‘Just chill’ – O’Sullivan and referee clash for second time during tense quarter-final

Ronnie O’Sullivan asked referee Desislava Bozhilova to “chill” during the final session of his quarter-final against Stuart Bingham after he refused to come to the table while fans watching the match on the other side of the arena trickled in.

Fast forward to the 21st frame and O’Sullivan again appeared to take exception with Bozhilova’s handling of proceedings.

With the tussle between Kyren Wilson and John Higgins about to resume after the mid-session interval, fans had started to return as O’Sullivan sized up an important red following a Bingham miss.

The pair were locked at 10-10, so rather than rush the shot or take it on amid all the background noise, O’Sullivan went back to his chair as Bozhilova urged the spectators to return to their seats quickly.

“Would you take your seats quickly, and then hold the door closed for a minute,” Bozhilova said, while Dominic Dale and Phil Yates agreed on commentary for Eurosport that O’Sullivan was “doing exactly the right thing”.

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‘Some referees have got it in for me’ – O’Sullivan on black spot incident

Satisfied, Bozhilova then gestured to O’Sullivan to come back to the table, but the seven-time world champion remained unconvinced.

“But we might wait 20 minutes,” Bozhilova said.

“It’s not 20 minutes. Just chill, chill,” O’Sullivan replied.

“I’m chilled,” the referee insisted.

O’Sullivan then got to his feet and duly slotted the red into the top-right corner, although he would go on to miss a simple red and lose the frame to fall 11-10 behind, eventually losing the match 13-10.

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O’Sullivan: Some of the referees ‘have got it in for me’

Ronnie O’Sullivan has hit out at the officials over a controversial incident in his World Snooker Championship quarter-final against Stuart Bingham.

But the big talking point came in the 12th frame, when referee Desislava Bozhilova was trying to re-spot the black, only for it to keep rolling off.

O’Sullivan was sure that the ball was in the wrong position, because it meant he had no path through to pot a red he had played for.

After asking for black to be re-spotted, The Rocket opted against taking the pot, saying it was down to his “principles”.

“Some of the referees, I think they’ve got it in for me,” he exclusively told Eurosport. “So I just want to prove to her that she’d got it wrong.

“Then I didn’t feel good about having to pot the ball after that, but I just want to make a point. The point was made.

“I’m not that hungry to win in that way. I’m more of a principled person. So the principles been made. I can sleep at night.”

The Rocket eventually lost the frame, which lasted a marathon 47 minutes, as they closed at 8-8 after two sessions.

He is attempting to win a record eighth crown, which would move him one clear of Stephen Hendry.

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‘What a shot!’ – O’Sullivan rolls in ‘absolute cracker’ of a long red against Bingham

And the draw has certainly opened up in his favour as he goes in pursuit of snooker history, with 2019 champion potential semi-final opponent Judd Trump dumped out of the tournament after losing 13-9 to Jak Jones.

Former winners Mark Williams, Shaun Murphy and Luca Brecel – who lifted the title last year – have also made early Crucible exits.

Indeed, The Rocket is the only one of the world ranked top 10 players still in the event.

And he also insists he was not bothered by having less than two hours between the afternoon and evening sessions of his match against Bingham, adding: “It doesn’t matter, it’s just a normal day for me. A bit of snooker, a bit of food, chill out.”

McManus praises O’Sullivan for refusing pot

Speaking of the incident, Eurosport pundit Alan McManus believes O’Sullivan made the correct decision not to take on the red.

“The sportsmanship is exemplary from Ronnie and it always is the case,” he said. “He plays a safety shot there.

“But what any referee I think should do is never mind what the players think or see or feel, they can have a conflab about it on their own, you take out our ball marker and if it overlaps then it doesn’t spot. It’s definitive.

“You don’t need a ball to see if it spots, you use the width of the ball marker. Then you figure out a way to get it on because you definitively know that it spots and that’s the key to it.

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‘A little bit angry’ – White on O’Sullivan whacking table with cue

“Once you know whether it does or whether it doesn’t, then you can say to the guys, ‘Look, I’ve measured it on the middle of the cross’. Because there’s an indentation, so the ball will roll in because it’s been spotted 312 times over the last couple of days.

“It’s not an easy job, it’s just the way you go about it. There are complexities to it but use the marker and have a look. It goes, that’s the first thing. Let’s find the best way of getting it on the spot.”

Jimmy White added: “When Ron first pots the black he thinks he’s on the red and he asks for the ball to be re-spotted. She re-spots it and he is a bit more where he can pot it [but] he still doesn’t believe she’s putting it right on the spot, so what happens then, eventually it goes on the spot and Ronnie can pot it.

“But he doesn’t. He goes to Stuart Bingham and Stuart Bingham says, ‘Whatever you say Ron I believe’.”

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O’Sullivan: Some of the referees ‘have got it in for me’

Ronnie O’Sullivan has hit out at the officials over a controversial incident in his World Snooker Championship quarter-final against Stuart Bingham.

But the big talking point came in the 12th frame, when referee Desislava Bozhilova was trying to re-spot the black, only for it to keep rolling off.

O’Sullivan was sure that the ball was in the wrong position, because it meant he had no path through to pot a red he had played for.

After asking for black to be re-spotted, The Rocket opted against taking the pot, saying it was down to his “principles”.

“Some of the referees, I think they’ve got it in for me,” he exclusively told Eurosport. “So I just want to prove to her that she’d got it wrong.

“Then I didn’t feel good about having to pot the ball after that, but I just want to make a point. The point was made.

“I’m not that hungry to win in that way. I’m more of a principled person. So the principles been made. I can sleep at night.”

The Rocket eventually lost the frame, which lasted a marathon 47 minutes, as they closed at 8-8 after two sessions.

He is attempting to win a record eighth crown, which would move him one clear of Stephen Hendry.

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‘What a shot!’ – O’Sullivan rolls in ‘absolute cracker’ of a long red against Bingham

And the draw has certainly opened up in his favour as he goes in pursuit of snooker history, with 2019 champion potential semi-final opponent Judd Trump dumped out of the tournament after losing 13-9 to Jak Jones.

Former winners Mark Williams, Shaun Murphy and Luca Brecel – who lifted the title last year – have also made early Crucible exits.

Indeed, The Rocket is the only one of the world ranked top 10 players still in the event.

And he also insists he was not bothered by having less than two hours between the afternoon and evening sessions of his match against Bingham, adding: “It doesn’t matter, it’s just a normal day for me. A bit of snooker, a bit of food, chill out.”

McManus praises O’Sullivan for refusing pot

Speaking of the incident, Eurosport pundit Alan McManus believes O’Sullivan made the correct decision not to take on the red.

“The sportsmanship is exemplary from Ronnie and it always is the case,” he said. “He plays a safety shot there.

“But what any referee I think should do is never mind what the players think or see or feel, they can have a conflab about it on their own, you take out our ball marker and if it overlaps then it doesn’t spot. It’s definitive.

“You don’t need a ball to see if it spots, you use the width of the ball marker. Then you figure out a way to get it on because you definitively know that it spots and that’s the key to it.

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‘A little bit angry’ – White on O’Sullivan whacking table with cue

“Once you know whether it does or whether it doesn’t, then you can say to the guys, ‘Look, I’ve measured it on the middle of the cross’. Because there’s an indentation, so the ball will roll in because it’s been spotted 312 times over the last couple of days.

“It’s not an easy job, it’s just the way you go about it. There are complexities to it but use the marker and have a look. It goes, that’s the first thing. Let’s find the best way of getting it on the spot.”

Jimmy White added: “When Ron first pots the black he thinks he’s on the red and he asks for the ball to be re-spotted. She re-spots it and he is a bit more where he can pot it [but] he still doesn’t believe she’s putting it right on the spot, so what happens then, eventually it goes on the spot and Ronnie can pot it.

“But he doesn’t. He goes to Stuart Bingham and Stuart Bingham says, ‘Whatever you say Ron I believe’.”

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Gilbert expresses ‘massive relief’ after Maguire’s surprise concession sees him into semis

David Gilbert admitted it was a “massive relief” when Stephen Maguire conceded the frame to give him a 13-8 victory in their quarter-final match at the 2024 World Snooker Championship.

The Scotsman, having recovered from 8-1 and 9-2 down to make a contest of it, only needed one snooker but opted to shake hands rather than battle on.

It drew some raised eyebrows, but Gilbert was understandably ecstatic he didn’t become embroiled in a safety exchange.

“It was fantastic!” the Englishman said in his post-match press conference. “I’ll buy Stephen a pint if I ever bump into him.”

The result means Gilbert is now down to the one-table set-up at the Crucible for the second time in his career, having also reached the semi-finals in 2020.

After winning eight of the first nine frames, it looked like he might seal his progress with a session to spare, but Maguire launched a comeback to pull within three at 11-8 down.

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‘That must have hurt’ – Maguire punches table after miss

Gilbert dug deep to hang on, though, reeling off two frames in a row to extinguish Maguire’s challenge.

Asked if he was feeling the nerves at the end, he told Eurosport: “No, not particularly. I was enjoying the challenge. Stephen came back at me and I knew that was going to happen, you’d be silly to think you’re going to go 13-4 or 13-2.

“The only thing I was struggling with really was the table. It was really heavy and hard work to play on and it probably looked like we were struggling – certainly me – but I wasn’t, I was perfectly fine.

“[I got a] massive buzz when I potted the last red and when Stephen just turned round and shook my hand, [it was a] massive relief.”

Maguire, who was aiming to reach his third semi-final at the Crucible and first since 2012, was quizzed about the end of the match and his decision not to carry on.

“Did you see where I landed?” he replied in his press conference. “It was just happening all through the match.

“I had to get the spider, I’m never going to snooker him from that shot. There was no point, it was just wasting time really.”

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‘Couldn’t get any rhythm’ – Trump laments pace in shock Jones loss

Judd Trump believes the pace of his World Championship quarter-final was one of the reasons why he lost to Jak Jones.

The Ace in the Pack was one of the favourites to lift the title this season.

Reflecting on his performance, Trump told Eurosport he could not find any fluency in his play.

“It was tough,” he said. “I tried to enjoy it. I think obviously Jak’s a little bit slower than some of the other players and I just wasn’t able to get any rhythm.

“I tried my best, but it was just too long a period in-between shots. I just couldn’t get any rhythm, couldn’t get any flow.

“Every time I came to the table, I felt like I hadn’t played. It was difficult.

“I’m someone who needs to kind of play to a rhythm. I think maybe I just bogged myself down. I should have maybe played a bit more attacking, quicker. Just learn from it.”

The pair had been near inseparable in the opening two sessions of their last-eight match, and resumed on Wednesday morning locked at 8-8.

That meant there were a possible nine frames remaining, but only six were needed, as Jones sauntered to victory.

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‘You can’t be missing these’ – Eurosport commentators shocked as Trump misses routine pink

It brings to a close an excellent campaign for Trump, who has won five rankings events, including the World Open and the German Masters.

“It’s been a great season for me,” he reflected. “Very, very consistent throughout. Obviously there’s just been little periods where a couple of bad games here and there, and this game I didn’t play well from the get-go really.”

The 31-year-old also added that he was far from happy with the table at the Crucible.

There have been questions over the tightness of the pockets, but Trump quipped: “It’s not so much the pockets. I think it’s more the actual table’s not great.”

For Jones, meanwhile, this was the biggest win of his career.

The 30-year-old’s best previous finish at a tournament this season was when reaching the third round of the Welsh Open.

But he is now through to the semi-finals of a ranking event for only the second time, matching his run at the 2022 Gibraltar Open.

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‘What is happening?’ – Trump’s struggles continue with missed yellow

“It was a bit edgy at times, but better than my previous matches,” he said.

“I thought Judd wasn’t the Judd of usual. He missed quite a lot of balls that he wouldn’t normally miss, but I thought he started off really well with a century, which kind of motivated me.

“I played a good three frames then to go 3-1 up at the mid-session interval, and I didn’t think he was the same after that. He kind of went into his shell a little bit, which is not normally like Judd.

“I kind of picked up on that and in the end took advantage.”

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Bingham battles back to level with O’Sullivan heading into final session

Stuart Bingham hit back with two superb breaks to ensure his World Championship quarter-final with Ronnie O’Sullivan is all-square heading into the final session.

The Rocket looked destined to take a lead into Wednesday’s evening session after opening up an 8-6 advantage.

But his opponent responded with visits of 125 and 92 to level at 8-8.

O’Sullivan was far from convincing from the start of the session as he missed a black off its spot.

Bingham made the most of the chance with a break of 108 to move into the lead.

The Rocket soon responded, levelling at 5-5 despite the fact he was still failing to find his best form, missing a yellow at 26-0 ahead and then a red at 56-8.

The next frame saw further missed opportunities as Bingham could not close out from 60-0 up, and again when presented with frame ball, after O’Sullivan left a red over the pocket.

As such, the world No. 1 came back to the table and cleared up to win the frame, giving him a 6-5 lead.

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Watch: O’Sullivan shows class by refusing red after black-spot confusion at the Crucible

The referee was asked to check it had been correctly replaced on several occasions, with the eventual positioning of the ball meaning O’Sullivan did not attempt to pot the final red.

That brought an untimely end to his break, with Bingham eventually bringing winding up a 47-minute frame as the contest headed to the mid-session interval all square.

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‘The kind of start you dream about’ – Bingham begins second session with century

The hiatus seemed to come at the perfect time for the seven-time champion, who was much more fluent after the re-start, notching up an excellent 79, enough to take the frame despite going in-off when sinking the blue.

He then opened up a two-frame cushion, once more taking advantage of Bingham not cashing in when being first at the table.

But the 2015 world champion hit back, accumulating an excellent 125, meaning he had a chance to level up ahead of the concluding session this evening.

And he did just that, this time compiling a terrific 92 to level at 8-8.

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‘One of the greatest bits of sportsmanship’ – O’Sullivan praised after black-spot drama

Ronnie O’Sullivan received widespread praise for his display of sportsmanship in the 12th frame of his World Snooker Championship quarter-final against Stuart Bingham after the black seemingly wouldn’t settle on its spot.

The moment arrived at a key point in the match, with O’Sullivan at the table with a chance to eat into Bingham’s deficit in the frame and move 7-5 ahead going in at the mid-session interval.

After potting a sublime black, he appeared to land perfectly on the penultimate red until his path was blocked when referee Desislava Bozhilova put the colour back on its spot.

There was confusion though as the black appeared to rock in a slight depression, with O’Sullivan asking for it to be respotted several times.

“You could see there, there’s an indentation in this spot, so this black is nestling within that little divot,” Dominic Dale said on commentary for Eurosport.

“There is something you can do as a referee when that happens. I’ve never really seen referee’s do this, but if you get another ball out of a pocket and just tap down on the black, it will remain where it should remain.

“This is a problem for Ronnie. There’s an indentation in that black spot. I think because of it, this red isn’t on. If the black was absolutely on its spot, didn’t fall within that little hole, maybe the red would be on. That’s the problem.

“There’s something else the referee can do here; yes, you can press down on the spot.”

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‘What a shot!’ – O’Sullivan rolls in ‘absolute cracker’ of a long red against Bingham

Bozhilova also noticed the rolling and pressed down on the spot in an effort to alleviate the situation and ensure a fair outcome.

“You’re absolutely right to ask for it to be respotted, but I could also see it rolling,” Bozhilova said to O’Sullivan during their exchange. “But it stayed this time.”

O’Sullivan responded saying: “I just don’t feel good about it to be honest.”

When it finally settled, The Rocket still seemed unconvinced and it was unclear whether the red was ultimately on.

He shook his head and uttered “I can’t take it” before opting to play safe, an act which drew plenty of praise on social media.

It was led by former world champion Neil Robertson on BBC commentary, who described it as “probably one of the greatest bits of sportsmanship I’ve ever seen in any sport.”

The exchange between O’Sullivan and the referee

Bozhilova: “I also see it rolling, so I’ll do my best… it stayed this time. It has to go on its spot.”

O’Sullivan: “No, I know that.”

Bozhilova: “I’m saying you’re absolutely right to ask for it to be respotted, but I could also see it rolling. But it stayed this time.”

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O’Sullivan bangs cue on table after miss at World Snooker Championship

O’Sullivan: “I just don’t feel good about it to be honest.”

Bozhilova: “Stuart could have a look if he wants? I’m saying it’s right on the spot now.”

Bingham: “I’ll trust Ronnie, whatever he says.”

Bozhilova: “But this time it’s on the spot. It didn’t roll off. It did not move this time.”

O’Sullivan (shaking head): “I can’t take it.”

Bozhilova: “That’s your choice.”

O’Sullivan: “Yeah, I know. I know it’s my choice.”

O’Sullivan: “Can you just give it one more go?”

Bozhilova: “Okay, but this is the last time.”

O’Sullivan: “Just let it roll on.”

Bozhilova: “It needs to be on the spot.”

O’Sullivan: “It goes.”

Bozhilova: “Yes, it’s on the spot.”

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Jones reaches semis with shock win over out of sorts Trump

Jak Jones pulled off the biggest win of his career by knocking out a lacklustre Judd Trump to reach the semi-finals of the World Snooker Championship for the first time.

Resuming at 8-8, the Welsh qualifier won 13-9 in a final session which was riddled with errors from both players at The Crucible, closing out with a century break. Jones will face the winner of the match between Ronnie O’Sullivan and Stuart Bingham.

It was a nervy start, with Jones missing what was described as the “easiest blue ever” during commentary on Eurosport and discovery+. But although Trump had a chance to take advantage, a missed pink allowed Jones back in to take the opening frame 60-27.

The second frame of the day was just as scrappy, but Trump was keeping Jones at arm’s length. But a gift from the Welshman – a foul while potting the pink – cleared a path for the 2019 winner to level things up again at 9-9 by taking the frame 59-24.

If Trump was hoping that could kickstart a run of form to the semi-finals, that was not immediately the case. Jones bounced back impressively for a man who is yet to reach the last four at the Crucible, with a break of 87 doing the damage to lead the match.

By this point, Trump’s highest break of the session was just 22 and another miss of the pink let Jones back in again. “The interval needs to come for Trump” said Joe Johnson on commentary. Jones was not playing like a man who had come through qualifying and he did the necessary, moving to move to within two frames of victory with another half century break.

The interval gave both players a chance to re gather their thoughts but the 15 minutes seemed to make little difference to Trump. Jones was also missing, but his higher-ranked opponent missed an easy yellow.

Jones missed two chances to close out the frame, leading to a tense back and forth of each player trying to snooker the other – “this is like watching a horror film” said Dave Hendon on commentary, before the qualifier finally put the world number two away.

Trump now needed to win four straight frames to avoid an early exit, which had not looked likely based on form throughout the session. But another miss on a brown opened the reds up for Jones, who finished with a break of 106.

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‘These are bad signs’ – Trump misses another pink in 20th frame

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World Championship LIVE – Trump looks to see off Jones challenge, O’Sullivan and Bingham to resume

Morning all!

Goodness me, mates, what a day this is: all four quarters to a finish with three tight and one on the cusp of tight. I’ve not a clue what’s going to happen, but I can’t wait to bring it to you.

Today’s Schedule

  • Kyren Wilson v John Higgins
  • Judd Trump v Jak Jones
  • David Gilbert v Stephen Maguire
  • Stuart Bingham v Ronnie O’Sullivan
  • Kyren Wilson v John Higgins
  • Stuart Bingham v Ronnie O’Sullivan

Tuesday recap – Trump and Jones remain locked after tight evening session, O’Sullivan and Bingham level

There is still nothing to split Judd Trump and Jak Jones after two sessions of their World Championship quarter-final, with the pair locked at 8-8 heading into Wednesday’s decisive third meeting.

Trump, a 2019 world champion, was the huge favourite ahead of the tie but scrapped to 4-4 in the first session and couldn’t pull away from the determined Welshman on Tuesday evening.

Play will continue on Wednesday morning at 10:00 UK time, with the winner set to face Ronnie O’Sullivan or Stuart Bingham in the last four.

The two are locked at 4-4 after both players surrendered the lead in an even opening session to their World Championship quarter-final.

World No. 1 O’Sullivan, bidding for a record eighth Crucible title in Sheffield, got off to a sloppy start and trailed 3-1 before a run of three straight frames edged him in front.

But 2015 world champion Bingham claimed the final frame of the session to level things up and leave the tie finely poised ahead of its resumption on Wednesday.

Elsewhere, Kyren Wilson took a 5-3 lead over four-time world champion John Higgins while Stephen Maguire will be attempting the mother of all comebacks after fighting back to 10-6 having trailed 7-1 and 9-2 to David Gilbert.

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