Murphy happy to avoid ‘a couple of grenades’ in World Championship draw

The 2005 winner of the competition begins his campaign against Lyu Haotian in the first round, and admitted relief at swerving the likes of Stephen Maguire and Jack Lisowski early on.

“There’s obviously a couple of grenades that you could have avoided – [Stephen] Maguire was one of them, [Jack] Lisowski another.

“I’m happy to have avoided those. After that, I mean it’s just take your pick, isn’t it? Lyu Haotian on his day can beat anyone, as can I.”

Murphy was grateful not to go through the arduous qualifying route, but is wary of facing someone like Lyu, who battled past Daniel Wells and Jenson Kendrick to make it into the main draw.

“I’m delighted to still be in the 16 and seeded through, not to have to go through the rigmarole of the qualifiers,” Murphy said.

“The other side of that is that the qualifiers who come through are sharp, they’re ready, they’re hungry, they’re at it.

“Like all first rounders, it’s going to be like that first fence at the Grand National.

“I haven’t been involved in the championship the last few years. I got to the final three years ago. I’ve lost in the first round in the last two championships.

“I either seem to have a really deep run to the semis or final, or get bumped out in the first round.

“So I’m hoping that I can buck my recent trend and get out of the first round, get through that melee of the first fence.”

Ding v Lisowski a ‘ridiculous match’ – Allen

Two-time Crucible semi-finalist Mark Allen was involved in the draw itself and picked out some of the standout ties involving the sport’s biggest names.

“There’s a couple of massive games there,” Allen told the BBC. “Luca [Brecel] vs [Dave] Gilbert to kick things off on Saturday.

“Ronnie [O’Sullivan] against Jackson [Page], who loves the big occasion. [Judd] Trump against [Hossein] Vafaei, Ding [Junhui] against [Jack] Lisowski a ridiculous match for the first round as well.

“What a match-up with Joe O’Connor [against Mark Selby], two Leicester boys, two good friends so that could be a good one as well.”

Allen faces an arguably less eye-catching opening showdown against Robbie Williams, but heaped the plaudits on the man making his fourth appearance at the tournament.

“Robbie is someone I’m a big admirer of actually and the way he came through that qualifier the other day from 9-8 down, he’s a class player but they’re all good players at the end of the day,” Allen said.

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Williams dominates Allen in semi-final, closes in on O’Sullivan final showdown

Mark Williams produced a scintillating display in the afternoon session of his Tour Championship semi-final, winning all eight frames against Mark Allen in Manchester.

Williams, the eighth seed, was playing some sublime snooker, showcasing all the facets of his potting and safety game, to which Allen had no answers.

The Welshman sealed the opening frame after making his way to an impressive break of 57, in a run that came to an end after failing to pot a pink to the bottom pocket.

Allen responded with a run of 34 after being thwarted by black to the bottom pocket, opening the door for Williams to clear up the table up to the final black with a well-crafted clearance of 46 to double his lead.

With Allen already falling foul to a Williams snooker, he was left with the cue ball tightly nestled behind the brown but brilliantly escaped.

Williams responded by finding a red to middle pocket and the Northern Irishman could only watch on in his seat as his opponent coasted to a brilliant break of 99 with some delightful potting to move 3-0 ahead.

It was a horrible case of deja vu for Allen, who managed to escape a snooker but left the cue ball nestled in prime position for Williams to dispatch the red.

He cleared up the table quite magnificently with his first century break of the match at 107 to motor into a 4-0 lead, and left Allen desperately looking for answers to stem the Welshman’s flow.

He needed to win at least three of the four frames after the interval to keep his hopes alive, and find a way to stop an opponent who looks close to his imperious best.

That took a major hit when Williams strengthened his hold on the match with another sensational break, this time of 112 to take a 5-0 lead following the re-start.

Williams could only make 31 on his first visit to the table in the sixth frame, but Allen’s attempt at a red was unsuccessful. Williams returned to finish off the frame and carried on in the seventh to take a huge lead

An unanswered 48 from Williams put him on his way to making it eight before too long, but the inevitable was delayed by a couple of nice reds from Allen, who gave himself a foothold in the final frame before the break.

However, with Williams in such fine fettle, the tight frame was decided with a pivotal blue from the Welshman pretty much sealing him the session whitewash.

There was still time for Allen to send the pink off the table, prompting him to offer his hand.

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‘It’s a great practice match’ – Carter reveals inspiration ahead of O’Sullivan clash

Ali Carter has revealed he will go into his rematch with old rival Ronnie O’Sullivan at the Tour Championship quarter-finals in Manchester on Wednesday with one eye on the World Championship (20 April-May 6) later this month.

The two-time Crucible finalist booked a quarter-final against O’Sullivan with a tense 10-8 win over Barry Hawkins, who hit back from 7-1 behind before Carter scrambled over the line by dominating the 18th frame.

“I’m delighted to get over the line because it got a little bit sticky,” said Carter ahead of the best-of-19 frame encounter with O’Sullivan at the elite 12-man event. “Everyone is saying at 7-1 the match is won, but it’s not won until you reach 10.

“Coming through that match, there is a feather in my cap really because I was under extreme pressure.

“I’m playing well, but sometimes the game doesn’t let you play well. You’ve just got to keep battling away.”

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Relive O’Sullivan and Carter’s shoulder barge spat at 2018 World Snooker Championship

It will be the first time Carter and O’Sullivan have met since their bad-natured Masters final at Alexandra Palace in January that saw the Rocket claim a record eighth Masters title with a 10-7 final victory over his Essex rival by winning seven of the final eight frames.

The match ended in a war of words between with the pair, with Carter accusing O’Sullivan of “snotting all over the floor” and O’Sullivan responding by saying the world No. 8 was “not a nice person”.

Carter has only managed one win against O’Sullivan in 20 matches over the past 23 years – an infamous 13-9 victory in the last 16 of the 2018 World Championship in Sheffield when they brushed shoulders at the table.

“I relish the challenge now because he’s the best player to pick up a cue,” said Carter on ITV. “I’ve played him in a final this year. To play him in another quarter-final, I’m in the right place.

“It’s a great practice match for the World Championships. Coming here, I wanted to get as many best-of-19 frame matches in the bank. And what is a better match than against the greatest player of all time.

“I’m under no pressure. Only the pressure I put on myself to perform. I know I’ve put the work in. My preparation has been good. So we’ll see what happens.”

The match starts out at 1pm with eight frames to be played in the first session before they play to a finish from 7pm this evening.

The winner will meet Zhang Anda or Gary Wilson in Friday’s semi-finals.

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‘A great dish’ – Vintage Williams produces one of the all-time great clearances

Mark Williams took snooker’s version of Route 66 in completing one of the greatest clearances of all time to secure a quarter-final with Judd Trump at the Tour Championship in Manchester.

It seemed unlikely his error would cost Ford the match, with four of the remaining seven reds tied up on cushions – until the three-time world champion produced a miraculous 66 clearance that had to be seen to be believed, with the white ball resembling a pinball in the ground it had to cover.

“I don’t know how I did it, but that was one of the best clearances I’ve ever made,” Williams told reporters.

“I took my eye off the red. It wasn’t a twitch or anything. But that must be one of the best clearances I’ve ever seen,” commented world No. 14 Ford, who produced four centuries in defeat.

“Five minutes and 46 seconds of absolute snooker genius,” was how World Snooker Tour described the break on their social media output.

In the context of the match, perhaps as good as any break produced in the modern history of the sport with an array of glorious positional shots and wonderful pots crowned by an audacious pot at pace on the final blue along a baulk cushion that saw him land perfectly on the match-clinching pink.

“I would have to see it back again,” said Williams, who also told ITV he was struggling with jet lag after returning from China ahead of the coveted 12-man event.

“I can’t remember much about it. If there was anything on, I had to go for it. It’s got to be up there. I know there was three or four reds on the cushion, blue was on the cushion.

“Anyway, was a great dish.”

Williams next faces Judd Trump on Thursday for a semi-final place.

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‘Not good enough’ – Higgins raises fears about future after ‘unforgivable’ defeat

Four-time world champion Higgins began strongly in Manchester on Monday, but blew a 4-1 lead in losing nine of the last 12 frames to crash out of the elite 12-man event amid a strong sense of regret.

Despite producing fine breaks of 85, 75, 55, 66, 82, 62 and 86, the 31-time ranking event winner lost three frames on black balls and also watched Allen roll in a pivotal break of 93 leading 8-7 in the 16th frame after Higgins touched a green with his sleeve when lining up a long red from the D.

The Scotsman turned professional in 1992 and has lifted the world title in 1998, 2007, 2009 and 2011, but admits his 30th trip to the Crucible for the World Championship later this month (April 20-May 6) could be his “final go” at winning the sport’s biggest event for a fifth time.

Speaking after his defeat to Allen, a clearly deflated Higgins said: “I should have been in front today, lost a bad frame when I definitely should have made it 5-2 I think.

“Then it is 4-4, but I think Mark played better tonight. Again, I missed two or three unforgivable balls at this level that you cannot afford to miss.

“My long game was non-existent as well. At this level, it’s not good enough. It’s not good enough against the best players.

“I just need to dust myself down a couple of weeks before the worlds, try to get some good practice in and go there and give it a final go maybe.”

Higgins last won a major ranking title with a 10-3 victory over Ronnie O’Sullivan in the final of the 2021 Players Championship.

The celebrated ‘Class of ’92’ icon is likely to be seeded 13th at the Crucible unless Tom Ford or Barry Hawkins can reach the final of the Tour Championship on Sunday.

Allen progresses to a quarter-final meeting with Ding Junhui on Wednesday after compiling three centuries against Higgins, but had words of encouragement for the Wishaw player.

“I think he’s actually being a bit too hard on himself,” said Allen on ITV. “He’s not playing bad snooker. Like I said, it is fine, fine margins.

“Three black balls and a real uncharacteristic foul by John. It’s almost like he has to win one of these close games.

“I don’t feel like we have to talk John up. He’s a four-time world champ.”

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‘Not good enough’ – Higgins raises fears about future after ‘unforgivable’ defeat

Four-time world champion Higgins began strongly in Manchester on Monday, but blew a 4-1 lead in losing nine of the last 12 frames to crash out of the elite 12-man event amid a strong sense of regret.

Despite producing fine breaks of 85, 75, 55, 66, 82, 62 and 86, the 31-time ranking event winner lost three frames on black balls and also watched Allen roll in a pivotal break of 93 leading 8-7 in the 16th frame after Higgins touched a green with his sleeve when lining up a long red from the D.

The Scotsman turned professional in 1992 and has lifted the world title in 1998, 2007, 2009 and 2011, but admits his 30th trip to the Crucible for the World Championship later this month (April 20-May 6) could be his “final go” at winning the sport’s biggest event for a fifth time.

Speaking after his defeat to Allen, a clearly deflated Higgins said: “I should have been in front today, lost a bad frame when I definitely should have made it 5-2 I think.

“Then it is 4-4, but I think Mark played better tonight. Again, I missed two or three unforgivable balls at this level that you cannot afford to miss.

“My long game was non-existent as well. At this level, it’s not good enough. It’s not good enough against the best players.

“I just need to dust myself down a couple of weeks before the worlds, try to get some good practice in and go there and give it a final go maybe.”

Higgins last won a major ranking title with a 10-3 victory over Ronnie O’Sullivan in the final of the 2021 Players Championship.

The celebrated ‘Class of ’92’ icon is likely to be seeded 13th at the Crucible unless Tom Ford or Barry Hawkins can reach the final of the Tour Championship on Sunday.

Allen progresses to a quarter-final meeting with Ding Junhui on Wednesday after compiling three centuries against Higgins, but had words of encouragement for the Wishaw player.

“I think he’s actually being a bit too hard on himself,” said Allen on ITV. “He’s not playing bad snooker. Like I said, it is fine, fine margins.

“Three black balls and a real uncharacteristic foul by John. It’s almost like he has to win one of these close games.

“I don’t feel like we have to talk John up. He’s a four-time world champ.”

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Allen fights back to level with Higgins at Tour Championship, Wilson leads Selby

John Higgins and Mark Allen are locked at 4-4 after the first session of their first-round encounter at the 2024 Tour Championship in Manchester.

The eight frames featured moments of quality as both players battled to get the upper hand in the best-of-19 frame clash and put themselves in pole position to book a quarter-final showdown with Ding Junhui.

Allen took the opener with a break of 69 before Higgins, who secured the 12th and final spot in the tournament, responded with breaks of 85 and 75 to move ahead. Higgins then came through a scrappy fourth to lead 3-1 at the interval.

Higgins maintained his momentum when play resumed. After calling a foul on himself he nailed two plants in a break of 66 that eventually helped him over the line following Allen’s failed attempt to get a snooker.

Allen struggled for his usual fluency and that was evident again in the sixth frame. A good long red got him among the balls, but his cue ball control was ragged.

Nevertheless, his grittiness shone through as he potted his way out of trouble to keep the break going before making his 40th century of the season and first of the match.

More importantly, that contribution stopped the rot and reduced his deficit to two frames at 4-2.

The Northern Irishman capitalised on the swing in momentum, winning a marathon 56-minute frame to further close the gap with Higgins, before drawing level by taking the final frame.

On the other table, Gary Wilson was in sublime form as he opened up a 5-3 lead over Mark Selby.

Wilson made breaks of 95, 98, 78 and 101 to put himself in the ascendency against the four-time world champion, with a place in the quarter-finals to play Zhang Anda up for grabs.

It was Selby who made the better start. The Jester from Leicester won two of the first three frames, which included a break of 85, to lead 2-1 in the all-English clash.

From there, though, he was second best. Wilson made it 1-1 with a break of 95 and then reeled off four frames in a row from 2-1 down to take control.

Crucially, he won a scrappy fifth frame after the break to move 3-2 ahead before breaks of 78 and 101 helped him extend his cushion.

He may yet rue a missed opportunity to take a 6-2 advantage into tomorrow’s session, though.

After Selby got in first and missed a chance he would have been fearing the worst, but he was given a reprieve and took it to trail by just two frames.

Allen and Higgins will play to a finish on Monday evening while Tom Ford and Mark Williams will play the first session of their match.

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Allen completes comeback against Higgins at Tour Championship, Wilson leads Selby

Mark Allen completed an impressive comeback to beat John Higgins 10-7 in the first round at the 2024 Tour Championship in Manchester.

Allen fought back from 4-1 down and finished strongly as he set up a quarter-final showdown with Ding Junhui.

The eight frames of the first session featured moments of quality as both players battled to get the upper hand in the best-of-19 frame clash.

Allen took the opener with a break of 69 before Higgins, who secured the 12th and final spot in the tournament, responded with breaks of 85 and 75 to move ahead. Higgins then came through a scrappy fourth to lead 3-1 at the interval.

Higgins maintained his momentum when play resumed. After calling a foul on himself he nailed two plants in a break of 66 that eventually helped him over the line following Allen’s failed attempt to get a snooker.

Allen struggled for his usual fluency and that was evident again in the sixth frame. A good long red got him among the balls, but his cue ball control was ragged.

Nevertheless, his grittiness shone through as he potted his way out of trouble to keep the break going before making his 40th century of the season and first of the match.

More importantly, that contribution stopped the rot and reduced his deficit to two frames at 4-2.

The Northern Irishman capitalised on the swing in momentum, winning a marathon 56-minute frame to further close the gap with Higgins, before drawing level by taking the final frame.

Allen picked up where he left off in the evening session, taking the ninth frame in one visit. Higgins responded well with a break of 82, levelling the encounter at 5-5.

Play followed the same pattern over the next two fiercely-contested frames, with Allen winning the 11th and Higgins the 12th.

With the battle narrowed down to the best-of-seven frames, Allen took the lead with a 102 break, before securing a two-frame buffer as Higgins failed to pot a pink from distance.

Higgins brought it back to 8-7 with a break of 86 and looked as if he could level the clash again in the 16th frame. But he was penalised by referee Paul Collier for brushing the green with his sleeve, giving Allen the advantage.

Allen did not look back, taking the frame with a break of 93. He then clinched the winner with his third century of the day, setting up a quarter-final clash against Ding.

On the other table in the afternoon session, Gary Wilson was in sublime form as he opened up a 5-3 lead over Mark Selby.

Wilson made breaks of 95, 98, 78 and 101 to put himself in the ascendancy against the four-time world champion, with a place in the quarter-finals to play Zhang Anda up for grabs.

It was Selby who made the better start. The Jester from Leicester won two of the first three frames, which included a break of 85, to lead 2-1 in the all-English clash.

From there, though, he was second best. Wilson made it 1-1 with a break of 95 and then reeled off four frames in a row from 2-1 down to take control.

Crucially, he won a scrappy fifth frame after the break to move 3-2 ahead before breaks of 78 and 101 helped him extend his cushion.

He may yet rue a missed opportunity to take a 6-2 advantage into tomorrow’s session, though.

After Selby got in first and missed a chance he would have been fearing the worst, but he was given a reprieve and took it to trail by just two frames.

Meanwhile, Mark Williams will have a 5-3 advantage over Tom Ford in their second session tomorrow.

The Welshman had quickly raced into a 3-0 lead, with Ford finally off the mark in the fourth frame after a superb run of 114.

Williams regained his three-frame advantage with a break of 76, but Ford responded with 73 and 136 to close the gap to just one frame.

He couldn’t complete the comeback, however, with Williams securing the 5-3 lead after a break of 86 in the eighth frame.

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Allen completes comeback against Higgins at Tour Championship, Wilson leads Selby

Mark Allen completed an impressive comeback to beat John Higgins 10-7 in the first round at the 2024 Tour Championship in Manchester.

Allen fought back from 4-1 down and finished strongly as he set up a quarter-final showdown with Ding Junhui.

The eight frames of the first session featured moments of quality as both players battled to get the upper hand in the best-of-19 frame clash.

Allen took the opener with a break of 69 before Higgins, who secured the 12th and final spot in the tournament, responded with breaks of 85 and 75 to move ahead. Higgins then came through a scrappy fourth to lead 3-1 at the interval.

Higgins maintained his momentum when play resumed. After calling a foul on himself he nailed two plants in a break of 66 that eventually helped him over the line following Allen’s failed attempt to get a snooker.

Allen struggled for his usual fluency and that was evident again in the sixth frame. A good long red got him among the balls, but his cue ball control was ragged.

Nevertheless, his grittiness shone through as he potted his way out of trouble to keep the break going before making his 40th century of the season and first of the match.

More importantly, that contribution stopped the rot and reduced his deficit to two frames at 4-2.

The Northern Irishman capitalised on the swing in momentum, winning a marathon 56-minute frame to further close the gap with Higgins, before drawing level by taking the final frame.

Allen picked up where he left off in the evening session, taking the ninth frame in one visit. Higgins responded well with a break of 82, levelling the encounter at 5-5.

Play followed the same pattern over the next two fiercely-contested frames, with Allen winning the 11th and Higgins the 12th.

With the battle narrowed down to the best-of-seven frames, Allen took the lead with a 102 break, before securing a two-frame buffer as Higgins failed to pot a pink from distance.

Higgins brought it back to 8-7 with a break of 86 and looked as if he could level the clash again in the 16th frame. But he was penalised by referee Paul Collier for brushing the green with his sleeve, giving Allen the advantage.

Allen did not look back, taking the frame with a break of 93. He then clinched the winner with his third century of the day, setting up a quarter-final clash against Ding.

On the other table in the afternoon session, Gary Wilson was in sublime form as he opened up a 5-3 lead over Mark Selby.

Wilson made breaks of 95, 98, 78 and 101 to put himself in the ascendancy against the four-time world champion, with a place in the quarter-finals to play Zhang Anda up for grabs.

It was Selby who made the better start. The Jester from Leicester won two of the first three frames, which included a break of 85, to lead 2-1 in the all-English clash.

From there, though, he was second best. Wilson made it 1-1 with a break of 95 and then reeled off four frames in a row from 2-1 down to take control.

Crucially, he won a scrappy fifth frame after the break to move 3-2 ahead before breaks of 78 and 101 helped him extend his cushion.

He may yet rue a missed opportunity to take a 6-2 advantage into tomorrow’s session, though.

After Selby got in first and missed a chance he would have been fearing the worst, but he was given a reprieve and took it to trail by just two frames.

Meanwhile, Mark Williams will have a 5-3 advantage over Tom Ford in their second session tomorrow.

The Welshman had quickly raced into a 3-0 lead, with Ford finally off the mark in the fourth frame after a superb run of 114.

Williams regained his three-frame advantage with a break of 76, but Ford responded with 73 and 136 to close the gap to just one frame.

He couldn’t complete the comeback, however, with Williams securing the 5-3 lead after a break of 86 in the eighth frame.

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Allen withdraws from World Mixed Doubles due to ‘personal reasons’, replaced by Selby

Former UK Champion Mark Allen has withdrawn from snooker’s World Mixed Doubles tournament for “personal reasons.”

The Northern Irishman was due to partner Rebecca Kenna at the event in Manchester this weekend.

However, he has decided not to take part, just weeks before snooker heads to Sheffield for the World Championships.

The Pistol will be replaced by four-time Crucible winner Mark Selby, who also played with Kenna in 2022.

They reached the final two years ago, only to lose to Australian Neil Robertson and Mink Nutcharut of Thailand.

That duo will be reunited to defend their title, with the rest of the draw made up of the pairing of Judd Trump and Baipat Siripaporn, alongside Luca Brecel and Reanne Evans.

Allen, 38, has won two ranking event titles this season, the Shoot Out and the Players’ Championship.

He will still take part in the Tour Championship, also in Manchester, next week, where he has been drawn against John Higgins in the first round.

That will be his final tournament before heading to Sheffield for snooker’s blue-riband event, one in which he has been a two-time semi-finalist.

But his absence does not detract from the anticipation of the World Mixed Doubles for Kenna, who is ranked No. 3 in the women’s game.

“I’m very excited this time round,” she told Metro. “I was a lot more nervous last time but I’m more settled now.

“It was right at the start of my journey on tour, so it was a bit overwhelming last time, I’m just looking forward to it this time.

“It was such a great event last time and everyone seemed to like it and it’s one of the last big events [on tour] for me.”

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