Brecel begins title defence with lead over Gilbert in Crucible opener

Luca Brecel began his World Snooker Championship title defence in impressive fashion, building a 6-3 first-session lead over David Gilbert in the tournament opener.

The reigning champion looked sharp from the first break as he got off to a blistering start at the Crucible in Sheffield.

He fired in a break of 91 in the opener and followed it up with a dominant century (134) – helped by a brilliant double on the yellow to sustain the break – to take an authoritative two-frame lead.

Brecel had a great chance to strengthen his early advantage when he was gifted an open pack at the beginning of the third frame, but he could only manage 24 points before he made a mess of a safety shot to give Gilbert a rare opportunity at the table.

But the Englishman’s problematic start continued as he caught himself in a tight bunch, which cost him a miss on a simple red to the bottom left pocket. However, Brecel was not as devastating as he had been to that point, as Gilbert returned to the baize to pull a frame back.

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‘Could not have started better’ – Delicious double helps Brecel to 134 break in opener

Despite Brecel’s excellent start, Gilbert backed up his 70 break in the third frame with a knock of 77 to pull level as the pair headed for the mid-interval session.

Following the break, a refreshed Brecel returned to the table and capitalised on an error from Gilbert, who left a long red for the ‘Belgian Bullet’ to kickstart another half-century knock (73) and regain the lead.

After rediscovering the free-flowing best he had showed in the opening frames, Brecel strategically dropped a magnificent final red into the bottom right as he went on to record his second century of the match (104) and restore his two-frame buffer.

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Fantastic final red helps Brecel to second century of the day

The seventh frame became scrappy, with both players missing shots you would have expected them to put away. Brecel stepped up and showed some superb positional play on the blue ball to come in and out of baulk and set up his next red, which helped him over the line for 5-2.

Just as Brecel threatened to run away with the opening session after an audacious long red at the start of the eighth frame, Gilbert replied with a magnificent break of 115 to reduce the deficit to two frames.

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Gilbert delights with double on blue to make century break

A long-winded ninth frame followed, but Brecel just about did enough to stretch his lead once more to take a three-frame lead into the final session.

The pair will resume their 19-frame match on Saturday from 18:45 UK time, live on Eurosport and discovery+.

Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+

World Championship LIVE – Defending champion Brecel leads Gilbert in opener

Thanks for joining us

We will back in an hour with Judd Trump taking on Hossein Vafaei and Ali Carter up against Stephen Maguire in two high-quality first-round matches.

Latest: Brecel 6-3 Gilbert

Breaks of 91, 134, 73 and 104 from Luca this morning with Dave contributing 70, 77 and 115. This match not over, but Gilbert will have to make a fast start tonight you suspect.

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Gilbert delights with double on blue to make century break

World Snooker Championship schedule – Saturday, April 20

10:00 (UK time)

  • Luca Brecel 6-3 David Gilbert
  • Zhang Anda 1-5 Jak Jones
  • Ali Carter v Stephen Maguire
  • Judd Trump v Hossein Vafaei
  • Tom Ford v Ricky Walden
  • Luca Brecel v David Gilbert

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (65-19)

Mistake by Dave to lead a red over a top pocket. Luca slots red, black and red to leave Dave needing a snooker. Luca then sets up a snooker that Gilbert can’t escape from. And the handshake comes from the former Crucible semi-finalist. A very productive first session from the world champion, who will need four more frames to reach the last 16 when they resume at 7pm tonight.

Zhang 1-5 Jones

Jak Jones with a break of 58 in the sixth frame, and he is suddenly 5-1 clear of Zhang Anda in the race to 10.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (52-19)

Another eight points added to the Brecel total after Dave goes for a long red and leaves red near yellow pocket. Luca with a red and black, but just safety to follow. The stodgiest frame of this match so far.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (44-19)

But the Belgian player ends up going in off after carting in a blue to right centre. Didn’t see that coming. Frame still well in the mixer. Four reds still on table.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (44-0)

Dave trying to squeeze home a tricky red after Luca misses a hopeful blue with deep screw, but can’t nudge it into the top right-hand pocket. And a brilliant pink at pace to green bag could be key to a 6-3 lead. That was a fearless pot.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (22-0)

Would you believe that? Dave with a fine pot on a mid-range red to break the deadlock, but somehow ends up screwing the white into right centre pocket. Is this a turning point in the frame? Brecel thumps in a long pot with hand on table from the d. Difficult table with reds welded to side cushions, but Luca will look to make progress. As he always does.

Zhang 1-4 Jones

A 75 break from Jak Jones in the fifth frame helps the Welshman move 4-1 clear on the other main showpiece table inside the Crucible.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (6-0)

A rare sustained bout of safety play in this ninth frame of the day. Neither man has been overly bothered about exchanging tactical blows so far.

BRECEL 5-3 GILBERT (6-0)

Tables look to be playing in peak condition this morning. Which bodes well for an attacking exhibition of snooker over the next 17 days. Conditions so vital to the quality of play.

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-115)

A blistering break of 115 from Dave, the third century of a free-flowing session of snooker with both men showing their class. A huge final frame of the first session coming up. Is it going to be 5-4 or 6-3 before they resume at 7pm tonight? Can’t remember much safety being played. A fine way to start the 48th World Championship.

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-56)

This has been an excellent response by Dave to remain in touch in this contest. Has been on the backfoot, but moves quickly to 50. Brecel left a red with an error, and Dave has stepped in with some real intent.

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Fantastic final red helps Brecel to second century of the day

Zhang 1-3 Jones

Not exactly speeding along on the other table. Head for the mid-session with Jak holding a 3-1 advantage. Five more frames to come in that session.

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-0)

Another wonderful opening red by Luca from distance. Just stroked that home with stun to hold for black. Tricky red down the table to yellow pocket rattles the jaws of the pocket. Doesn’t drop, but no damage done.

BRECEL 4-2 GILBERT (66-8)

Brilliant shot from Brecel on blue to come in out and out of baulk to land on the next red. What a superb piece of positional play. And that is going to be the platform for another frame. A 5-2 lead with a knock of 40.

BRECEL 4-2 GILBERT (26-7)

A really scrappy affair in the seventh frame with both men missing balls that you expect to see drop. But Dave then sees a green stay out to the yellow pocket. A shake of the head from Gilbert, who can’t really afford to be missing these chances.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (104-22)

Lowest break of the six frames is 70. This match is all about attacking and scoring. Very good to watch. A brilliant break of 104 this time by Brecel, his second of the match, for a 4-2 lead in the race to 10. Three more frames remaining of the first session.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (70-22)

Delightful play by Luca, whose average shot time is only 16 seconds. That missed red by Dave using top spin into the pack is going to prove so costly.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (40-22)

Dave handed another chance to get hand on table in this sixth frame, but breaks down quickly among reds. And he has opened up the pack too. Which spells bad news. Luca looking very interested as he nudges in a tough pink to green bag amid a trademark flurry of pots. Speeds to 39. Looks a very good chance to regain his two-frame lead.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (77-24)

Dave had a dart at getting four snookers, but never really likely on the final red. The 73 break from Brecel sees him get his nose in front by the odd frame in five.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (73-1)

Dave back out from the tea break, leaves a long red and Luca has punished him. Got top side of the baulk line. But out of position on 69. Recovers situation with an excellent cut on red before green slides home to left centre. Misses a red with a rest, but this frame looks all over.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (42-0)

Boys back out then for another five frames, and Luca looking to get back on a roll after losing momentum. Drops in a long red before producing some fine cueing to hammer in a stunned red. Really is a joy to watch when he is in the mood. Races to 42. Looking very decent here among the balls.

Zhang 0-2 Jones

Jak Jones with a break of 55 in the second frame to establish a 2-0 lead.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (19-77)

Some heavy scoring play from both men so far. 77 from the Tamworth man is good enough to level us up. He’ll be feeling better about his cuppa at the break.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (19-54)

Well, this would be a real result for Dave if he can get out of this mini session at 2-2. Was hit with a few heavy bombs by Brecel in the opening two frames, but suspect Luca has missed a trick here as his opponent closes in on restoring parity at 2-2.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (15-1)

Well, both men throwing their cues at couple of efforts. Dave has a go at a red from distance that doesn’t drop before Luca splatters the reds after trying and failing to force in a red, but somehow doesn’t leave an easy starter. Dave then sees a white fly in a top pocket, but Brecel can’t nudge in a tough red to left middle. And he has stuck up the red for Dave.

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (40-85)

Looks like Gilbert is going to steady the ship with a winning counter punch in this frame. Brecel had his chances, didn’t take them and Dave is going to register in this match. A break of 70 from Gilbert, who closes to 2-1 behind.

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (40-27)

Dave being handed a few chances to make his presence felt after Luca is miles off a long red. But just failing to really settle down as Brecel quickly returns to the table. 16 this time as Luca misses a red to left centre. So a third chance of the frame for the man dubbed ‘The Angry Farmer’. Can he secure his first frame of the day?

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (24-8)

91 and 134 from Brecel in the first two frames and he is on the move again in the third frame. Dave yet to really settle out there. Hasn’t had a chance. And leaves Luca an easy starter. But he can only make 24 before he butchers a safety shot. Hit a middle jaw running back down the table to baulk, and Dave has his first real chance of this match.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (142-0)

And in goes the century from Luca, who is right on it out there. Brilliant double on yellow to keep the break going. And a 134 total clearance from Brecel is impeccable. Dave yet to pot a ball in this match.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (66-0)

Brecel continuing his march towards another quick kill in the second frame. Early chance of a maximum, but forced to take a pink to right centre to quell those prospects. Still, this is very, very bright indeed from Luca. Drops in a wonderful red to left middle. Into a blind pocket. Very impressive. Should be a 2-0 lead on the cards.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (25-0)

Looks like Brecel has never been away from this venue. First to the punch in the second frame, and picking up from where he left off last year. Just striking the cue ball with real sense of authority.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (108-0)

This has been a blistering start by Brecel. Could be a century straight off the bat here. 91 break, but a tough blue doesn’t drop. No matter. Exceptional level of play from Luca, who leads 1-0.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (46-0)

Dave very unfortunate to see the green fly in potting a red, but Brecel is not hanging about as he opens up the reds via the green seconds later. Brilliant shot by the Belgian player, who then smashes open more reds off a red with the rest. What a shot that is. Nothing difficult on this table now.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (6-0)

Out comes the leading four men for this morning’s action. Luca bouncing down the old stairs. Gilbert with an early error to leave a red over a left hand middle bag. Chance then for Luca to get hand on table. But only makes six before a tough red to centre stays out. A settling in period. Nine frames to be play in this first session.

LUCA BRECEL CONQUERS CRUCIBLE

A reminder of the moment Luca Brecel became Belgium’s first world champion a year ago.

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Brecel clinches ‘sensational’ maiden world title against Selby at Crucible

‘THE GREATEST SHOWMAN’ – WHO ARE THE TOP 10 CRUCIBLE HEADLINE SNOOKER ACTS?

The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield has been home to the World Snooker Championship since 1977, producing some of the greatest matches, magic and memories from genuine icons, including Ronnie O’Sullivan, Stephen Hendry, Steve Davis and Alex Higgins. So where do these giants of the green baize rank in terms of creating interest in the tournament watched by millions worldwide? Read more here

Good morning

A huge day ahead as the 48th World Championship at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield gets moving at 10am with world champion Luca Brecel taking on David Gilbert, a semi-finalist at the fabled venue back in 2019. International champion Zhang Anda faces 2023 quarter-finalist Jak Jones on the other main table this morning. Boys on baize imminently.

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O’Sullivan prepared to go ‘beyond the distance’ again to win World Snooker Championship

World Snooker Championship schedule – Saturday, April 20

10:00 (UK time)

  • Luca Brecel v David Gilbert
  • Zhang Anda v Jak Jones
  • Ali Carter v Stephen Maguire
  • Judd Trump v Hossein Vafaei
  • Tom Ford v Ricky Walden
  • Luca Brecel v David Gilbert
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+

World Championship LIVE – Brecel begins title defence against Gilbert

The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield has been home to the World Snooker Championship since 1977, producing some of the greatest matches, magic and memories from genuine icons, including Ronnie O’Sullivan, Stephen Hendry, Steve Davis and Alex Higgins. So where do these giants of the green baize rank in terms of creating interest in the tournament watched by millions worldwide? Read more here

World Championship LIVE – Defending champion Brecel leads Gilbert in opener

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-115)

A blistering break of 115 from Dave, the third century of a free-flowing session of snooker with both men showing their class. A huge final frame of the first session coming up. Is it going to be 5-4 or 6-3 before they resume at 7pm tonight? Can’t remember much safety being played. A fine way to start the 48th World Championship.

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-56)

This has been an excellent response by Dave to remain in touch in this contest. Has been on the backfoot, but moves quickly to 50. Brecel left a red with an error, and Dave has stepped in with some real intent.

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Fantastic final red helps Brecel to second century of the day

Zhang 1-3 Jones

Not exactly speeding along on the other table. Head for the mid-session with Jak holding a 3-1 advantage. Five more frames to come in that session.

BRECEL 5-2 GILBERT (16-0)

Another wonderful opening red by Luca from distance. Just stroked that home with stun to hold for black. Tricky red down the table to yellow pocket rattles the jaws of the pocket. Doesn’t drop, but no damage done.

BRECEL 4-2 GILBERT (66-8)

Brilliant shot from Brecel on blue to come in out and out of baulk to land on the next red. What a superb piece of positional play. And that is going to be the platform for another frame. A 5-2 lead with a knock of 40.

BRECEL 4-2 GILBERT (26-7)

A really scrappy affair in the seventh frame with both men missing balls that you expect to see drop. But Dave then sees a green stay out to the yellow pocket. A shake of the head from Gilbert, who can’t really afford to be missing these chances.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (104-22)

Lowest break of the six frames is 70. This match is all about attacking and scoring. Very good to watch. A brilliant break of 104 this time by Brecel, his second of the match, for a 4-2 lead in the race to 10. Three more frames remaining of the first session.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (70-22)

Delightful play by Luca, whose average shot time is only 16 seconds. That missed red by Dave using top spin into the pack is going to prove so costly.

BRECEL 3-2 GILBERT (40-22)

Dave handed another chance to get hand on table in this sixth frame, but breaks down quickly among reds. And he has opened up the pack too. Which spells bad news. Luca looking very interested as he nudges in a tough pink to green bag amid a trademark flurry of pots. Speeds to 39. Looks a very good chance to regain his two-frame lead.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (77-24)

Dave had a dart at getting four snookers, but never really likely on the final red. The 73 break from Brecel sees him get his nose in front by the odd frame in five.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (73-1)

Dave back out from the tea break, leaves a long red and Luca has punished him. Got top side of the baulk line. But out of position on 69. Recovers situation with an excellent cut on red before green slides home to left centre. Misses a red with a rest, but this frame looks all over.

BRECEL 2-2 GILBERT (42-0)

Boys back out then for another five frames, and Luca looking to get back on a roll after losing momentum. Drops in a long red before producing some fine cueing to hammer in a stunned red. Really is a joy to watch when he is in the mood. Races to 42. Looking very decent here among the balls.

Zhang 0-2 Jones

Jak Jones with a break of 55 in the second frame to establish a 2-0 lead.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (19-77)

Some heavy scoring play from both men so far. 77 from the Tamworth man is good enough to level us up. He’ll be feeling better about his cuppa at the break.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (19-54)

Well, this would be a real result for Dave if he can get out of this mini session at 2-2. Was hit with a few heavy bombs by Brecel in the opening two frames, but suspect Luca has missed a trick here as his opponent closes in on restoring parity at 2-2.

BRECEL 2-1 GILBERT (15-1)

Well, both men throwing their cues at couple of efforts. Dave has a go at a red from distance that doesn’t drop before Luca splatters the reds after trying and failing to force in a red, but somehow doesn’t leave an easy starter. Dave then sees a white fly in a top pocket, but Brecel can’t nudge in a tough red to left middle. And he has stuck up the red for Dave.

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (40-85)

Looks like Gilbert is going to steady the ship with a winning counter punch in this frame. Brecel had his chances, didn’t take them and Dave is going to register in this match. A break of 70 from Gilbert, who closes to 2-1 behind.

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (40-27)

Dave being handed a few chances to make his presence felt after Luca is miles off a long red. But just failing to really settle down as Brecel quickly returns to the table. 16 this time as Luca misses a red to left centre. So a third chance of the frame for the man dubbed ‘The Angry Farmer’. Can he secure his first frame of the day?

BRECEL 2-0 GILBERT (24-8)

91 and 134 from Brecel in the first two frames and he is on the move again in the third frame. Dave yet to really settle out there. Hasn’t had a chance. And leaves Luca an easy starter. But he can only make 24 before he butchers a safety shot. Hit a middle jaw running back down the table to baulk, and Dave has his first real chance of this match.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (142-0)

And in goes the century from Luca, who is right on it out there. Brilliant double on yellow to keep the break going. And a 134 total clearance from Brecel is impeccable. Dave yet to pot a ball in this match.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (66-0)

Brecel continuing his march towards another quick kill in the second frame. Early chance of a maximum, but forced to take a pink to right centre to quell those prospects. Still, this is very, very bright indeed from Luca. Drops in a wonderful red to left middle. Into a blind pocket. Very impressive. Should be a 2-0 lead on the cards.

BRECEL 1-0 GILBERT (25-0)

Looks like Brecel has never been away from this venue. First to the punch in the second frame, and picking up from where he left off last year. Just striking the cue ball with real sense of authority.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (108-0)

This has been a blistering start by Brecel. Could be a century straight off the bat here. 91 break, but a tough blue doesn’t drop. No matter. Exceptional level of play from Luca, who leads 1-0.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (46-0)

Dave very unfortunate to see the green fly in potting a red, but Brecel is not hanging about as he opens up the reds via the green seconds later. Brilliant shot by the Belgian player, who then smashes open more reds off a red with the rest. What a shot that is. Nothing difficult on this table now.

BRECEL 0-0 GILBERT (6-0)

Out comes the leading four men for this morning’s action. Luca bouncing down the old stairs. Gilbert with an early error to leave a red over a left hand middle bag. Chance then for Luca to get hand on table. But only makes six before a tough red to centre stays out. A settling in period. Nine frames to be play in this first session.

LUCA BRECEL CONQUERS CRUCIBLE

A reminder of the moment Luca Brecel became Belgium’s first world champion a year ago.

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Brecel clinches ‘sensational’ maiden world title against Selby at Crucible

‘THE GREATEST SHOWMAN’ – WHO ARE THE TOP 10 CRUCIBLE HEADLINE SNOOKER ACTS?

The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield has been home to the World Snooker Championship since 1977, producing some of the greatest matches, magic and memories from genuine icons, including Ronnie O’Sullivan, Stephen Hendry, Steve Davis and Alex Higgins. So where do these giants of the green baize rank in terms of creating interest in the tournament watched by millions worldwide? Read more here

Good morning

A huge day ahead as the 48th World Championship at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield gets moving at 10am with world champion Luca Brecel taking on David Gilbert, a semi-finalist at the fabled venue back in 2019. International champion Zhang Anda faces 2023 quarter-finalist Jak Jones on the other main table this morning. Boys on baize imminently.

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O’Sullivan prepared to go ‘beyond the distance’ again to win World Snooker Championship

World Snooker Championship schedule – Saturday, April 20

10:00 (UK time)

  • Luca Brecel v David Gilbert
  • Zhang Anda v Jak Jones
  • Ali Carter v Stephen Maguire
  • Judd Trump v Hossein Vafaei
  • Tom Ford v Ricky Walden
  • Luca Brecel v David Gilbert
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+

O’Sullivan hunting ‘turbo button’ to fire latest Crucible charge

Ronnie O’Sullivan has said his aim is to try and find a “turbo button” to perform at a consistently high level.

The world No. 1 has had one of his best seasons in years, with victories at the UK Championship, World Grand Prix, Shanghai Masters, The Masters and World Masters of Snooker.

The desire to succeed is still huge and although he has dismissed the idea of seeking perfection, he wants to perform consistently well.

“That turbo button I want to just find from the start of the match, middle of the match, end of the match,” O’Sullivan said in an interview with Eurosport’s Rachel Casey. “You have one spell where you might not play well, but really I should be able to do that more often than I am. It’s nice to know that it’s in there, and obviously it’s coming out when I need it most.

“Maybe five, six, seven, ten years ago, I was doing that quite a lot during matches.

“I want to get back to that consistency level, and then I’ve got a great chance of winning any tournament I play.”

Steve Peters will be working with O’Sullivan when the World Championship gets underway on Eurosport and discovery+ at the weekend, and the fabled sports psychiatrist is being tasked with finding the key to unlocking consistency.

“I have felt better to be honest in my game,” O’Sullivan said. “I felt like mentally and physically, I’m great, I’ve kept fit, I’ve looked after myself; I’ve paced myself.

“I’d just like to have a bit more consistency. Everyone’s talking about these bursts, but I want them. I just want to produce that for longer periods in the match.

“Otherwise I’m just making hard work of games.”

O’Sullivan is widely considered the greatest to play the game, and at times it has been suggested that his play has been perfect.

The 48-year-old is not striving for perfection, with consistency his target.

“ I don’t want perfection,” O’Sullivan said. ”I just want to play alright.

“Not perfect, just to hit the ball solid and then it’s a nice game, it’s an enjoyable game.”

Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

‘Superhuman’ O’Sullivan, ‘indestructible’ Trump – White and McManus preview World Championship

Jimmy White believes “superhuman” Ronnie O’Sullivan has shown he knows how to produce under pressure as the world No. 1 eyes an eighth World Snooker Championship title.

The Rocket goes into the 2024 event tied with Stephen Hendry on seven crowns as the most successful players of the modern era.

O’Sullivan is also bidding to clinch the coveted single-season Triple Crown for the first time after his triumphs at the Masters and UK Championship.

First up in the 48-year-old’s bid for glory is a first-round clash with Jackson Page.

“I like his game, but I think he’s a little bit too open for Ronnie,” White said of O’Sullivan’s Welsh opponent.

“And I think Ronnie going for eight World Championships, the first time going for the Triple Crown…the way he’s produced during the last season, when someone has come close to him, he seems to have gone for the win and produced. He kicks on, he’s having those spasms of winning three or four frames.”

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O’Sullivan prepared to go ‘beyond the distance’ again to win World Snooker Championship

O’Sullivan comes into the tournament on the back of a defeat to Mark Williams in the final of the Tour Championship, but White is not reading too much into that slip-up.

“He’s only human,” White added. “Now and again he’s going to run out of steam. Mark Williams played excellent.

“But because Ronnie’s superhuman with the way he’s been playing this season, you haven’t seen a lot of that. I can’t see Jackson Page beating Ronnie.”

White’s fellow Eurosport expert Alan McManus took a different view of world No. 43 Page’s chances.

“I actually think he’s got the game to upset Ronnie,” said McManus.

“I watched the last couple of matches in qualifying. The way he won the match to get here was sensational. Through the ball he’s like butterscotch, under massive pressure.”

Trump showing ‘indestructible self-belief’

Another leading contender to take the title at the Crucible is Judd Trump, who is enjoying a superb 2023-24 campaign.

The Ace in the Pack has already claimed five titles this season, but faces a tough opening task against Hossein Vafaei.

“Judd Trump has had a fantastic season and went on that roll where he had this indestructible self-belief,” White said.

“Then he played O’Sullivan in Saudi Arabia and he just had a bad day. It wasn’t like him to play that bad.

“I think you’ve got to fancy Judd Trump in that match. Make no mistake, [Vafaei] is a great player, but he’s playing Judd Trump. Trump for me temperament wise, if he gets the form he had six weeks ago, I think he wins the match.”

Once again, the two pundits were on different sides as McManus backed the Iranian to impress.

“I think Hossein is going to win,” McManus said. “I think he’s playing awesome, he’s playing very aggressive.”

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Trump lifts World Open trophy after latest inspired success

Brecel has mettle…but also attitude

Luca Brecel arrives in Sheffield as the defending champion after his stunning triumph last season.

However, the Belgian Bullet has struggled to build on that success this season and White foresees an awkward first-round match for him against David Gilbert.

“Unfortunately, since he’s had success, he seems to have gone back to that little bit of an attitude,” White said of Brecel.

“We know how good Dave Gilbert is…if he plays his game, he can beat Luca for sure.

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A fluke for Luka! Brecel fortunate to sink red in World Open second-round match

“Sometimes he [Brecel] is one of these guys I want to shake and say: ‘fast forward yourself, this is it pal, you’ve got to do it now.’

“He’s got a tough game Luca, but he’s got a lot of mettle about him and a lot of self-belief.”

Stream the 2024 World Snooker Championship live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

‘I needed a bit of help’ – O’Sullivan enlists old coach ahead of eighth world title bid

Ronnie O’Sullivan has reunited with an old coach ahead of his bid to clinch a record-breaking eighth World Snooker Championship at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield.

The 48-year-old is tied on seven world titles with Stephen Hendry as he prepares to make his 32nd appearance in the sport’s showpiece event, and takes on Jackson Page in the first round.

He has enjoyed a stellar season but admitted he needs “a bit of help” and has started working with Nic Barrow, a former professional and founder of ‘The Snooker Gym’.

“I’ve been trying to think how I want the next five to 10 years to be,” O’Sullivan said. “I’ve been working with a coach and we’ve done a lot of testing in some ways, and I’ve realised I don’t know much about snooker.

“I thought I did. I know how to get a ball in a hole, and I know how to compete and win it, and I’ve got an idea of what needs to happen – I know I have to get this bit of wood and this ball and if I do this, that should happen.

“But I haven’t been that efficient in the last few years and I’ve just tried to accept that I needed a bit of help, so I’ve gone back to a coach that worked with my old coach, and I’m going back through the stuff that worked for me.”

O’Sulliivan has amassed a record 41 ranking titles and can become just the fourth player to win snooker’s three Triple Crown events in the same season if he triumphs in the Steel City, with Steve Davis, Hendry and Mark Williams previously achieving the feat.

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‘Quite extraordinary’ – O’Sullivan wraps up eighth Masters title with win over Carter in final

“I like to win and I’ve got another five to 10 years, and I’ve got to enjoy the work that I’m doing,” he added. “I know I’ve won tournaments but winning and playing to a certain standard don’t always match up.

“I’ve played a lot better and not won anything all season. It doesn’t really make sense but I haven’t really enjoyed it, I’ve just been struggling to get through the ball smoothly.

“Being happy with the game is what it’s all about, or if that’s not the case, I’ve got to get around not playing well and accept it, but I’m not good at accepting it.

“There’s two ways to come at it, from a technical point of view with the help of Steve [Peters, psychiatrist], or if I can’t do that, I’ve got to accept that I am where I am and not let it wind me up. That’s the worst-case scenario.

“There’s another one, saying I’m not bothered, but I’m not quite ready for that.”

The World Snooker Championship begins on Saturday April 20, with all the action from the Crucible live on Eurosport and discovery+.

Stream top snooker action, including the 2024 World Championship, live on Eurosport and discovery+

‘The greatest showman’ – Who is the Crucible’s ultimate headline act?

The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield will host the World Snooker Championship for a 48th time this year, but who has most captured the public’s imagination at the celebrated venue since 1977?

We pick our top 10 most influential performers at the Crucible, each of whom has played pivotal roles in creating the magical legacy of snooker’s greatest show on earth.

10. Fred Davis (England) – world champion 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955 and 1956

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‘We should never complain about balls again!’ – Higgins and McManus sample Fred Davis’ snooker table

The World Championship was first staged at Camkin’s Hall in Birmingham in 1927, long before the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield first hosted the sport’s flagship event.

Long before the concocted claims of self-styled snooker majors were invented, Joe Davis and his younger brother Fred enjoyed a dominance of the sport’s only genuine major with a trophy haul never witnessed in the televised era of professionalism.

During its days as a challenge event, Joe won 15 straight times between 1927 and 1946 after purchasing the ancient trophy for £19 in 1926 that is still hoisted above the world champion’s shoulders today. Fred was triumphant eight times between 1948 and 1956 to join John Pulman, a former commentator and a figure idolised by Alex Higgins, as joint second in the all-time list.

It was perhaps fitting then – in linking the past with the present – that Fred competed in the early years of the Crucible, and produced a memorable century at the age of 65 during the 1979 World Championship against Kirk Stevens, who he defeated 13-8 to reach the quarter-finals before losing 13-4 to Australia’s ‘Steady’ Eddie Charlton.

Chesterfield-born Fred lost 18-16 to Perrie Mans in the semi-finals in 1978 at the age of 64 after overcoming John Virgo 9-8, Dennis Taylor 13-9 and Patsy Fagan 13-10 in the second year of the World Championship in Sheffield.

At the age of 79, he was still competing when he lost 5-1 to a promising teenager named Ronnie O’Sullivan in qualifying for the Grand Prix in 1992. His considerable legacy in helping to create the beginnings of tournament we witness today cannot be disputed.

9. Dennis Taylor (Northern Ireland) – world champion 1985

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Steve Davis and Dennis Taylor after their iconic final in 1985.

Image credit: Eurosport

It would be difficult to unearth a list of the Crucible’s most memorable headline acts without giving a nod to the figure who won the tournament’s most famous match.

An all-time record terrestrial TV audience of 18.5m on BBC2 in the United Kingdom were glued to the 1985 final as Taylor – the Northern Irish bloke with the funny-shaped glasses fighting out of Country Tyrone – sunk the final black in the twilight zone of an epic 18-17 win against the apparently impregnable Steve Davis, who had somehow overcut a tricky black to a top bag with the title within potting distance.

It was a harrowing way to lose with Davis left to wonder how he blew an 8-0 advantage as Taylor wagged his finger after producing one of the great comebacks in a Crucible final that failed to produce a century break from either man. It was Taylor’s finest hour in the midnight hour. And a moment that continues to be celebrated whenever the finest Crucible memories are dusted down from yesteryear.

“The final frame, the final black,” said whispering commentator Ted Lowe as both men battled to sink the deciding ball before a record TV audience for the Beeb’s second channel that, unlike Davis in the final, will never be beaten.

“I’m delighted to say I beat him twice out of five meetings at the Crucible,” said Taylor. “I beat him 13-11 the first time he was here in 1979. Not many people can say that.

“Snooker was the winner that evening. I was just lucky to pot that final black after 17 days. I was 7-0 down after the first session then 8-0 down.

“It just shows what can happen if you persevere. Steve says he will remember that one more than the six he won.

“Listen, Steve Davis played the game as good as anyone because when you missed against Steve Davis, you went back to your seat. You knew he was going to win the frame.”

8. Cliff Thorburn (Canada) – world champion 1980

Thorburn lifted the world title at the Crucible to become Canada’s first world champion in 1980 with a taut 18-16 win over Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins watched by 14.5m viewers.

Nicknamed ‘The Grinder’ for his innate ability to strangle his opponents armed only with a wooden cue and a packet of woodbine, when tobacco sponsorship in sport was more prevalent, Thorburn was a permanent fixture in households up and down the land in challenging for the sport’s major trophies over the next decade.

His most memorable contribution to the Crucible arguably came when he made the historic first 147 maximum break in 1983.

A totemic break – taking 16 minutes and four seconds to compile during a 13-12 win over Terry Griffiths in the second round in 1983 – forced Cliff to drag himself away from his packet of snouts while Terry puffed away gleefully in the corner.

“Good luck, mate,” said the BBC commentator Jack Karnehm as Thorburn ominously crouches over the final black before dropping to his knees and making for his tabs to calm the nerves seconds later.

Thorburn had a formidable tactical game that allowed him to compete with hardened professionals like Ray Reardon, Davis, John Spencer and Griffiths during the 1970s and 1980s.

While some found his methodical style difficult to digest, and his sluggish pace bordering on gamesmanship, he was a product of his time and he flourished with his ability to punish errors from opponents who would be knocked out of their stride.

He was the first man to make a 147 at the Crucible, and also claimed three Masters at the Wembley Conference Centre in 1983, 1985 and 1986. He will rightly be recalled as one of snooker’s toughest combatants.

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Cliff Thorburn is welcomed back to Toronto after claiming the 1980 world title.

Image credit: Eurosport

7. Ray Reardon (Wales) – world champion 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1978

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Ronnie O’Sullivan on ‘unbelievable relationship’ with Ray Reardon

Reardon lifted the world title six times in the 1970s with his solitary Crucible success coming in the 1978 final in Sheffield when he defeated Perrie Mans 25-18.

The Welshman also played a pivotal role in helping Ronnie O’Sullivan claim the second of his seven world titles in 2004 when ‘The Rocket’ sought advice on how he could bring consistency to the tactical side of the sport. Reardon’s influence on the importance of a telling safety shot should not be undervalued.

Nicknamed ‘Dracula’, the Tredegar-born character had a disarming smile, but knew when to put the bite on his opponent. O’Sullivan even sported some Dracula teeth after his 18-8 final win over Graeme Dott in tribute to the green baize giant.

Reardon was successful in 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1978 buoyed by a supreme strategic approach and a prodigious long game. As one of the game’s finest exponents of playing the correct shot, he provided the blueprint for Steve Davis to dominate the 1980s with a heavier-scoring version of the Reardon approach.

It says enough that world champions O’Sullivan and Shaun Murphy have thanked Reardon for helping them to enhance their tactical games with advice on how and when to advance their own interests in the spirit of their own respective games, armed with the ultimate aim of winning snooker.

Reardon was the oldest man to lift the World Championship at the Crucible Theatre aged 45 in 1978 until 46-year-old O’Sullivan defeated Judd Trump 18-13 in 2022.

“Reardon treated it like a job. His passion and his heart was in it,” said O’Sullivan. “Reardon was special.”

6. Ding Junhui (China) – world finalist 2016

China’s leading player Ding Junhui reached the World Championship final in 2016, losing 18-14 to Mark Selby, but his influence on the sport is evident with TV audiences of 45 million in his homeland watching the afternoon sessions of the final eight years ago.

The popularity and purpose of his play has witnessed an explosion of talent and tournaments becoming commonplace since the 18-year-old Ding completed a 10-6 win against Steve Davis in the 2005 UK Championship final, the first of three UK title victories.

China has 22 players on the professional circuit, second only to England with 57, and stages several huge tournaments as a direct result of Ding’s influence on the sport.

“It would be good if they took the World Championship to different places,” Ding told Eurosport. “I think in other sports they get the chance to host the biggest events in other places.

“The World Cup in football is in a different place every time, but of course there is a lot of history here so I understand it is quite hard. And also I know it is not my decision.

“But I wish China would get the chance to host it. I know the fans there would love to see the World Championship.

“It might be easier for me to win it then.”

He could yet become China’s first world champion, a holy grail that would be fitting reward for Ding’s commitment to the cause that has seen him contribute over 650 centuries, win 14 ranking titles and the Masters in London.

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Ding punches table in celebration after win over Robertson in World Open semi-finals

5. Steve Davis (England) – world champion 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988 and 1989

It was once claimed Davis commanded more hours on terrestrial TV in the 1980s than the then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Dubbed the ‘Master Cueman’ for his exemplary positional sense, part of his attraction was his ability to pot balls like a robot at his peak in lifting the world title in 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988 and 1989.

He enjoyed a fierce rivalry with Alex Higgins with the contrast in styles adding to the widespread popularity of the game in the 1980s, but he would not have given Higgins a light during their intense bouts.

There was no doubt who was the more likely winner. Davis was the complete snooker player at the peak of his powers with a voracious appetite for prizes.

“It’s always a thrill to play at the Crucible,” he told me. “I don’t think you ever replicate the buzz of the early years, but the build-up and the excitement before the tournament starts give you the same feeling as a kid at Christmas almost.”

To put snooker’s popularity into some kind of perspective, when Davis won the last three of his six World Championships in 1987, 1988 and 1989, he snagged more money in those three years than golf’s Open champion – the £105,000 he enjoyed in 1989 dwarfed Mark Calcavecchia’s £80k for lifting the Claret Jug at Troon.

When Selby earned £350,000 for lifting a second world title in 2016, the year in which Davis ended his gilded 38-year career, Henrik Stenson collected £1.175m for conquering Troon. The sports have gone their separate ways financially.

Apart from missing the black against Taylor in the 1985 final, I asked Davis if he had any regrets looking back over his career.

He said: “I don’t regret missing the black, it was the green in the ninth frame…”

4. Stephen Hendry (Scotland) – world champion 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1999

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‘Return of the king!’ – Hendry opens up qualifying with fine century

The dawning of a new decade in the 1990s brought about a changing of the guard on the old green baize that scarcely seemed believable. Davis had dismantled John Parrott 18-3 to finalise a sixth Crucible victory in 1989, but never returned to the showpiece match as his glory days came to a shuddering halt.

The end of Davis’ dominance was hastened by the arrival of Stephen Hendry, whose fearsome long potting and break-building game saw him become the youngest Crucible winner of all time at the age of 21 with an 18-12 win over Jimmy White in the 1990 final.

Dubbed the ‘King of the Crucible’, Hendry would defeat White in three more finals with victories over Peter Ebdon and Mark Williams seeing him end the 1990s as the undisputed GOAT with seven world crowns.

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Stephen Hendry of Scotland celebrates victory with the trophy after winning the 1999 Embassy World Snooker Championships Final match against Mark Williams of Wales played at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England, May 3, 1999

Image credit: Getty Images

Yet curiously, like Davis a decade earlier, his demise saw him denied the opportunity to become Hendry the eighth in the noughties.

It was Hendry who spawned the generation of the attacking players we witness today. His willingness to open the reds as early as possible was ground-breaking, but unlike Davis he did not take kindly to the nosedive that professional sport inevitably brings to its leading figures with advancing years.

He won 36 ranking titles, revelled in over £8 million in prize money and has amassed 777 century breaks since 1985.

He retired in 2012 after being forced to qualify for the World Championship, an event that he had made his own with a part-time return to the table in 2021 failing to ignite former glories.

“It felt degrading,” said Hendry. “That’s no disrespect to other players, but I had owned the Crucible for a decade with seven wins and two finals.”

3. Jimmy White (England) – world finalist 1984, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994

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World champion Cliff Thorburn with Jimmy White in 1980.

Image credit: Eurosport

“In the 1980s when there were only four channels, everybody thought they knew you. It was like you were in EastEnders,” said White.

Snooker in itself was a soap opera with White cast as the young rebel with a cause. Millions of people up and down Blighty and beyond willed and wished the People’s Champion – a role he assumed from his close friend Alex Higgins – to become world champion for so, so long, but the Hollywood ending never came.

Certainly not at the Crucible, a dream-crushing cauldron for hundreds of hopeful cue artists, but arguably none more so than the free-wheeling, much-loved ‘Whirlwind’ of old London town, a figure who lost half a dozen world finals in all sorts of weird and wonderful ways between 1984 and 1994.

White succumbed in finals to Steve Davis in 1984, Parrott in 1991 and most memorably Hendry in 1990, 1992, 1993 and of course 1994, the most agonising of his six defeats when he was among the balls in the deciding frame only to “twitch” a black off its spot when finally poised for an 18-17 victory over the heavy-scoring Scotsman.

On the day he turned 32 – 30 years ago – White was rueful in defeat, telling a sarcastically well-wishing David ‘The Governor’ Vine in the post-match interview: “he’s beginning to annoy me”.

World Snooker Tour president Barry Hearn does not understand why White never won the world title. “When I watch the old-school snooker, how this bloke didn’t win a world title is beyond me,” said Hearn. “I keep watching it still expecting him to win. He’s in positions where you wonder: ‘how can you fail Jim?’

“He’s got solid technique and a sound temperament, but when he saw the land of milk and honey and Moses was leading you across the river bed in the greatest scene in the movie, he stayed a bit too long there and the water crashed down on you.”

White never returned to the sport’s blue-chip match, but his epic failure acted as a totem for others to avoid foundering on the rocks of their own great expectations.

“Admittedly, the Jimmy White curse was weighing on my mind,” said Ronnie O’Sullivan after lifting the first of six world titles with an 18-14 win against John Higgins in 2001.

“You think about what happened to him, and you wonder how he ever went back into that arena after losing the final six times.”

White arguably won more than he lost with his swashbuckling, crowd-pleasing style establishing him as one of the Crucible’s all-time most popular figures.

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‘Come on Jimmy!’ – White given standing ovation on main draw return at UK Championship

2. Ronnie O’Sullivan (England) – world champion 2001, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2020 and 2022

For a career apparently prone to inconsistent moments as much as awe-inspiring magic, Ronnie O’Sullivan has been as committed to the Crucible as his pursuit of perfection for the past four decades.

Since losing 10-7 to Alan McManus in his Crucible debut in 1993, O’Sullivan has never missed his annual pilgrimage to Sheffield as he prepares for a record-extending 34th straight appearance this year.

While he may have a love-hate relationship with the venue, he also realises that this is the place where legacies are made in the sport.

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‘The best frame in Crucible history’ – White and McManus on O’Sullivan 147 in 1997

Watching the golden years of Davis in the 1980s and the outset of Hendry’s stranglehold in the 1990s helped developed O’Sullivan’s passion for potting balls to such an extent that he has gone beyond them both to become the greatest player of all time.

A figure who transcends snooker, O’Sullivan has captured the imagination of the public like Higgins and White due to his unpredictability on and off the table since turning professional in 1992, but it is his brilliance with a cue that continues to captivate millions of fans beyond the Crucible.

He stands alongside Higgins and White as genuine crowd-pleasers who have changed the face of snooker since Sheffield first housed the World Championship, bringing a greater popularity to the green baize.

O’Sullivan usurped Reardon to become the oldest world champion since the inception of the modern era.

O’Sullivan had 46 years and 148 days behind him when he held aloft the little silver lady on a priceless Bank Holiday Monday two years ago to equal Hendry’s haul of seven world titles. Naturally, the tears poured forth as he emotionally embraced his opponent Judd Trump.

It was the nearest any opponent got to him over 17 tortuous days.

O’Sullivan concedes reaching utopia suggests his roadshow at the elite level can run for several more years after reaching 1260 centuries and counting in his life and times.

“At times I felt like the cue ball was on a piece of string,” he said. “I was putting it where I wanted. In some ways, it didn’t matter where the balls were.

“I just knew there were key shots I had to get to and I was confident I was able to do it.

“It is a good feeling winning frames from virtually impossible positions.”

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‘He can’t let him go!’ – O’Sullivan embraces Trump after winning seventh title

1. Alex Higgins (Northern Ireland) – world champion 1972 and 1982

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Alex Higgins with baby daughter Lauren after winning the World Championship in 1982.

Image credit: Eurosport

Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins won two world titles, against John Spencer (37-31) in 1972 and Reardon (18-15) in 1982, but the second was the solitary world trophy he carried off at the Crucible. In the semi-finals against White, he trailed 15-14 and 59-0 when he came to the table.

On the cusp of defeat, the Belfast icon produced a series of unbelievable pots despite appearing to have little control of the white ball.

The clearance of 69 on his way to a 16-15 win over White is widely regarded as one of the finest breaks in Crucible history before he usurped Reardon in the final with 11m viewers gripped by the action.

There is a pot on the blue to a baulk bag when he had made only 13 which is particularly fearsome.

In days of heavier balls and slower cloths, Higgins shaped the table against the odds with an air of unpredictability governing his next shot as his personal life was played out in the tabloids.

“Davis was a much heavier scorer and more of a power player,” said O’Sullivan. “Higgins had no right to beat Davis, but Higgins was a magician with a terrific knowledge of the table.

“He was a genius. In fact, I’d say he was the only genius to play snooker. You’ll never see another Alex Higgins again. It is like George Best.”

Higgins is fondly remembered for his natural flair and attacking instincts, but he was also a formidable safety player.

Part of the challenge of snooker is knowing when to play the right shot at the right time. Higgins was never afraid to fraternise with the tactical game when the mood took him.

His finest moment was arguably lifting the UK title in 1983 with a gripping 16-15 win over his bitter foe Davis. In the same year, he had been largely outclassed 16-5 by Davis in the semi-finals of the World Championship.

Yet Higgins somehow managed to rally from 7-0 behind, winning eight of the next nine frames to level at 8-8. He moved 14-12 clear, but trailed 15-14 before takiing the final two frames to the delight of his adoring public.

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Jimmy White: Alex Higgins made snooker popular

Higgins’ tactical nous was part of his armoury, and his legion of fans appreciated Higgins in whatever mode he was in.

It is fair to say, without the popularity of Alex Higgins in the formative years of professionalism, .

A product of his time, he will be recalled as the Crucible’s all-time greatest showman.

Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

‘The greatest showman’ – Who is the Crucible’s ultimate headline act?

The Crucible Theatre in Sheffield will host the World Snooker Championship for a 48th time this year, but who has most captured the public’s imagination at the celebrated venue since 1977?

We pick our top 10 most influential performers at the Crucible, each of whom has played pivotal roles in creating the magical legacy of snooker’s greatest show on earth.

10. Fred Davis (England) – world champion 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955 and 1956

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‘We should never complain about balls again!’ – Higgins and McManus sample Fred Davis’ snooker table

The World Championship was first staged at Camkin’s Hall in Birmingham in 1927, long before the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield first hosted the sport’s flagship event.

Long before the concocted claims of self-styled snooker majors were invented, Joe Davis and his younger brother Fred enjoyed a dominance of the sport’s only genuine major with a trophy haul never witnessed in the televised era of professionalism.

During its days as a challenge event, Joe won 15 straight times between 1927 and 1946 after purchasing the ancient trophy for £19 in 1926 that is still hoisted above the world champion’s shoulders today. Fred was triumphant eight times between 1948 and 1956 to join John Pulman, a former commentator and a figure idolised by Alex Higgins, as joint second in the all-time list.

It was perhaps fitting then – in linking the past with the present – that Fred competed in the early years of the Crucible, and produced a memorable century at the age of 65 during the 1979 World Championship against Kirk Stevens, who he defeated 13-8 to reach the quarter-finals before losing 13-4 to Australia’s ‘Steady’ Eddie Charlton.

Chesterfield-born Fred lost 18-16 to Perrie Mans in the semi-finals in 1978 at the age of 64 after overcoming John Virgo 9-8, Dennis Taylor 13-9 and Patsy Fagan 13-10 in the second year of the World Championship in Sheffield.

At the age of 79, he was still competing when he lost 5-1 to a promising teenager named Ronnie O’Sullivan in qualifying for the Grand Prix in 1992. His considerable legacy in helping to create the beginnings of the tournament we witness today cannot be disputed.

9. Dennis Taylor (Northern Ireland) – world champion 1985

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Steve Davis and Dennis Taylor after their iconic final in 1985.

Image credit: Eurosport

It would be difficult to unearth a list of the Crucible’s most memorable headline acts without giving a nod to the figure who won the tournament’s most famous match.

An all-time record terrestrial TV audience of 18.5m on BBC2 in the United Kingdom were glued to the 1985 final as Taylor – the Northern Irish bloke with the funny-shaped glasses fighting out of Country Tyrone – sunk the final black in the twilight zone of an epic 18-17 win against the apparently impregnable Steve Davis, who had somehow overcut a tricky black to a top bag with the title within potting distance.

It was a harrowing way to lose with Davis left to wonder how he blew an 8-0 advantage as Taylor wagged his finger after producing one of the great comebacks in a Crucible final that failed to produce a century break from either man. It was Taylor’s finest hour in the midnight hour. And a moment that continues to be celebrated whenever the finest Crucible memories are dusted down from yesteryear.

“The final frame, the final black,” said whispering commentator Ted Lowe as both men battled to sink the deciding ball before a record TV audience for the Beeb’s second channel that, unlike Davis in the final, will never be beaten.

“I’m delighted to say I beat him twice out of five meetings at the Crucible,” said Taylor. “I beat him 13-11 the first time he was here in 1979. Not many people can say that.

“Snooker was the winner that evening. I was just lucky to pot that final black after 17 days. I was 7-0 down after the first session then 8-0 down.

“It just shows what can happen if you persevere. Steve says he will remember that one more than the six he won.

“Listen, Steve Davis played the game as good as anyone because when you missed against Steve Davis, you went back to your seat. You knew he was going to win the frame.”

8. Cliff Thorburn (Canada) – world champion 1980

Thorburn lifted the world title at the Crucible to become Canada’s first world champion in 1980 with a taut 18-16 win over Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins watched by 14.5m viewers.

Nicknamed ‘The Grinder’ for his innate ability to strangle his opponents armed only with a wooden cue and a packet of woodbine, when tobacco sponsorship in sport was more prevalent, Thorburn was a permanent fixture in households up and down the land in challenging for the sport’s major trophies over the next decade.

His most memorable contribution to the Crucible arguably came when he made the historic first 147 maximum break in 1983.

A totemic break – taking 16 minutes and four seconds to compile during a 13-12 win over Terry Griffiths in the second round in 1983 – forced Cliff to drag himself away from his packet of snouts while Terry puffed away gleefully in the corner.

“Good luck, mate,” said the BBC commentator Jack Karnehm as Thorburn ominously crouches over the final black before dropping to his knees and making for his tabs to calm the nerves seconds later.

Thorburn had a formidable tactical game that allowed him to compete with hardened professionals like Ray Reardon, Davis, John Spencer and Griffiths during the 1970s and 1980s.

While some found his methodical style difficult to digest, and his sluggish pace bordering on gamesmanship, he was a product of his time and he flourished with his ability to punish errors from opponents who would be knocked out of their stride.

He was the first man to make a 147 at the Crucible, and also claimed three Masters at the Wembley Conference Centre in 1983, 1985 and 1986. He will rightly be recalled as one of snooker’s toughest combatants.

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Cliff Thorburn is welcomed back to Toronto after claiming the 1980 world title.

Image credit: Eurosport

7. Ray Reardon (Wales) – world champion 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1978

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Ronnie O’Sullivan on ‘unbelievable relationship’ with Ray Reardon

Reardon lifted the world title six times in the 1970s with his solitary Crucible success coming in the 1978 final in Sheffield when he defeated Perrie Mans 25-18.

The Welshman also played a pivotal role in helping Ronnie O’Sullivan claim the second of his seven world titles in 2004 when ‘The Rocket’ sought advice on how he could bring consistency to the tactical side of the sport. Reardon’s influence on the importance of a telling safety shot should not be undervalued.

Nicknamed ‘Dracula’, the Tredegar-born character had a disarming smile, but knew when to put the bite on his opponent. O’Sullivan even sported some Dracula teeth after his 18-8 final win over Graeme Dott in tribute to the green baize giant.

Reardon was successful in 1970, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1978 buoyed by a supreme strategic approach and a prodigious long game. As one of the game’s finest exponents of playing the correct shot, he provided the blueprint for Steve Davis to dominate the 1980s with a heavier-scoring version of the Reardon approach.

It says enough that world champions O’Sullivan and Shaun Murphy have thanked Reardon for helping them to enhance their tactical games with advice on how and when to advance their own interests in the spirit of their own respective games, armed with the ultimate aim of winning snooker.

Reardon was the oldest man to lift the World Championship at the Crucible Theatre aged 45 in 1978 until 46-year-old O’Sullivan defeated Judd Trump 18-13 in 2022.

“Reardon treated it like a job. His passion and his heart was in it,” said O’Sullivan. “Reardon was special.”

6. Ding Junhui (China) – world finalist 2016

China’s leading player Ding Junhui reached the World Championship final in 2016, losing 18-14 to Mark Selby, but his influence on the sport is evident with TV audiences of 45 million in his homeland watching the afternoon sessions of the final eight years ago.

The popularity and purpose of his play has witnessed an explosion of talent and tournaments becoming commonplace since the 18-year-old Ding completed a 10-6 win against Steve Davis in the 2005 UK Championship final, the first of three UK title victories.

China has 22 players on the professional circuit, second only to England with 57, and stages several huge tournaments as a direct result of Ding’s influence on the sport.

“It would be good if they took the World Championship to different places,” Ding told Eurosport. “I think in other sports they get the chance to host the biggest events in other places.

“The World Cup in football is in a different place every time, but of course there is a lot of history here so I understand it is quite hard. And also I know it is not my decision.

“But I wish China would get the chance to host it. I know the fans there would love to see the World Championship.

“It might be easier for me to win it then.”

He could yet become China’s first world champion, a holy grail that would be fitting reward for Ding’s commitment to the cause that has seen him contribute over 650 centuries, win 14 ranking titles and the Masters in London.

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Ding punches table in celebration after win over Robertson in World Open semi-finals

5. Steve Davis (England) – world champion 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988 and 1989

It was once claimed Davis commanded more hours on terrestrial TV in the 1980s than the then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Dubbed the ‘Master Cueman’ for his exemplary positional sense, part of his attraction was his ability to pot balls like a robot at his peak in lifting the world title in 1981, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1988 and 1989.

He enjoyed a fierce rivalry with Alex Higgins with the contrast in styles adding to the widespread popularity of the game in the 1980s, but he would not have given Higgins a light during their intense bouts.

There was no doubt who was the more likely winner. Davis was the complete snooker player at the peak of his powers with a voracious appetite for prizes.

“It’s always a thrill to play at the Crucible,” he told me. “I don’t think you ever replicate the buzz of the early years, but the build-up and the excitement before the tournament starts give you the same feeling as a kid at Christmas almost.”

To put snooker’s popularity into some kind of perspective, when Davis won the last three of his six World Championships in 1987, 1988 and 1989, he snagged more money in those three years than golf’s Open champion – the £105,000 he enjoyed in 1989 dwarfed Mark Calcavecchia’s £80k for lifting the Claret Jug at Troon.

When Selby earned £350,000 for lifting a second world title in 2016, the year in which Davis ended his gilded 38-year career, Henrik Stenson collected £1.175m for conquering Troon. The sports have gone their separate ways financially.

Apart from missing the black against Taylor in the 1985 final, I asked Davis if he had any regrets looking back over his career.

He said: “I don’t regret missing the black, it was the green in the ninth frame…”

4. Stephen Hendry (Scotland) – world champion 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1999

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‘Return of the king!’ – Hendry opens up qualifying with fine century

The dawning of a new decade in the 1990s brought about a changing of the guard on the old green baize that scarcely seemed believable. Davis had dismantled John Parrott 18-3 to finalise a sixth Crucible victory in 1989, but never returned to the showpiece match as his glory days came to a shuddering halt.

The end of Davis’ dominance was hastened by the arrival of Stephen Hendry, whose fearsome long potting and break-building game saw him become the youngest Crucible winner of all time at the age of 21 with an 18-12 win over Jimmy White in the 1990 final.

Dubbed the ‘King of the Crucible’, Hendry would defeat White in three more finals with victories over Peter Ebdon and Mark Williams seeing him end the 1990s as the undisputed GOAT with seven world crowns.

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Stephen Hendry of Scotland celebrates victory with the trophy after winning the 1999 Embassy World Snooker Championships Final match against Mark Williams of Wales played at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England, May 3, 1999

Image credit: Getty Images

Yet curiously, like Davis a decade earlier, his demise saw him denied the opportunity to become Hendry the eighth in the noughties.

It was Hendry who spawned the generation of the attacking players we witness today. His willingness to open the reds as early as possible was ground-breaking, but unlike Davis he did not take kindly to the nosedive that professional sport inevitably brings to its leading figures with advancing years.

He won 36 ranking titles, revelled in over £8 million in prize money and has amassed 777 century breaks since 1985.

He retired in 2012 after being forced to qualify for the World Championship, an event that he had made his own with a part-time return to the table in 2021 failing to ignite former glories.

“It felt degrading,” said Hendry. “That’s no disrespect to other players, but I had owned the Crucible for a decade with seven wins and two finals.”

3. Jimmy White (England) – world finalist 1984, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 and 1994

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World champion Cliff Thorburn with Jimmy White in 1980.

Image credit: Eurosport

“In the 1980s when there were only four channels, everybody thought they knew you. It was like you were in EastEnders,” said White.

Snooker in itself was a soap opera with White cast as the young rebel with a cause. Millions of people up and down Blighty and beyond willed and wished the People’s Champion – a role he assumed from his close friend Alex Higgins – to become world champion for so, so long, but the Hollywood ending never came.

Certainly not at the Crucible, a dream-crushing cauldron for hundreds of hopeful cue artists, but arguably none more so than the free-wheeling, much-loved ‘Whirlwind’ of old London town, a figure who lost half a dozen world finals in all sorts of weird and wonderful ways between 1984 and 1994.

White succumbed in finals to Steve Davis in 1984, Parrott in 1991 and most memorably Hendry in 1990, 1992, 1993 and of course 1994, the most agonising of his six defeats when he was among the balls in the deciding frame only to “twitch” a black off its spot when finally poised for an 18-17 victory over the heavy-scoring Scotsman.

On the day he turned 32 – 30 years ago – White was rueful in defeat, telling a sarcastically well-wishing David ‘The Governor’ Vine in the post-match interview: “he’s beginning to annoy me”.

World Snooker Tour president Barry Hearn does not understand why White never won the world title. “When I watch the old-school snooker, how this bloke didn’t win a world title is beyond me,” said Hearn. “I keep watching it still expecting him to win. He’s in positions where you wonder: ‘how can you fail Jim?’

“He’s got solid technique and a sound temperament, but when he saw the land of milk and honey and Moses was leading you across the river bed in the greatest scene in the movie, he stayed a bit too long there and the water crashed down on you.”

White never returned to the sport’s blue-chip match, but his epic failure acted as a totem for others to avoid foundering on the rocks of their own great expectations.

“Admittedly, the Jimmy White curse was weighing on my mind,” said Ronnie O’Sullivan after lifting the first of seven world titles with an 18-14 win against John Higgins in 2001.

“You think about what happened to him, and you wonder how he ever went back into that arena after losing the final six times.”

White arguably won more than he lost with his swashbuckling, crowd-pleasing style establishing him as one of the Crucible’s all-time most popular figures.

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‘Come on Jimmy!’ – White given standing ovation on main draw return at UK Championship

2. Ronnie O’Sullivan (England) – world champion 2001, 2004, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2020 and 2022

For a career apparently prone to inconsistent moments as much as awe-inspiring magic, Ronnie O’Sullivan has been as committed to the Crucible as his pursuit of perfection for the past four decades.

Since losing 10-7 to Alan McManus in his Crucible debut in 1993, O’Sullivan has never missed his annual pilgrimage to Sheffield as he prepares for a record-extending 34th straight appearance this year.

While he may have a love-hate relationship with the venue, he also realises that this is the place where legacies are made in the sport.

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‘The best frame in Crucible history’ – White and McManus on O’Sullivan 147 in 1997

Watching the golden years of Davis in the 1980s and the outset of Hendry’s stranglehold in the 1990s helped developed O’Sullivan’s passion for potting balls to such an extent that he has gone beyond them both to become the greatest player of all time.

A figure who transcends snooker, O’Sullivan has captured the imagination of the public like Higgins and White due to his unpredictability on and off the table since turning professional in 1992, but it is his brilliance with a cue that continues to captivate millions of fans beyond the Crucible.

He stands alongside Higgins and White as genuine crowd-pleasers who have changed the face of snooker since Sheffield first housed the World Championship, bringing a greater popularity to the green baize.

O’Sullivan usurped Reardon to become the oldest world champion since the inception of the modern era.

O’Sullivan had 46 years and 148 days behind him when he held aloft the little silver lady on a priceless Bank Holiday Monday two years ago to equal Hendry’s haul of seven world titles. Naturally, the tears poured forth as he emotionally embraced his opponent Judd Trump.

It was the nearest any opponent got to him over 17 tortuous days.

O’Sullivan concedes reaching utopia suggests his roadshow at the elite level can run for several more years after reaching 1260 centuries and counting in his life and times.

“At times I felt like the cue ball was on a piece of string,” he said. “I was putting it where I wanted. In some ways, it didn’t matter where the balls were.

“I just knew there were key shots I had to get to and I was confident I was able to do it.

“It is a good feeling winning frames from virtually impossible positions.”

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‘He can’t let him go!’ – O’Sullivan embraces Trump after winning seventh title

1. Alex Higgins (Northern Ireland) – world champion 1972 and 1982

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Alex Higgins with baby daughter Lauren after winning the World Championship in 1982.

Image credit: Eurosport

Alex ‘Hurricane’ Higgins won two world titles, against John Spencer (37-31) in 1972 and Reardon (18-15) in 1982, but the second was the solitary world trophy he carried off at the Crucible. In the semi-finals against White, he trailed 15-14 and 59-0 when he came to the table.

On the cusp of defeat, the Belfast icon produced a series of unbelievable pots despite appearing to have little control of the white ball.

The clearance of 69 on his way to a 16-15 win over White is widely regarded as one of the finest breaks in Crucible history before he usurped Reardon in the final with 11m viewers gripped by the action.

There is a pot on the blue to a baulk bag when he had made only 13 which is particularly fearsome.

In days of heavier balls and slower cloths, Higgins shaped the table against the odds with an air of unpredictability governing his next shot as his personal life was played out in the tabloids.

“Davis was a much heavier scorer and more of a power player,” said O’Sullivan. “Higgins had no right to beat Davis, but Higgins was a magician with a terrific knowledge of the table.

“He was a genius. In fact, I’d say he was the only genius to play snooker. You’ll never see another Alex Higgins again. It is like George Best.”

Higgins is fondly remembered for his natural flair and attacking instincts, but he was also a formidable safety player.

Part of the challenge of snooker is knowing when to play the right shot at the right time. Higgins was never afraid to fraternise with the tactical game when the mood took him.

His finest moment was arguably lifting the UK title in 1983 with a gripping 16-15 win over his bitter foe Davis. In the same year, he had been largely outclassed 16-5 by Davis in the semi-finals of the World Championship.

Yet Higgins somehow managed to rally from 7-0 behind, winning eight of the next nine frames to level at 8-8. He moved 14-12 clear, but trailed 15-14 before taking the final two frames to the delight of his adoring public.

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Jimmy White: Alex Higgins made snooker popular

Higgins’ tactical nous was part of his armoury, and his legion of fans appreciated Higgins in whatever mode he was in.

It is fair to say, without the popularity of Alex Higgins in the formative years of professionalism, snooker’s development would have been stunted.

A product of his time, he will be recalled as the Crucible’s all-time greatest showman.

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Snooker in the bloodstream: The fearless Welshman set for O’Sullivan test

When Ronnie O’Sullivan begins his quest for an eighth World Championship crown this week he will do so against a player for whom snooker is in the bloodstream.

Blaenau Gwent is a borough in South Wales encompassing towns such as Tredegar, birthplace of six times world champion Ray Reardon, and the village of Cwm, where Mark Williams grew up before going on to win the world title three times.

This is the green, green baize of home. A snooker hotspot formed in the shadow of the now quiet coalfields. For decades, the menfolk of Gwent were miners. Snooker was a post-work pleasure after long days at the coalface.

Reardon himself was buried for three hours during a mine collapse as a young man. Williams was a boy during the strike of 1984, his father out of work. In these defiantly working-class areas, money was tight but the determination to survive was strong.

Evidence of this mindset has been clearly identifiable in the careers of Reardon and Williams and now the lineage is extended by Jackson Page, a 22-year-old from Ebbw Vale who demonstrated considerable poise by making a century in the deciding frame of his final qualifying round match against Noppon Saengkham.

His reward is a meeting with O’Sullivan, but even before the draw was made he was sounding bullish. “Give me anyone, I ain’t bothered. I’m just ready to go,” he said after qualifying. Not cockiness, but confidence. That Reardon/Williams attitude that anything is possible.

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Brecel clinches ‘sensational’ maiden world title against Selby at Crucible

Page has played O’Sullivan twice, losing 6-3 in round one of the 2017 UK Championship and 4-1 in the second round of this season’s English Open, but he recently proved he can set aside the stellar reputations of opponents when he beat both John Higgins and Mark Selby during a run to the World Open semi-finals in Yushan, China.

This was by far his best performance in a ranking event since he first joined the World Snooker Tour in 2019, although he was also successful on his Crucible debut two years ago, beating Barry Hawkins 10-7 with centuries in each of the last two frames.

Williams is a regular practice partner – when he can be dragged off the golf course – and mentor figure. He dished out a particularly hard lesson by hammering Page 13-3 in the second round after that Hawkins victory.

There are also echoes of another player, James Cahill. He arrived at the Crucible in 2019 under amateur status and was widely tipped to be crushed by O’Sullivan but stood tall, took the game to him, seemed to enjoy every minute and pulled off a shock 10-8 victory.

Page does not seem the type to be intimidated, although he is aware O’Sullivan can outplay anyone at his best. Their match on Wednesday and Thursday promises to be an eye-catching affair, one of many in an intriguing first-round draw in which the qualifiers feel much closer in standard to the top seeds than in years gone by.

All 32 players in the final stages are ranked inside the world’s top 45. There are no rank outsiders – this year just one debutant, Joe O’Connor, made it through the qualifying melee.

The Welsh are well represented. Keeping up with the Joneses will be a challenge for Zhang Anda, who plays Jak, a quarter-finalist last year, and John Higgins, who has been drawn against Jamie, the player who eliminated Neil Robertson in the qualifiers.

Ryan Day is back for a 15th time while 52-year-old Dominic Dale is the oldest qualifier for 14 years and back at the Crucible for the first time in a decade.

Experience is a theme of the qualifiers. Former champion Stuart Bingham will play Gary Wilson while Stephen Maguire meets Ali Carter, who beat him in the semi-finals in 2012.

Six of the qualifiers are over 40, meaning 15 players in the field have reached this age milestone.

At the other end of the scale, 21-year-old Si Jiahui is the youngest competitor this year, returning to the Crucible after his remarkable run to within two frames of the final 12 months ago.

In between, Si has appeared in the German Masters final. He was 4-0 down to Wu Yize in the final round of qualifying a few days ago but reeled off 10 frames in a row to prevail 10-4.

He faces Williams in what could be the match of the round, although similar billing could be used for Ding Junhui v Jack Lisowski and Judd Trump v Hossein Vafaei.

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‘Absolute corker’ – Vafaei hits remarkable fluke against Trump

Lisowski was at his free-flowing best in easing through two rounds of qualifying, and Vafaei impressively recovered from 3-0 down to get the better of Jiang Jun.

He poses a clear threat to Trump, who always seems to start slowly at the World Championship – although one year when he won comfortably in round one was 2022, where he beat Vafaei 10-4.

The opening round feels like the first fence of the Grand National. After all the build-up, it’s suddenly coming into view and there will be prominent fallers. Even the greats feel nerves. Everyone knows whole careers are defined by performances in the World Championship.

When the matches get longer the bigger names are rightly fancied to relax into the championship and play their best snooker, so these first six days are where they may be most vulnerable.

And this year, there is more than enough quality from the qualifiers to cause plenty of upsets.

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