Crucible titles key if Trump wants to ‘end all arguments’ over his status – Hendon

When Judd Trump was born in August 1989, snooker was dominated by a winning machine.

Steve Davis was world champion, world No. 1 and more responsible than anyone for making this upstart sport respectable and therefore attractive to sponsors, television and family audiences.

Fast forward 35 years and Trump has equalled Davis’s tally of 28 ranking titles with his capture of the World Open in Yushan, a remarkable achievement in itself but more so because this is his fifth victory of the season and the third time he has won at least five ranking events in a single campaign.

Trump is now just three ranking titles behind John Higgins on 31. Stephen Hendry remains second on 36 with Ronnie O’Sullivan out in front on 41.

Eras differ. When Davis turned professional there was only one ranking tournament, the World Championship. Even at his peak in the late 80s there were no more than eight a season, as opposed to the 17 available in the current campaign. Had there been more, he would have won more.

But standards have risen and the game has become more competitive, so for Trump to keep adding trophies to his collection on such a regular basis is to his enormous credit.

He is particularly adept at winning tournaments where every player comes in at the last 128 stage, meaning you have to play every day during the week with no time for rest.

O’Sullivan has not triumphed in an event played under this format since December 2018; since that point in time, Trump has won 15 such titles.

This partly reflects where they are in their respective careers. O’Sullivan typically gets up for high prestige, limited-field events with big prize money. He has won five such elite tournaments this season. Trump is motivated only by winning whichever trophy is on the line that week.

He has done so by accepting that it won’t always be pretty. To keep going to the well, day after day, and be able to find something takes a multitude of skills. The pioneer of ‘naughty’ snooker is now a master at grinding out results if his A-game is absent.

Trump has become a brilliant tactician, able to out-think opponents as well as out-score them. He is still knocking in the big breaks as well, with 76 centuries this season putting him well out in front of the rest.

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Trump makes second century of World Open final as he closes on victory

The other quality a relentless winner needs is nerve. Trump now wins more than his fair share of close frames, soaking up pressure to shift the psychological momentum his way.

This was never more evident in Yushan than during his defeat of Kyren Wilson in the last 16, in which he won an hour-long fifth frame, albeit with two mighty flukes on green and brown. (Davis himself was often accused of being lucky. His deadpan response was, “I have more luck because I play more matches.”)

Trump is a very different player to Davis but they share certain traits. Both were painfully shy as boys, finding solace on the snooker table where introverts have traditionally thrived.

Both brought a different way of playing to the fore. For Davis, it was based on technique and solid preparation. Trump also puts the work in but possesses great cue power and is able to get the cue ball fizzing in all directions.

Davis loved winning. One or two titles a year was not enough. Trump has the same attitude, treating each tournament the same and not letting success go to his head.

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‘What a shot!’ – Trump nails stunning long blue to develop pink

The big challenge now – perhaps the only one – is to add to his solitary world title. It’s five years since Trump produced an exhibition of shot-making brilliance to beat John Higgins at the Crucible. He reached the final again in 2022, losing to O’Sullivan, but has otherwise disappointed in Sheffield in recent times.

He knows that, for all his considerable success elsewhere, careers are judged by a player’s record in the World Championship, the tournament which towers above all others due to its history, prominence and the marathon length of its matches.

So often at the Crucible, Trump seems to start slowly. Even in 2019 he only just scraped past Thepchaiya Un Nooh in the first round, 10-9. In other years he has narrowly come through his opening encounter or been beaten, as he was last year by Anthony McGill.

This is in contrast to regular tour events where he slogs his way through the early rounds often without finding top gear. The key then is to find a way of taking this game to Sheffield.

Davis once famously said the secret to winning at snooker was to “play as if it means nothing when it means everything.” The problem is, it really does mean everything. If it didn’t then the king of the 80s would not have missed that last black against Dennis Taylor in the 1985 final.

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‘Have you ever seen two more outrageous flukes back-to-back?’ – Trump pulls off the extraordinary

Aside from the additional pressure the World Championship brings, Trump’s main problem is the strength of his rivals. Neil Robertson will have to qualify for the first time since 2006 and if he does get through will be playing one of the top 16 seeds – maybe Trump – in the first round.

O’Sullivan is going into this year’s event with the ambition to add an eighth world title to the eight UK Championship and Masters crowns he has earned.

Add in the likes of Mark Allen, Mark Selby and a host of others with the drive and potential to succeed and the tournament is looking harder than ever to win.

There is a certain snobbery to the way some see snooker, dismissing events such as the World Open as somehow lesser than the established British tournaments, an attitude rooted largely in nostalgia.

Yet the fact remains that there is one trophy which counts more than the rest. It has been presented to every world champion since the first in 1927 and Judd Trump will be aware that the likes of Davis, Hendry and O’Sullivan are way ahead of him on this particular measure of greatness.

As attention turns once again to the Crucible, he knows this is the place where he can end all arguments as to his status.

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‘I’ve put myself in an amazing position’ – Trump hopes to win ‘magnificent seven’ ranking titles

Trump led 7-2 after the first session and secured three more frames for victory in Yushan to win his fifth ranking title of the season.

Speaking after the win, Trump was surprised that his win came by such a large margin.

He said: “I thought it was going to be a tough game against Ding. I’ve seen how well he’d been scoring. He beat everyone pretty comfortably, except Neil [Robertson] where he scraped through.

“I thought it was going to be really tough. I managed to dig in this afternoon, and get a good lead. Then this evening, I probably played the best snooker of the tournament that I’ve played and managed to get over the line quite comfortably.

“I felt a lot more relaxed, and I was just hitting the ball a lot better. Whenever you’ve got a lead like that, you just relax and play as if you’re in practice.

“I played very good tonight and it’s always difficult if you’ve got a big lead, especially if the crowd gets behind him and he starts winning frames.”

The former world No. 1 said that it would have been harder if Ding had put the pressure on in the second session, with the crowd able to make a difference if momentum goes in favour of the home player.”

He added: “It can be a very lonely atmosphere if things start going his way, so I knew it was important to finish off the job as soon as possible.

“It was one of those games I thrive on. I remember against Ronnie [O’Sullivan] in a Masters final and I did the same thing. It’s something that really gets me going.

“I knew it was going to be tough, and I knew it was important to get a good lead, because you could feel the support behind him, but I think it was also very fair.

“Nobody wants to have their opponent having more support than you, but sometimes you have to use it to your advantage, to motivate yourself.”

Trump has enjoyed an exceptional season with five titles to his name, and was asked if he might pull off a haul of a “magnificent seven”, replying that he had given himself a chance with the Tour Championship and World Championship to come.

He answered: “It’s obviously going to be difficult, but I’ve put myself in an amazing position. I think I said this at the start of the season after I’d won three in a row.

“I was able to just relax and enjoy the season. If I didn’t win another game it would have been an amazing season. I’ve managed to keep ticking over, winning the German [Masters] and winning this one, with a couple of finals as well. It’s been a dream season for me.”

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Trump secures second World Open crown with impressive win over Ding

Judd Trump has secured his second World Open title with a 10-4 win over Ding Junhui in Yushan.

The Bristolian, the event’s top seed, repeated his 2019 success after five years away from the tournament, and he stamped his authority on the final in the early stages, building a big lead that left the home favourite Ding struggling to keep the pace.

But here, in front of a partisan crowd rooting for Ding, the gulf in class was vast.

After a marathon first frame that Trump finally put to an end with an excellent long pot, a second painful frame followed where both men could not find their best form, but it was the English world No. 2 who doubled his lead after Ding conceded the frame.

An 88 break had Trump up handsomely in the third, before Ding finally got on the scoreboard in the fourth after two brilliant long reds.

A brave blue from the Chinese rattled the jaws of the pocket in the dying embers of a tense fifth frame, and it gave Trump the opportunity to seize the initiative once more, developing and sinking the pink to snatch it 4-1 after poor misses from both parties.

The sixth frame was less close, as another Ding concession ended a one-sided affair after another miss from the 11th seed, this time on the penultimate red, and Trump had hit him for six not long after.

A 78 break had Trump up 7-1 and steaming towards glory, but the first century of the match would go the way of the home favourite, who drew a rousing ovation from the Chinese support.

However, it was indeed a case of “Anything you can do, I can do better,”, as Trump responded in some style – a 130 break – to re-establish a six-frame lead at 8-2, with the pick of the bunch being an outstanding blue that would be a contender for shot of the season so far.

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Trump pulls further clear of Ding in final with magnificent 130 clearance

Ding added another frame to his tally in the 11th to come from behind and take it within one visit, but another century was rounded off by Trump with a delicate red into the top right.

Ding took what would turn out to be the penultimate frame, but with a final flourish of the pink, the trophy was Trump’s once again.

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World Open final LIVE – Trump faces Ding in Yushan showdown

Ding to face Trump in World Open final after beating Robertson in dramatic decider

Ding Junhui won a dramatic deciding frame against Neil Robertson to set up a meeting with Judd Trump in the final of the World Open.

The home favourite dug deep from 5-4 behind in front of a raucous crowd in Yushan, China, but eventually came through a marathon contest to land his first victory over the Australian since 2014.

Robertson will be left to rue three chances to get over the line for a place in his first final in two years, with the defeat meaning he misses out on a spot in next week’s Tour Championship and will have to qualify for next month’s World Championship.

Instead, Ding will have an opportunity to win his first ranking event since the 2019 UK Championship.

Trump eases into final with comfortable win over Page

Judd Trump booked his spot in the final of the World Open with a comfortable 6-2 victory over Jackson Page.

The Englishman continued his remarkable run of results to reach his eighth final of the season and will face either Neil Robertson or Ding Junhui on Sunday as he aims to capture a fifth ranking-event title.

The result brought a brilliant tournament to an end for Wales’ Page, who failed to produce the kind of snooker that saw him reach the last-four stage.

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