After
18 years as a professional, Robert Milkins has joined the elite top 16 for the
first time.
Just
four years ago, Milkins was in freefall, ranked 55th in the world
and in a bad place both personally and professionally.
With
the help of friends he turned his life and career around. After beating Neil
Robertson at the Crucible he said: “I’m happy with life. I’ve got two young
kids, a lovely missus, good friends behind me, a good manager and a good coach.
I don’t need much else.
“Before
I had nothing – nothing at all. I was in a flat, just going out drinking every
day; then I got evicted and I was 20 to 30 grand in debt. I was just going down
the gutter and I was lucky that some friends of mine came along.
“They’d
taken me in 15 years previously when my mum died as well, so they came back
into my life and helped me out. I’d lost my mum, I’d lost my dad, I got
divorced. It just blew me apart. Now It’s all turned round and I’m chuffed to
bits that it has.”
Milkins
has continued to make progress this season, reaching the semi-finals of the
Wuxi Classic and Australian Open.
Another
person who has helped him is Terry Griffiths, director of coaching at the South
West Snooker Academy in Milkins’s home city of Gloucester.
The
old saying is that you can’t teach an old dog new tricks. Actually you can
teach anyone anything – as long as they want to learn.
Milkins
was always a great talent. I remember Ronnie O’Sullivan once saying he loved
the way he bounced round the table, believing he had a right to be there. However,
as he has acknowledged, his attitude sometimes let him down.
He
came close to playing O’Sullivan in the 2005 Irish Masters final when he led
Matthew Stevens 8-5 in the semis. Stevens then potted the ball of the week – a great
green – and came back to win 9-8.
The
years that followed saw a decline. Now comes the rise.
Paul
Mount and the SWSA have clearly helped give Milkins some stability and he is
now playing measured, solid, good snooker. What was noticeable against
Robertson at the World Championship was how disciplined he was throughout.
It’s
all come from the only thing that ever provides sporting success: hard work.
Yesterday
Sir Nick Faldo, a six times major winner at golf, gave a misfiring Rory McIlroy
some free advice.
It
seems obvious enough: practice really hard and treat your profession as just
that – a profession not a hobby. But in sport there are many distractions and it's easy to take things for granted.
Milkins,
at 37, may have left it late but not too late. In snooker, longevity is more
possible than in physical sports.
He
said yesterday: “I’ve got to make sure I keep my
place. I want to get into the Masters and of course at the end of the season to
be seeded through to the Crucible.”
Such talk would have seemed wildly deluded just a couple of
years ago but Milkins has made it a reality.
Out of the snooker darkness has come light, which serves as
hope for any player in a similar position that there is always a way back - if
you’re prepared to work for it.
2 comments:
Good for him. Of course someone choosing to spend millions building the world's best practice facility and getting loads of the world's best players to come to his home town has probably helped, but he's grabbed the opportunity with both hands. Plenty of opportunities for others to do the same.
I anticipate more stories of latter day success like Rob Milkins now that the balls are lighter.
Fast players are suited to lighter balls while safety is more difficult when travelling around the world to play in Asia if you have a nasty cold or have never experienced a plane journey.
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