Trump races into last 16 with dominant win over Vafaei

Judd Trump made a statement of intent by racing to a 10-5 victory over Hossein Vafaei in the first round of the World Championship.

The Iranian made a good start to the second session by taking the opening frame, but Trump responded in superb fashion to book his place in the last 16.

Trump was not at his sizzling, free-scoring best but showed he has more than one string to his bow by suffocating his opponent.

Vafaei needed a fast start and got in with an excellent opening red, showing his cue power with a deep screw to get on the blue. With pink and black out of commission, the Iranian made 30 before having to run for cover.

Trump missed a pot but got lucky as a series of cannons saw a red drop into the bottom left. The cherry on the cake for Trump was he landed perfectly on the blue, but he did not take advantage of his good fortune as he missed a simple red – to audible gasps from the Crucible crowd – to hand the table back to his opponent.

picture

‘Gets worse the more you see it’ – Trump’s poor miss against Vafaei shocks Crucible crowd

It was not a simple table that Vafaei inherited, with reds on cushions, and he added 28 to his advantage before missing a red across the bottom rail. The lead was 46 with a possible 51 on the table, and Trump was unable to mount a comeback as Vafaei took the opening frame of the session to cut the gap to two.

Trump made 34 before running out of position in the 11th. He got back in with a brilliant pot and laid a fiendish snooker. Although Vafaei made the escape, he stuck a red over the left middle and Trump picked off the balls he required to restore his three-frame lead at 7-4.

Trump was not able to bend the cue ball to his will as can be the case when at his absolute best, as was proved when he failed to make contact with the pack when on a break of 12 in the 12th.

The tactical side of Trump’s game is much improved and he put Vafaei in trouble with reds clustered towards the bottom left. The error was drawn and Trump extended his lead to 50 points before running for the safety of baulk rather than push the boat out and take on a tough colour with the threat of a counter.

Rather than one knockout punch in the 12th, Trump took it thanks to a series of blows as he extended his advantage to four frames.

Trailing by 57 points in the 13th frame, and having had a light-hearted exchange with referee Rob Spencer over the position of a red, Vafaei had a chance to counter after Trump missed a makeable red. He picked off pots and looked set to hit back, but he missed the penultimate red when attempting a pot with his left hand rather than using the rest.

picture

‘You play’ – Vafaei asks referee to play his shot at World Championship

In a theme of the match, Trump punished the mistake to extend his lead to 9-4 and to the cusp of the second round.

Trump was a 10-4 winner when the two players met at the same stage two years ago, but Vafaei ensured there was no repeat as he fluked the final pink and knocked in the black to keep his hopes alive.

World No. 2 Trump appeared irked by some movement in the crowd when missing a pot in the 14th frame.

He did not look fully settled on Sunday – his highest break of the session was 44 – but that run secured him a good advantage in the 15th with reds on cushions.

Vafaei chanced his arm, but the pot did not drop and Trump closed out the match to reach the last 16 where he will face Tom Ford or Ricky Walden.

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

Trump punishes Vafaei errors to open up commanding lead

Judd Trump ruthlessly pounced on errors from Hossein Vafaei to secure a 6-3 lead after the first session of their clash in the opening round of the World Championship.

Vafaei arrived at the Crucible in confident mood and approached the clash with an attacking mindset. It was arguably too attacking, as some questionable shot choices were punished by Trump who did not miss a beat in Sheffield on Saturday afternoon.

The players will return on Sunday to play to a conclusion in the race to 10.

Nerves were on show in the early exchanges, with Vafaei missing a simple red on 13 and Trump breaking down on 31. Trump got in again and steadied the nerves with a run of 63 to get the opener on the board.

Vafaei made a hard-working break of 56 in the second, with the cue ball accumulating some mileage, but eventually broke down when missing a tough red to the green pocket.

The Iranian seems to prefer to play front-foot snooker, but his endeavour proved costly as Trump pounced on the missed red and cleared to the pink to double his lead.

Vafaei made 67 in the third but ran out of position when in search of one more red to leave Trump needing a snooker.

The third frame was Vafaei’s own version of Groundhog Day, as he went for an audacious pot to keep the break going, but the cross-double did not drop and Trump stepped in to pick his pocket with a brilliant clearance of 72 to move three frames to the good.

Fergal O’Brien in the Eurosport commentary box called Vafaei’s play “poor game management” and it was hard to disagree as Trump capitalised in ruthless fashion.

Vafaei was not prepared to take a backward step and pulled off a stunning cutback on a black to keep a break going in the fourth. It was possibly a case of the snooker gods looking positively on his attacking instincts as he later missed a red to the bottom left but it cannoned off the black and into the bottom right to secure his first frame.

picture

Vafaei gets frame on the board against Trump thanks to huge fluke

After securing the fourth frame on the back of an outrageous fluke, the prospect of a repeat reared its head in the fifth as Vafaei missed a red to left middle but saw it hit the knuckle and cling to the rail before dropping into the yellow pocket.

picture

Vafaei misses red to middle, sees it drop into yellow pocket against Trump

The chance was not taken though as he played a poor positional shot to get on the black and missed the pot by a distance. Trump punished mistakes before the interval and did so again upon the resumption as a 56 clearance to the pink restored his three-frame lead.

There was nothing wrong with Vafaei’s cueing and he hammered that home with the first century of the match – a superb 138 – to take the sixth.

picture

‘What a classy break’ – Vafaei makes century against Trump

A lot of the talking points from the session were around Vafaei. He had a chance once again in the seventh to build on the 138 from the previous frame, but missed a simple red which Trump seized upon once again with a break of 77.

Trump took frames two, three, five and seven on the back of his opponent’s mistakes. The eighth was all of his own making as two solid contributions off good opening reds moved him four frames ahead.

Vafaei showed tremendous resolve to keep himself in the hunt by taking the final frame of the session with a 74, but a 6-3 lead overnight has Trump in the driving seat.

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

‘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.”

picture

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.”

picture

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.

picture

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