‘Proud of myself’ – Higgins celebrates ‘special clearance’ that settled Allen classic

John Higgins said he was “proud” of a match-winning “special clearance” against Mark Allen at the World Championship on Monday evening.

With the game tied at 12-12, Allen was 62-0 clear when he missed a red that most would have expected him to sink, leaving a tough ask for Higgins to take on.

However, a remarkable double on a red and some expert positional play – coupled with some calm nerves – saw Higgins add 64 points and move into the quarter-finals, where he will face Kyren Wilson.

Higgins spoke to Eurosport in the studio after his win, and discussed his decision to take on the double.

He said: “I don’t know. I didn’t think the red went, but I’m thinking ‘let’s go for it’. There’s a sniff of a chance you might get it and get the clearance.

“When it went in, I felt calm.”

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Rare emotion from Higgins as he gets over the line in classic with Allen

In the aftermath of the win, Allen paid tribute to the former world No. 1, who remains one of the finest players on the tour.

Higgins replied: “I get a bit emotional. Mark is a total gentleman, said some nice words. I went into the dressing room and had a little bubble myself, because I knew it was a special clearance.

“I’m delighted the way I held on to Mark when it was 7-5, the standard wasn’t great, taking a little bit of time.

“Sometimes I’m sitting admiring him, thinking ‘why doesn’t he play like that all the time?’ He’s an unbelievable player when he gets on a bit of a roll. I think he will win this tournament in the future, but he’s got to play at that pace, because he’s not as good when he starts double-guessing himself.

“Tonight, the one thing I’ll mention about Mark is his bottle. He’s got incredible bottle, and I never in a million years thought he was going to miss that red. That’s just the one thing I’ve always said about him.”

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‘King of Clearances’ Higgins sinks remarkable double on way to victory

Throughout the interview, Higgins was reluctant to acknowledge the steel he had displayed, and the talent alongside it.

But ultimately he acknowledged: “I’m over the moon. I think it will hit me later that it was a special clearance. I’m proud of myself.”

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‘Who was that?’ – Spectator ejected after shouting out on Allen’s shot

Sweet wrappers, crisp packets and the dreaded mobile phone are often the scourge of professional snooker players when down on their shots.

Occasionally, and it is only occasionally, spectators do get a little wild and that was the case during Mark Allen’s clash with John Higgins at the World Championship on Sunday afternoon.

With Allen about to take a shot in the 13th frame, he was halted in the middle of his backswing by a scream from the crowd.

It was not clear what was shouted out, but it caught the attention of Allen who stepped up off his shot and referee Paul Collier exclaimed “who was that?”

It would appear the offending voice was identified, as Collier followed up by saying: “Can you escort him out please?”

A delay ensued, before a round of applause greeted the exit of the person in question.

His exit was welcomed by Joe Johnson in the Eurosport commentary box.

“Just as the player was down on his stroke, very ungentlemanly,” the 1986 world champion said.

The Crucible is an intimate venue and the ruckus also halted play on the adjoining table.

David Hendon was covering the Jack Lisowski versus Stuart Bingham match, and the doyen of the Eurosport commentary box said what many were thinking.

“It’s possible one gentleman has enjoyed the afternoon refreshments a little too much,” Hendon said.

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‘Who was that?’ – Spectator ejected after shouting out on Allen’s shot

Sweet wrappers, crisp packets and the dreaded mobile phone are often the scourge of professional snooker players when down on their shots.

Occasionally, and it is only occasionally, spectators do get a little wild and that was the case during Mark Allen’s clash with John Higgins at the World Championship on Sunday afternoon.

With Allen about to take a shot in the 13th frame, he was halted in the middle of his backswing by a scream from the crowd.

It was not clear what was shouted out, but it caught the attention of Allen who stepped up off his shot and referee Paul Collier exclaimed “who was that?”

It would appear the offending voice was identified, as Collier followed up by saying: “Can you escort him out please?”

A delay ensued, before a round of applause greeted the exit of the person in question.

His exit was welcomed by Joe Johnson in the Eurosport commentary box.

“Just as the player was down on his stroke, very ungentlemanly,” the 1986 world champion said.

The Crucible is an intimate venue and the ruckus also halted play on the adjoining table.

David Hendon was covering the Jack Lisowski versus Stuart Bingham match, and the doyen of the Eurosport commentary box said what many were thinking.

“It’s possible one gentleman has enjoyed the afternoon refreshments a little too much,” Hendon said.

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Allen wins four frames in a row to take lead against Higgins

Mark Allen won four frames on the spin to take control of his last-16 clash with John Higgins at the World Championship.

Higgins was the better player early in the session and moved into what looked an imposing two-frame advantage.

Allen failed to find his stride before the mid-session interval, but came out far more attacking following the break and he finished Sunday afternoon the stronger in securing a 9-7 advantage.

The two will return on Monday to play to a finish in the race to 13 for a place in the quarter-finals.

Higgins’ long game was shaky on Saturday afternoon, but he kicked off the second session with a superb red from distance and he picked off a break of 75 to move ahead at 5-4.

The Scot had control of the 10th frame but missed a brown with the long rest to gift a chance to Allen, and he settled into the session with a break of 54 to draw level.

A superb plant saw Higgins get underway in the 11th, but he was unfortunate with a split of the pack on 29 and he missed a tough red to left middle.

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‘Emphatically dispatched’ – Higgins finds superb plant against Allen

In the words of Philip Studd on Eurosport commentary, “this is a little like wading through treacle.” That was how the 11th felt, as both players struggled to find openings with reds on cushions.

Higgins eked out a 32-point lead with two reds remaining on the table and despite Allen working some penalty points with a fine snooker, Higgins took the 11th after sinking the final red.

Higgins looked good once again in the 12th, but a loose positional shot saw him break down on 38.

Allen failed to capitalise and the frame turned extremely scrappy, but it went Higgins’ way when his opponent caught the knuckle of the right middle with his safety and the four-time Crucible champion opened up a two-frame cushion for the first time in the match.

Allen lacked fluency before the mid-session interval, but he seized on a poor safety from Higgins in the 13th to craft a break of 71. The Northern Irishman left the table a little perplexed after missing a red and inviting a counter from Higgins, who needed one snooker, but he fended it off to cut the gap to one frame at 7-6.

Higgins showed attacking endeavour for much of the session and that mindset continued as he took on a difficult black to the left middle in the 14th. It dropped into the heart of the pocket to set him away, but he missed a blue to the bottom left and Allen cashed in with a break of 94 to draw level.

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John Higgins knocks in excellent black against Allen

After trailing by two frames earlier in the afternoon, Allen got his nose in front by taking his third frame on the bounce on the back of a fluent and silky 80.

Momentum was with Allen heading into the final frame of the afternoon and he rammed home his advantage with a break of 74 to take a 9-7 lead overnight.

Bingham holds lead over Lisowski

Stuart Bingham maintained his two-frame lead over Jack Lisowski and will take a 9-7 advantage into the final session on Monday.

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‘It looked unmissable’ – Lisowski’s head sinks after shocking miss on green

Bingham took the first frame of the afternoon to extend his advantage to three frames, but he faltered before the mid-session interval as Lisowski won three frames on the bounce.

The two traded the four frames after the interval to leave Bingham with his nose in front but far from secure.

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Higgins and Allen all level after opening session

John Higgins won the final frame of the afternoon to secure a share of the opening session at 4-4 with Mark Allen in their last-16 clash at the World Championship.

Higgins struggled from long range, while Allen’s cue-ball control was lacking at times, and the contest failed to catch fire.

While the fireworks were lacking, there was plenty of tension as both battled hard in the first of three sessions.

The pair will return on Sunday afternoon for their second session.

The contest kicked off with Allen inheriting a table that had the look of a practice session, with reds spread invitingly and high-value colours available.

Despite making hard work of the break – and almost missing a blue – Allen knocked in his 47th century of the season, a run of 119, to get his nose in front.

Allen had chances in the second, but lost the cue ball on each occasion, and a mistake on the final red allowed Higgins to draw level.

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John Higgins lines up a shot during day eight of the Cazoo World Snooker Championship

Image credit: Getty Images

The way Higgins stroked in a long red at the start of the third frame and went on to make 73 suggested it felt good in his hands. It proved to be one of few pots from range that he was able to knock in.

There was pressure on Higgins, as only a win would be enough for the four-time world champion to retain his place in the top 16, and there were signs of nerves as he missed a makeable red to the right middle and Allen cashed in to draw level at the interval.

Higgins looked jittery in the frame after the interval, and a poor miss was punished as Allen made a run of 79 to move back in front.

Allen has made a hugely successful career in recent seasons on the back of a circumspect approach, shunning tough shots in favour of patience.

Trailing by 11 points on the brown in the sixth frame, it came as a surprise when Allen went for a tough pot to the green pocket. It did not drop and Higgins punished the error to draw level.

Higgins walked away from the table scratching his head after missing a red by a distance at the start of the seventh, with his misery compounded by leaving Allen an easy starter. The world No. 3 went on to make 65 and that proved enough to take him back in front.

The final frame of the session had a big feel to it – even at this early juncture in the clash – and it went Higgins’ way.

Allen had a chance to take it after Higgins saw a red hit the jaws of the left middle, but he missed a blue to the green pocket and his opponent held firm to draw level at 4-4.

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Trump opens up lead over Ford as Higgins battles past Jones

Judd Trump worked a 6-2 lead over Tom Ford after the first session of their second-round clash at the World Championship, while John Higgins battled past Jamie Jones in the first round.

World No. 2 Trump was a long way short of his sizzling best, but seized on errors from his opponent to get his nose in front going into Friday’s second session.

There were no big breaks, 69 was the most Trump could muster, but he did enough to put himself in a good position in the race to 13.

The first frame saw both players pass up chances and it turned into a scrappy battle.

For over 30 minutes it was attritional stuff, but Ford produced some brilliance – aided by a fluked brown – as he picked off a couple of superb pots to take the opener.

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Ford flukes brown, makes superb clearance against Trump

Trump settled into the match with two solid contributions in the second frame to get on the board.

Ford failed to pot a simple blue in the second frame to hand Trump the chance to get on the board, and missed a red he would normally make with his eyes closed in the third.

Trump made an impressive 67, but missed the penultimate red and had to extricate himself from a couple of snookers before closing out the third to get his nose in front.

There were a couple of alarming misses from Ford in the fourth, but Trump failed to capitalise despite knocking in a superb red – and Ford countered to draw level at the first interval.

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Trump knocks in superb long red against Ford

Ford made 56 in the fifth, but missed another simple red to hand Trump a chance to counter.

The sixth followed the pattern of the previous frame, with Ford missing when in the balls and Trump pouncing to open up a two-frame lead.

Trump did not look totally at ease around the table, but he found some excellent pots in the seventh which he took with a break of 69.

Ford’s evening was summed up in the final frame of the session when he snookered himself on the remaining reds when potting the green – sarcastically giving a thumbs-up to the crowd.

A short while later, he missed a simple red and Trump stepped in to take the frame and open up a four-frame lead.

Higgins holds off Jones to set up Allen clash

John Higgins moved into the second round with a 10-6 win over Jamie Jones.

Four-time Crucible champion Higgins was under pressure when trailing 3-1 mid-way through the first session, but ran through four frames on the spin to secure a lead heading into Thursday night.

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Higgins wraps up win over Jones at World Snooker Championship

The Scot took the opening two frames of the evening and won the frames either side of the interval to move into a 9-5 lead.

There were no huge breaks from Higgins, and there were signs of nerves as he struggled to close out the win but he took a scrappy 16th frame to set up a clash with Mark Allen.

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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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