welfare, quality of life or populations health, depression and suicide are 30X higher than in the poorest areas of Europe like south Spain, Portugal, Greece and Cyprus. That’s fact, or it was some 7 years ago, but I doubt it has radically changed. So? Family support, social cohesion, inter-personal relationships, and sunlight, are much more decisive factors than poverty when it’s about mental health.

What is true though is that to be able to put an effort into anything, especially a tremendous effort, you have to believe that you have a chance, you need to have hope to be able find the strength. So hopelessness is a huge factor, much more than actual poverty. I feel that the most debilitating factor in our society is negativity, the constant focus on bad news, giving people the feeling that nothing is even worth a try, that things are doomed from the start. It’s especially hard on the young people, unfair and untrue. Things  are never doomed until you die and we all will … eventually, meanwhile there is plenty we can achieve. That and the shaming of the successful, knowing that success isn’t measured by money, it’s measured by achievements, personal as well as professional. I don’t believe that being hurt in your pride when you fail is a bad thing, quite the opposite, it’s the seed to motivate you to do better, and it’s something to learn from. People like Ronnie have achieved what they did because they are competitive, because they work hard, because they don’t accept to fail, because they take pride in being fighters and winners. Despite depression. And whatever priviledge they have, they earned.

And that goes for others as well. Mark Selby was born in a working class family, was abandoned by his mother as young child, lost his father to cancer aged 16, wasn’t seen as hugely talented either, didn’t have an actual home for a while, and, still, found the strength and motivation that makes him multiple World Champion and triple crown owner. Novak Djokovic lived through civil war as a kid and has opened up about how traumatic it was. He’s one of the greats in tennis and uses the fortune he earned to support orphaned kids too.

 

IMPORTANT THINKERS OF OUR TIMES
How Ronnie O’Sullivan Found Politics
MN

Former Labour leader Ed Miliband playing pool with Ronnie O’Sullivan. Photo: Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive/PA Images

Snooker’s mercurial genius understands that breakdowns don’t happen in a vacuum.

Snooker was invented in colonised India, its rules cemented in the Ooty Club near the Nilgiri hills – which remains to this day a relic of the empire. The rooms of the Ooty Club are filled even now with mounted lions and tigers’ heads, a strict dress code enforced and a polite notice framed in the billiards room to commemorate its sporting history. Here, a British lieutenant, Neville Chamberlain, added coloured balls to the original game and assigned their worth, playing with first year cadets who were nicknamed Snookers. For a time, snooker was restricted to “officers of the armed forces, and gentlemen moving in general society”, a fact which seems strange now considering the class associations that snooker, like darts, has cultivated.

Class means something entirely else to snooker now than it did when it was invented. One-hundred-and-forty years after its invention under the watchful gaze of beasts killed in the name of British glory, one of the sport’s all time greats, Ronnie O’Sullivan, played pool with Ed Miliband. In the Common Room Pool Club in Sheffield, he offered up his game in support of the Labour party.

Miliband played because snooker is a sport that normal, working class people like. Miliband playing snooker is different to, say, Miliband playing cricket. It’s different, too, to him having a kickabout with some Premier league footballers, who are inescapably tainted by the sticky residue of outrageous salaries and assault allegations and multi-thousand pound bottles of champagne in bleak nightclub VIP areas. Snooker is different. The anachronistic bow ties and dinner suits are an echo of the working class Londoners who began to play in the 1930s and sought to bring some respectability to their clubs. The silence of the snooker arena exists because it is a game which requires concentration and consideration, a game of patience and stamina. It is a respectable, working class sport – it’s authentic, in that intangible way politicians pursue ceaselessly but can never quite achieve.

O’Sullivan is snooker’s reformed bad boy, the mercurial genius with a troubled past. He was a dazzling prodigy from the age of ten, encouraged by his father “Big Ron” who ran a string of West End sex clubs. Big Ron was convicted of murder and imprisoned when O’Sullivan was 16, a devastating blow which preceded breakdowns and spells of addiction, and a well documented struggle with his mental health. He failed a drugs test and walked out of huge matches and gave reckless interviews about how much he hated the sport. Having always seemed mystified and burdened by the immensity of his gift, it seemed for a time he would destroy it entirely. Then, in 2009, after developing a relationship with legendary sports psychiatrist Steve Peters, he made a miraculous comeback in every sense. He returned to the game with spectacular success, got engaged and began to tackle the legacy of his depression.

Something else happened to O’Sullivan after his mental health problems were finally articulated and addressed. He got politicised. Having never voted before and professing an understandable apathy in the face of interchangeable career politicians, in 2015 he threw his support behind Ed Miliband. Almost overnight he seemed to become convinced that parliamentary politics have the potential to change lives. Since then, he has been a dogged defender of Labour and increasingly vocal about social inequality and poverty.

“I’ve not paid much attention to what is going on in the outside world,” he said in an interview in 2015. “But that has changed now, and it has changed my outlook on life like you wouldn’t believe. I now realise how lucky I’ve been… I get the chance to choose when I play and when I don’t play. Most people are stuck in jobs they don’t like and have no choice over the hours they work. Or are struggling to find work. That can’t be easy or good for the mind.”


It shouldn’t be so remarkable that someone financially privileged is capable of empathising with the poor, but it is. When the snap election was called O’Sullivan tweeted his support for Jeremy Corbyn and encouraged his fans to register to vote.

When challenged that he would not love paying increased tax, he tweeted again:

O’Sullivan became political after addressing his own mental illness. At the same time, he began to see how inextricable the relationship between mental health and class is. Once you come to see that, it’s very difficult not to be furious at the state of things.

Mental illness is spoken about like a phenomenon which occurs inevitably, like weather or death. While it is of course true that there are countless people who will suffer from mental illness regardless of their class position and circumstance, it remains true that mental illness can be exacerbated and even created by the conditions of living as a poor person in a capitalist society. Sometimes people are wary of saying this because they fear it implies that mental illness is not as “real” as we can perceive it to be if we discuss it as a purely physiological phenomenon. But it is a simple fact that our society is not only neglecting mental illness with a lack of funding, but also actually causing it. A person who is prone to relatively minor bouts of anxiety or depression can be propelled to a much more serious iteration of their illness by living in poverty. If you are constantly stressed about the very basic logistics of life, like housing, food and healthcare, it only follows that your ability to negotiate the messy business of living and having a brain becomes hugely compromised.

O’Sullivan has stated this explicitly:

“We are all human beings, we all have a purpose in life, we all want to enjoy this time on the planet, there is enough in the world for everyone in the world to have the basic needs without feeling under depression. I believe a lot of our illnesses and struggles and suicides and drug addictions and whatever is brought on by hopelessness.”

Recently I went to the GP to get a prescription for antidepressants, having spent seven years off them. I felt dishonest in his office, not truly ill. According to the symptom checklist, I suffer depression and anxiety. But even so, I couldn’t stop myself from saying to my doctor: I don’t think this is because I’m depressed. I think it’s because I’m poor. My anxiety about being poor makes it impossible to work, which makes me poorer, and the cycle continues.

I don’t know what I was expecting to happen, what solution might conceivably have been offered; but in the end the doctor gave me the pills to make my brain function adequately enough that I can work properly again, and maybe, some day, make enough money that I’ll be operative in the world I’ve found myself in; the one Ronnie O’Sullivan is determined to change.

@mmegannolan