‘I don’t have to win, you know’ – O’Sullivan on his future in snooker

Ronnie O’Sullivan has said he will dedicate the next 12 months to working hard on his game in a bid to extend his career at the top level.

O’ Sullivan has had some stellar results in the 2023/24 season, winning the UK Championship and Masters to add to his tally of Triple Crown events.

But despite the wins, the world No. 1 has been unhappy with the state of his game.

He has begun working closely with Steve Peters once again, and the revered Sports Psychiatrist will be in his corner at the World Championship and for the next 12 months.

“Steve’s gonna be there a lot,” O’Sullivan told Eurosport about his plans for a shot at an eighth World Championship, which gets underway on Eurosport and discovery+ at the weekend. “I told him, whenever you can make it, that’d be great.

“I’ve been speaking to him a lot on the phone recently.”

O’Sullivan is not happy with the state of his game, but has committed to working hard to feel comfortable at the table.

He continued: “I’m in that situation at the moment where I’ve just got to get myself in a frame of mind for maybe the next however long. I’ve given myself a year to the end of next year’s World Championship to work with Steve and hope, you know, to get back to where I feel it’s acceptable.

“I could do another year like this, I’ll commit to that playing how I’ve been playing and the struggles and what we all want to call it – the yips or the snatches, whatever you want to call it.

“I don’t consider that snooker, I’m butchering balls.

“Everyone’s got their own problems. But that ain’t fun for me.

“I’ve got two options. Like Steve said, you can learn to live with it. You can learn to live with anything and be happy or choose to be miserable.

“The task I’m gonna have to set myself is if I can’t get my game in the right place, and I really don’t wanna stop then I’ve got to get round my head round acceptance. Learn to live with it, play it.

“But if I can’t, then maybe do 18 months, two years, exhibitions, go see all the fans and really just go down that testimonial route and then hang my cue up. Would be, like 51, 52. No big deal.”

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‘A beautifully played shot’ – O’Sullivan’s delightful double at World Open

Should O’Sullivan triumph at the Crucible, it would give him an eighth world crown to go with his eight Masters and eight UK Championships.

Such an achievement would not be the trigger to consider retirement.

“I’ll only retire if I think I’m not playing well enough for long enough, which has been going on a while now,” he said. “That’s obviously something that distresses me enough to think. ‘I don’t want to keep doing that.’ But like I said, if I can learn to live with it.”

The lifestyle snooker has handed O’Sullivan is one of the reasons for him to keep playing.

He said: “I don’t have to win, you know, I just like travelling, I like the people I meet, I like the people I work with; I have a great time with all my sponsors and stuff like that. That’d be hard to give up.

“It’d be hard to give up all the exhibitions I do, the places I get to travel to. That’s why I don’t want to give it up.

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‘Outrageous fluke’ from O’Sullivan – but which pocket does the blue go in?

“But you’ve got to enjoy the playing, you know, and it’s been a tough year.

“If I can get back to enjoy the playing, then I’ll be the happiest man in the world.”

Despite being unhappy with his game, O’Sullivan is pleased with how he has approached the mental side of snooker.

“I think I’ve mentally been really strong to just keep going at it,” he said. “But I thought I’ve won five tournaments, got to the finaI and I’m not enjoying it.

“I want to win and enjoy it. So that’s why I said to Steve, ‘come on, I need to work this out now.’

“I need to work something out where I can feel in a better place with it all.”

Provided his game is in shape, O’Sullivan does not feel this is his last shot at an eighth world crown.

“I think there are plenty of opportunities to win that World Championship,” the 48-year-old said. “It’s just if I’m not enjoying it. If I’m enjoying it and like I said when I’m playing snooker, I feel like my mind is young around that table.

“I think like a youngster, so age is not important.

“I feel agile. As long as I keep feeling that young when I’m out there, then it doesn’t matter if I’m 60 if I feel like I’m still performing well out there. And I’m making, you know, my opponent look sluggish to me. I’m like, ‘cool, we can still do this.'”

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

‘I don’t have to win, you know’ – O’Sullivan on his future in snooker

Ronnie O’Sullivan has said he will dedicate the next 12 months to working hard on his game in a bid to extend his career at the top level.

O’ Sullivan has had some stellar results in the 2023/24 season, winning the UK Championship and Masters to add to his tally of Triple Crown events.

But despite the wins, the world No. 1 has been unhappy with the state of his game.

He has begun working closely with Steve Peters once again, and the revered Sports Psychiatrist will be in his corner at the World Championship and for the next 12 months.

“Steve’s gonna be there a lot,” O’Sullivan told Eurosport about his plans for a shot at an eighth World Championship, which gets underway on Eurosport and discovery+ at the weekend. “I told him, whenever you can make it, that’d be great.

“I’ve been speaking to him a lot on the phone recently.”

O’Sullivan is not happy with the state of his game, but has committed to working hard to feel comfortable at the table.

He continued: “I’m in that situation at the moment where I’ve just got to get myself in a frame of mind for maybe the next however long. I’ve given myself a year to the end of next year’s World Championship to work with Steve and hope, you know, to get back to where I feel it’s acceptable.

“I could do another year like this, I’ll commit to that playing how I’ve been playing and the struggles and what we all want to call it – the yips or the snatches, whatever you want to call it.

“I don’t consider that snooker, I’m butchering balls.

“Everyone’s got their own problems. But that ain’t fun for me.

“I’ve got two options. Like Steve said, you can learn to live with it. You can learn to live with anything and be happy or choose to be miserable.

“The task I’m gonna have to set myself is if I can’t get my game in the right place, and I really don’t wanna stop then I’ve got to get round my head round acceptance. Learn to live with it, play it.

“But if I can’t, then maybe do 18 months, two years, exhibitions, go see all the fans and really just go down that testimonial route and then hang my cue up. Would be, like 51, 52. No big deal.”

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‘A beautifully played shot’ – O’Sullivan’s delightful double at World Open

Should O’Sullivan triumph at the Crucible, it would give him an eighth world crown to go with his eight Masters and eight UK Championships.

Such an achievement would not be the trigger to consider retirement.

“I’ll only retire if I think I’m not playing well enough for long enough, which has been going on a while now,” he said. “That’s obviously something that distresses me enough to think. ‘I don’t want to keep doing that.’ But like I said, if I can learn to live with it.”

The lifestyle snooker has handed O’Sullivan is one of the reasons for him to keep playing.

He said: “I don’t have to win, you know, I just like travelling, I like the people I meet, I like the people I work with; I have a great time with all my sponsors and stuff like that. That’d be hard to give up.

“It’d be hard to give up all the exhibitions I do, the places I get to travel to. That’s why I don’t want to give it up.

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‘Outrageous fluke’ from O’Sullivan – but which pocket does the blue go in?

“But you’ve got to enjoy the playing, you know, and it’s been a tough year.

“If I can get back to enjoy the playing, then I’ll be the happiest man in the world.”

Despite being unhappy with his game, O’Sullivan is pleased with how he has approached the mental side of snooker.

“I think I’ve mentally been really strong to just keep going at it,” he said. “But I thought I’ve won five tournaments, got to the finaI and I’m not enjoying it.

“I want to win and enjoy it. So that’s why I said to Steve, ‘come on, I need to work this out now.’

“I need to work something out where I can feel in a better place with it all.”

Provided his game is in shape, O’Sullivan does not feel this is his last shot at an eighth world crown.

“I think there are plenty of opportunities to win that World Championship,” the 48-year-old said. “It’s just if I’m not enjoying it. If I’m enjoying it and like I said when I’m playing snooker, I feel like my mind is young around that table.

“I think like a youngster, so age is not important.

“I feel agile. As long as I keep feeling that young when I’m out there, then it doesn’t matter if I’m 60 if I feel like I’m still performing well out there. And I’m making, you know, my opponent look sluggish to me. I’m like, ‘cool, we can still do this.'”

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

Saengkham makes sublime 147 maximum in World Championship qualifying

Noppon Saengkham completed a composed 147 maximum break at the World Championship on Monday to move past Andy Hicks in qualifying.

The Thai player overcame his English counterpart 10-5 to set up a clash with Jackson Page on Wednesday, where the pair will compete for a spot at the Crucible.

Saengkham marked his 147th career century with the maximum effort, which was the 20th that has been achieved at the World Championship.

The 31-year-old achieved only the second 147 break of his career to move 7-3 ahead before he rubber-stamped his spot in the final qualification round with a commanding win.

After potting the final red into the right middle with a slight nick off the knuckle, Saengkham fiercely drilled the black into the bottom left to set up his final demolition of the colours.

The yellow and green went down with no fuss, before a technical shot on the brown was required to set up a pot on the blue, which Saengkham perfected with a nudge off the top rail with the cue ball.

After the blue, he had to stretch across the table to see the pink ball go down before he wrapped up the superb effort with the black to the bottom left.

The 202nd maximum break in professional snooker was greeted by a round of applause from the crowd in Sheffield as Saengkham moved one step closer to the tournament proper.

Elsewhere on Monday, Hossein Vafaei came through his tie with Marco Fu 10-4 and will face Jiang Jun in the final qualifying round.

Julien Leclercq was well beaten by Joe O’Connor who won 10-1 to set up a clash with Matthew Selt, while Cao Yupeng beat Ma Hailong 10-4.

Neil Robertson is among those in action on Monday, live on discovery+, as the 2010 champion looks to qualify for the World Championship for the 20th consecutive year.
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

Robertson knocks in two centuries to take commanding lead over Surety

Former world champion Neil Robertson is on the cusp of returning to the Crucible as he finished his first session against Zak Surety 7-2 up in World Championship qualifying.

Robertson, triumphant at the Crucible in 2010, has struggled for form this season and has found himself outside of the top 16.

That forced the Australian to go through qualifying sitting down in 36th in the one-year ranking.

In his first match of qualifying he faces Surety and after the first session has roared into a 7-2 lead.

Robertson took the first six frames in a row including a ton before Surety could get onto the board. However Robertson responded with a mammoth break of 134 to move to seven frames whilst Surety took the final one of the session.

The winner of this game will face either Jamie Jones or Alfie Burden in the final round of qualifying.

Elsewhere David Gilbert, a former World Championship semi-finalist, is also in control of his game against David Lilley 7-2. Like Robertson Gilbert also hit two centuries.

Another former Crucible semi-finalist, Si Jiahui is having a far tighter time of it with his game against Ben Mertens currently standing at 5-4 in his favour.

The pair constantly exchanged frames, with Si winning the first two before Mertens levelled up and then winning one each, including a 124 for Mertens.

But Si then won two in a row to ensure he would take the first session lead but Mertens won the final frame to make sure that that lead would just be one.

In the upcoming afternoon session, live on Eurosport and discovery+, will see Hossein Vafaei resume 6-3 up against Marco Fu amongst others.

World Snooker Championship qualifying scores Monday April 15

  • Jame Jones 5-4 Alfie Burden
  • Neil Robertson 7-2 Zak Surety
  • Si Jiahui 5-4 Ben Mertens
  • David Gilbert 7-2 David Lilley
  • Ryan Day 5-4 John Astley
  • Wu Yize 4-4 Tian Pengfei
  • Xiao Guodong 7-1 Sanderson Lam
  • Joe Perry 2-5 Scott Donaldson
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

Robertson knocks in two centuries to take commanding lead over Surety

Former world champion Neil Robertson is on the cusp of returning to the Crucible as he finished his first session against Zak Surety 7-2 up in World Championship qualifying.

Robertson, triumphant at the Crucible in 2010, has struggled for form this season and has found himself outside of the top 16.

That forced the Australian to go through qualifying sitting down in 36th in the one-year ranking.

In his first match of qualifying he faces Surety and after the first session has roared into a 7-2 lead.

Robertson took the first six frames in a row including a ton before Surety could get onto the board. However Robertson responded with a mammoth break of 134 to move to seven frames whilst Surety took the final one of the session.

The winner of this game will face either Jamie Jones or Alfie Burden in the final round of qualifying.

Elsewhere David Gilbert, a former World Championship semi-finalist, is also in control of his game against David Lilley 7-2. Like Robertson Gilbert also hit two centuries.

Another former Crucible semi-finalist, Si Jiahui is having a far tighter time of it with his game against Ben Mertens currently standing at 5-4 in his favour.

The pair constantly exchanged frames, with Si winning the first two before Mertens levelled up and then winning one each, including a 124 for Mertens.

But Si then won two in a row to ensure he would take the first session lead but Mertens won the final frame to make sure that that lead would just be one.

In the upcoming afternoon session, live on Eurosport and discovery+, will see Hossein Vafaei resume 6-3 up against Marco Fu amongst others.

World Snooker Championship qualifying scores Monday April 15

  • Jame Jones 5-4 Alfie Burden
  • Neil Robertson 7-2 Zak Surety
  • Si Jiahui 5-4 Ben Mertens
  • David Gilbert 7-2 David Lilley
  • Ryan Day 5-4 John Astley
  • Wu Yize 4-4 Tian Pengfei
  • Xiao Guodong 7-1 Sanderson Lam
  • Joe Perry 2-5 Scott Donaldson
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

Robertson hits three centuries to move within one win of Crucible spot

Neil Robertson completed a 10-2 drubbing to move within one win of booking his spot in the last-32 draw for the World Championship.

Resuming 7-2 clear from the afternoon session on Monday, the 2010 Crucible winner finished off matters with closing breaks of 90 and 117 after earlier rolling in 103, 134 and three more breaks over 50.

The Australian will face Jamie Jones on Wednesday after the Welshman sealed his progress with a 10-5 win over Alfie Burden by winning six of the closing seven frames from 4-4.

FIRST SESSION REPORT

Former world champion Neil Robertson is on the cusp of returning to the Crucible as he finished his first session against Zak Surety 7-2 up in World Championship qualifying.

Robertson, triumphant at the Crucible in 2010, has struggled for form this season and has found himself outside of the top 16.

That forced the Australian to go through qualifying sitting down in 36th in the one-year ranking.

In his first match of qualifying he faces Surety and after the first session has roared into a 7-2 lead.

Robertson took the first six frames in a row including a ton before Surety could get onto the board. However Robertson responded with a mammoth break of 134 to move to seven frames whilst Surety took the final one of the session.

The winner of this game will face either Jamie Jones or Alfie Burden in the final round of qualifying.

Elsewhere David Gilbert, a former World Championship semi-finalist, is also in control of his game against David Lilley 7-2. Like Robertson Gilbert also hit two centuries.

Another former Crucible semi-finalist, Si Jiahui is having a far tighter time of it with his game against Ben Mertens currently standing at 5-4 in his favour.

The pair constantly exchanged frames, with Si winning the first two before Mertens levelled up and then winning one each, including a 124 for Mertens.

But Si then won two in a row to ensure he would take the first session lead but Mertens won the final frame to make sure that that lead would just be one.

In the upcoming afternoon session, live on Eurosport and discovery+, will see Hossein Vafaei resume 6-3 up against Marco Fu amongst others.

World Snooker Championship qualifying scores Monday April 15

  • Jame Jones 5-4 Alfie Burden
  • Neil Robertson 7-2 Zak Surety
  • Si Jiahui 5-4 Ben Mertens
  • David Gilbert 7-2 David Lilley
  • Ryan Day 5-4 John Astley
  • Wu Yize 4-4 Tian Pengfei
  • Xiao Guodong 7-1 Sanderson Lam
  • Joe Perry 2-5 Scott Donaldson
Stream top snooker action, including the World Snooker Championship, live on discovery+, the Eurosport app and at eurosport.com

‘Might get lasagne, but that’s about it’ – Why O’Sullivan has no appetite for Crucible

Ronnie O’Sullivan has won the World Championship seven times, but the snooker GOAT has often seemed to have a love-hate relationship with the Crucible, historic host venue of the sport’s biggest tournament since 1977.

“Still have a tournament there. Why not? But just not the World Championship over 17 days. It’s a massive circus and you need a massive space to accommodate it. I think Saudi Arabia would be great. They’ve got the resources and would do it great.

“If you’re going to take it to China, you’d have to take it to Shanghai. Or another major city like Shenzhen or Guangzhou. It’d be done properly. Courtesy cars will be laid on. Food will be there. Hotels will be great. Everything would be paid for. Prize money would be astronomical.

“I know at the Crucible you get nice tea there, you might get lasagne if the guys are cooking. But that’s about it.”

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Watch – O’Sullivan referred to disciplinary committee after ‘lewd gesture’ at Crucible

O’Sullivan first played at the Crucible in 1993 – losing 10-7 to fellow Eurosport pundit Alan McManus – and has aired mixed views on the suitability of the compact 980-seat arena for such a huge event.

The world No. 1 even described it as an “amazing venue” after equalling Stephen Hendry’s modern-day record of seven wins in two years ago, but has rarely hidden his general dislike of the cramped set-up inside the snooker hothouse.

Here are a few more of O’Sullivan’s familiar soundbites about the Crucible over the years ahead of his record-extending 32nd-straight appearance in Sheffield.

O’Sullivan on Crucible – February 2024

“I don’t actually like the Crucible to be honest. I’d much rather it go anywhere than the Crucible. I know it’s a great venue, but I don’t like playing there for 17 days. For me if it goes anywhere but the Crucible it would be brilliant.”

O’Sullivan on Crucible – May 2022

“I really like the Crucible, I think it’s an amazing venue. It’s sort of iconic, there’s a brilliant atmosphere. It is our best venue and I’d only move it if they could get 5,000 people which would mean double the prize money.

“Or unless China come in with an offer that you just couldn’t refuse. Otherwise, why would you move it from Sheffield? Sheffield has been great to snooker, it’s sort of like the home of snooker really.

“Until someone comes up with an offer, you can’t refuse then I’d just keep it where it is.”

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

O’Sullivan on Crucible – January 2018

“Crucible goes on too long and it’s my least favourite event of all. Plus I’ve got plenty ranking points so no need to play as much.”

O’Sullivan on Crucible – April 2016

“When I think back to my great matches and you see the crowd’s faces and the pleasure that you give them when you play an unbelievable performance, that sticks in your mind, that’s what I’m here to do. I think there will inevitably be a move away from the Crucible at some point.

“With the 128 draw being used at many events there will come a point where they want all of those at one venue like Wimbledon, and that won’t be this one.

“Maybe they could do that and still keep another tournament at the Crucible, I don’t know how they would work it.”

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‘Don’t start’ – O’Sullivan in big row with referee

O’Sullivan on Crucible – March 2015

“I know it sounds crazy, but I wasn’t even sure if I was going to enter the worlds. I probably will, but it’s got to the point where I want to give snooker only 20% of my time.

“It’s not something I’m that bothered about. It’s probably one of my least favourite tournaments. 17 days is too long.”

Stream top snooker action, including the World Championship, live and on-demand on discovery+.

Red-hot Lisowski coasts into final qualifying round at World Championship

Needing two victories to secure his spot at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield alongside the top 16 seeds, world No. 17 Lisowski produced some exceptional scoring form to end Liu’s dream at the nearby English Institute of Sport.

The Gloucester potter produced four century breaks in the match to secure a meeting with two-time world finalist Matthew Stevens, who was a 10-6 winner over Jimmy Robertson.

‘Jackpot’ showed why he reached the last eight in 2022 with two 104 breaks, 100, 72 and 71 helping him ease 5-0 clear.

Liu claimed his first frame of the match with an 82, but Lisowski continued to storm ahead with further knocks of 50, 60, 89 and a closing 142 finishing off a strong day’s work.

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Top 5 shots from World Championship: O’Sullivan, Si, Brecel all star

Elsewhere, recent Welsh Open finalist Martin O’Donnell suffered a surprise 10-7 defeat to world No. 102 Ma Hailong in the second qualifying round.

World No. 62 O’Donnell levelled at 4-4 from 4-1 adrift and closed to 7-6 from 7-4 behind, but won only one of the final four frames as Ma progressed to a meeting with compatriot Cao Yupeng on Sunday and Monday.

2023 world seniors finalist Alfie Burden kept alive his hopes of reaching for the Crucible for the first time since 1998 with a 10-3 win over world No. 55 Xu Si that saw him produce a century and three breaks over 50 in a dominant performance.

Latest Crucible qualifying results

Round Three

Jack Lisowski 10-4 Liu Hongyu

  • Sanderson Lam 10-8 Liam Pullen
  • John Astley 10-6 Ashley Carty
  • Zak Surety 10-6 Gao Yang
  • Alfie Burden 10-3 Xu Si
  • Ma Hailong 10-7 Martin O’Donnell
Stream top snooker action, including the World Championship, live and on-demand on discovery+.

Doherty takes single-frame lead over Fu, Dott 5-4 ahead over Dorgham

Ken Doherty has a hard-fought 5-4 lead over Marco Fu after the first session of their World Championship second-round qualifier.

The Irish veteran took a 2-0 lead over fellow stalwart Fu, and found himself 36-4 up before missing a long red to set up a period of safety play.

While Fu put himself back in contention at 37-23, both players were struggling with long pots, though Doherty landed a difficult red to give himself the chance to close out the frame with just the colours remaining.

However Fu scrapped back to seize a final chance to pot the final black and halve the deficit.

Fu looked to be on course for a decent early break before confessing to a foul on the white, and Doherty went 40-9 up. He followed up a well-taken red with a rest with a poor miss on the blue, and Fu came back to the table.

As the player from Hong Kong worked his way to clear the remaining balls, he sunk a deft blue into the bottom left before clinching an equalising frame before the interval.

The two continued their battle after the restart and found themselves 51-50 in Doherty’s favour, with one red, and all the colours, remaining on the table.

A superb double on the brown left him needing the blue to be mathematically clear, and he played a safety to leave it tight with the blue on the right cushion.

Fu potted the blue after Doherty missed another double, and then sunk the pink to leave him with a hugely tough black to the middle-left as he trailed by two, before nailing an excellent effort to go ahead.

Doherty rode a couple of bad contacts as he battled back to end his losing streak and get back to 3-3.

Doherty then benefitted from a fluke to snooker Fu comprehensively to go 4-3 up, and at Fu then missed a black to allow his rival back in – only to be let off with an awful miss on the brown, and he then settled things at 4-4 as the session approached its final stages.

The final frame threatened to be a scrappy one as Doherty came to the table 16-11 but the reds spread against various cushions and the brown tight against the green on the right.

Doherty struggled and added just one more, and Fu built a 35-17 advantage before coming to the last three reds before having to play safe and Doherty returned to sink a long red as he edged a few points closer.

Fittingly for such a tight game, Doherty had three colours left when he came to the table 40-32 behind. He potted the blue to the top left, guided in the pink to the bottom left, before a routine black gave him the edge ahead of the evening session.

Experienced Scotsman, Graeme Dott, came up against Mostafa Dorgham in his qualifier, and he also took a 5-4 lead into the second session.

Three half century breaks guided Dott into his small lead, but he did not have it all his way.

Dott’s 62 break in the first frame put him ahead, but Dorgham scored 71 to level at 1-1. A 59 in the sixth frame for the Egyptian took him square at 3-3, before Dott bookend a Dorgham frame with breaks of 77 and 55 to go into the evening with a frame advantage.

Elsewhere in the early play, Julien Leclercq looks set to progress with a 7-2 lead over amateur Haydon Pinhey, and Fan Zhengyi has a 6-3 lead over fellow Chinese competitor Jian Jun.

Stream top snooker action, including the World Championship, live and on-demand on discovery+.