Posts tagged The Rocket
Ronnie O’Sullivan ends Mark Williams’ unbeaten run
0Ronnie O’Sullivan finally got his first win in the snooker Premier League after beating Mark Williams convincingly, while Marco Fu stormed to the top of the table.
Joining the players at the Penrith Leisure Centre were a number of flies, and it looked like the games were being played in a heat wave instead of late October.
Heading into his crunch match with Williams, O’Sullivan was at the bottom of the league, having drawn all three of his previous matches. His attitude was spot-on last night and he played exceptionally well to record his first win of the competition with a 4-2 victory.
O’Sullivan began the game in trademark fashion, knocking in a break of 98 but missed out on the £1,000 bonus for a century. Williams didn’t score a point, and that continued in the second frame as O’Sullivan made a breaks of 44 and 78 to go two up.
Williams has played well on his return to the Premier League, and he halved the deficit as a 47 proved enough after O’Sullivan missed a red down the cushion to pinch the frame. A fly appeared to have put O’Sullivan off the shot. The Rocket looked in fine form as he made a 70 in the next frame to guarantee himself a point and maintain his unbeaten run.
If Williams wanted to stay unbeaten like O’Sullivan, he would have to win the last two frames, but efforts of 39 and 50 helped O’Sullivan secure the two points and the much-needed win. Even though he had lost the game, Williams softened the blow by taking the last frame with breaks of 34 and 40 and stay in second place and above O’Sullivan in the table.
“I played alright when I was in the balls and was relaxed and that was good to feel relaxed at the table,” said O’Sullivan, who now stands a good chance of reaching the semi-finals.
Over the past few years, O’Sullivan’s long-potting has declined, and there were several times where he was unable to knock one in. Even he admits this is a problem. “My long game wasn’t good though. I’ve not been able to pot long balls for last six or seven years so I’m relying on nouse around the table and on people not playing well for me to win but a win’s a win,” he said.
Earlier in the evening, Fu went to the top of the table to give him a strong chance of reaching the play-offs by beating Ding Junhui 5-1.
Ding, who has played all of his matches, is now out of the competition after suffering back-to-back defeats.
Last week, reigning world champion Neil Robertson inflicted a 6-0 defeat on Ding, and Fu nearly did the same.
Fu came firing out of the blocks as he knocked in breaks of 39 and 44, playing great positional shots and keeping good control of the cue ball. Like he did against Robertson, Ding was struggling once again to get a break going, and Fu seized his opportunity in the second frame with a 42 and a 39.
In no time at all, Fu ensured he would leave with a point by winning the third frame without Ding scoring a point. The UK champion was out of sorts, missing easy balls and playing poor safety shots. The win was there for the taking for Fu, and he made a 94 to take the maximum two points.
By this point, Fu had potted 100 balls compared to Ding’s 10, but Ding did manage to make his trip worthwhile by clinching the fifth frame and £1,000 with a quick-fire 71. Before the game, Fu was the only player not to have made a century break, but he changed that in the final frame with a beautifully constructed 107 to round off the match.
“Towards the end I was relaxed and made the century but I got the two points which was the most important thing. The 100 [century] was a bonus,” said table-topper Fu, who has one match remaining in the round-robin format.
“I played very well without making any big breaks in the early stages. I made some good pots and put him under pressure and he didn’t pot a ball till the third frame.
“Maybe he’s taking the game too easy but he’s too good a player not to do well. Ding is having a bad run but there are so many tournaments so he won’t be too disappointed,” added Fu.
Certainly there are no flies on Fu.
Neil Robertson trounces Ronnie O’Sullivan in World Open final
0Reigning world champion Neil Robertson hammered Ronnie O’Sullivan 5-1 in the snooker World Open final last night in Glasgow.
It is the sixth ranking title of the Australian’s career, and he continues to stun audiences with his attacking style of play and composure around the table. He also kept up his incredible 100% record in ranking event finals.
Having come from 2-0 down to win 3-2 in the semi-final to an in-form Mark Williams earlier in the day, Robertson showed his true class to destroy the most-naturally gifted player to in the game. O’Sullivan wasn’t at his best, and Robertson was clinical when he was presented with the chances.
The Thunder from Down Under went 2-0 up against O’Sullivan by making breaks of 43 and 107, leaving O’Sullivan with plenty of work to do. However, he responded in typical O’Sullivan fashion by knocking in a fantastic break of 72, which was better than the 147 maximum he made earlier in the week, as the balls were in difficult positions and required perfect positional play.
O’Sullivan might have been thinking he was going to square the match at the mid-session interval, but he missed a simple pink, and those thoughts vanished rapidly, as Robertson made a break of 59 to lead 3-1.
The next frame was crucial for O’Sullivan, and he was under huge pressure to deliver, and when he missed a red into the centre pocket, Robertson once again took his chance and swept into a 4-1 lead, making a break of 66.
Three down with four frames left to play, O’Sullivan now had his back to the wall. When it looked like Robertson would cross the finishing line, he missed a difficult blue on a run of 30. O’Sullivan made 44 in response but missed the second-to-last red, and when he played a terrible safety shot, going in-off with the cueball, the balls were at Robertson’s mercy, and he didn’t disappoint, clearing to finish O’Sullivan off and collect the winners’ cheque for £100,000.
“Ronnie’s still my idol, whenever I get knocked out of a tournament I hope he wins it,” said Robertson. “I put him under pressure tonight and made some good breaks out of nothing, particularly the century in the second frame. There were some texts flying around before the final saying that this would be the one I would lose, and that fired me up.
“I’d only had a week and a half of really good practice before this because I’ve been so busy. I didn’t expect to play well until the UK Championship. I’ve won four BBC tournaments now, so my goals are to win the UK and the Masters and to do better in China. Having a title under my belt early in the season gives me the confidence to go on and win more,” Robertson added.
O’Sullivan will have the 147 he made, or nearly didn’t make, against Mark King to take away from the event, as well as the £40,000 runners-up prize. He knew there was no prize-money for the maximum when he asked referee Jan Verhaas at the time, but he will be happy to take the money and use it wisely.
“I’m always critical of myself but I have to give Neil credit, I take my hat off to him,” said the Rocket. “He’s playing like a world champion and world No 1. He’s a consistently great cueist, he’s confident and good under pressure. When John Higgins comes back they will have a good rivalry.
“I knew someone playing half as well as that would beat me. I was there for the taking and I shouldn’t have got to the final. I hit so many bad shots and my good breaks are few and far between,” said O’Sullivan.
Robertson is now the official world No.1 thanks to the new rankings system, which now works as a two-year rolling list. “It means the list is much more up to date and rewards players who are winning tournaments and doing well,” said Robertson in approval of the structure.
“To be world champion and world No 1 at the same time is a dream come true,” added the Australian.
World champion, world No.1 and now the World Open champion. A fine year for Robertson continues.
Ronnie O’Sullivan wins to set up Stephen Hendry clash
0Three-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan beat Jimmy White 3-1 to reach the last 16 of the snooker World Open in Glasgow.
After the madness of his refusal to pot the black for the 147 maximum on Monday, O’Sullivan missed easy balls in the opening frame today, presenting chances to White. However, the six-time world finalist looked nervous and couldn’t capitalise, allowing O’Sullivan took the lead.
The Rocket punished a miss from White to double his lead, rapidly clearing the table. White responded in the third frame in great style, knocking in a break of 88 to make the score 2-1.
White was playing some fantastic stuff, and he should have taken the match to a deciding frame, but after he missed a red into the right-middle pocket while on a break of 56, O’Sullivan took control and in typical fashion he cleared the table to set up a clash with Stephen Hendry in the next round.
“It’s great to play against Jimmy because he’s good to watch,” said O’Sullivan to BBC Sport. “But it’s unfortunate for him that he’s good to watch – it means you concentrate throughout rather than switching off. He started nervously but that’s only to be expected when you haven’t reached the latter stages of a tournament for a while. When I missed I got away with it.
“Then he got his rhythm and didn’t look like he wouldn’t miss. When he plays like that he’s still a top eight player. It was nice to play in front of a packed audience but I lost my rhythm a bit and it was tough. At one stage I struggled to even pot a red and black.
“I don’t like seeing Jimmy lose even if it me that is beating him but you have to go out to try to win the match. You need to treat jimmy like any opponent but he was my role-model and I love him,” added O’Sullivan.
Ronnie O’Sullivan pushes fans to the max
0He performs miracles on the snooker table, but sometimes Ronnie O’Sullivan can really get on your nerves.
He recorded his 10th maximum 147 break at the World Open in his 3-0 win over Mark King today, and it was a 147 that had great shots, time to ask for some advice and drama at the end – showcasing everything you need to know about O’Sullivan.
O’Sullivan always brings in the crowds, and they were treated to something special. After he potted the first red and colour, O’Sullivan stopped to ask referee Jan Verhass what the prize-money would be for making a 147. When told there would be no additional cash to the £4,000 received for the highest break, he went on to play some tremendous shots and delighted the crowd at the SECC in Glasgow, especially when potting the 13th black and bringing the cue ball out of baulk to land perfectly on the penultimate red.
When he sunk the final pink, the crowd were about to witness another special maximum from the Rocket. Other players would have stepped up, potted the black and accepted the applause of the crowd. Not O’Sullivan. He refused to pot the black in protest of no extra prize-money being made available, but after being persuaded by Verhass to pot it, in true O’Sullivan fashion he slammed the black into the pocket.
Luckily for him, the black went in at that extraordinary pace, because if it didn’t O’Sullivan would have been slightly embarrassed at the end. In potting the black, he now holds the record of making the most maximums, one more than Stephen Hendry. There must have been some in the audience thinking if O’Sullivan was taking it seriously, because for a time it didn’t look as though he was.
“After potting the first red and black I wanted to go for it so I asked the referee if there was a prize,” said O’Sullivan. “It would have been nice to have £25,000 so I could go on holiday. I would have got a kick out of just making a 140 and leaving the black. I don’t think 147s are that difficult but everyone else thinks they are.”
O’Sullivan certainly tests everyone’s patience to the maximum when he plays.
Ronnie O’Sullivan insists he has nothing to prove to anyone
0Some people love him, some people hate him, but when Ronnie O’Sullivan picks up a cue everyone knows he has an extraordinary talent on the snooker table.
The three-time champion of the world says he has nothing to prove and is focusing on the future of the game. “I don’t feel like I’ve got anything to prove to anybody, other than the obviously high standards I set myself – which I don’t believe to be high, they’re just standards I believe to be achievable,” he said speaking to Sky Sports.
O’Sullivan had dropped to world No.3 in the official rankings, but after a series of wins in the recent Players Tour Championships, he has now climbed up to second. However, the Rocket says he would rather help the development of youngsters in the sport than concentrate on reclaiming the world No.1 spot from John Higgins.
“Getting to No.1…it would be nice but I’m not going to break my neck. Winning another world title…it would be nice but I’m not going to break my neck. I just enjoy giving back to the sport. I hope there are moments of joy that I can bring to people that watch the game. I hope there are moments I can help other young players achieve their dreams coming into snooker – I hope there’s something I can give back to the sport in that way.
“Not because I want to be seen as a goody two-shoes that wants to be seen as the ambassador of snooker, because it’s not like that at all. But working with young players coming through who want to be the best and who want to win tournaments.
“I would like to, in some way, set up a facility where they can come and practice and play with me and I can show them what worked for me and try and add on a bit of advice,” said O’Sullivan.
He has made nine 147-maximum breaks in his career and is a winner of 22 ranking tournaments. Also, he lies second in the all-time century break list with over 600, behind Stephen Hendry, who has nearly 750. When given the chance, he takes it, and there is no one better than O’Sullivan when he break-builds.
The 34-year old has always contemplated the possibility of walking away from snooker, but since the arrival of new World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association chairman Barry Hearn, the ambidextrous entertainer has found a new lease of life, thanks to Hearn’s transformation of the sport.
“As far I’m concerned, I just want to be involved in snooker as long as I can. If it ain’t competing then it’s going to be from the sidelines and still being involved in trying to give back to the sport that I love – but it sometimes doesn’t come across like that,” O’Sullivan added.
He is a genius when he plays, but that genius comes with many flaws. He famously walked out on a match against Stephen Hendry in the UK Championship in 2006, and en route to winning his second world crown in 2004 gave a two-finger gesture to the crowd. He comes across as a player who loses interest very easily, but according to O’Sullivan it is far from that.
“Sometimes people think ‘well why is he doing it if he hates it that much?’ I love it that much I get frustrated with it. But you know what, people are going to have to put up with that and just get used to me because I probably won’t be going away soon,” said O’Sullivan.
So, fans of O’Sullivan, you can be reassured from the man himself that he will not be putting his cue away for good just yet.
Snooker without the Rocket wouldn’t be the same would it?