Stephen
Lee believes his resurgence has stemmed from the increased number of playing
opportunities in the last two years and he again produced a confident display
to beat Ding Junhui 4-0 in the final of the second Asian PTC in Yixing, China
today.
Lee
is 38, the sort of age when players are supposed to decline but this season has
already seen a PTC triumph for 41 year-old Rod Lawler and the 37 year-old John
Higgins win the Shanghai Masters.
Mark
Davis and Marcus Campbell, both 40, have been ranking event semi-finalists
already in the campaign.
Snooker
is not a physical sport so longevity is possible. Way back when in 1978, Fred
Davis reached the World Championship semi-finals at the age of 64. His last
Crucible appearance came at 70.
Latterly,
Steve Davis has eked out impressive performances in his 50s.
However,
as people age things do change, not least eyesight and also the ability to
handle pressure. Over time, mental scars can form, usually from all the
setbacks that litter even the greatest of careers.
I
remember about ten years ago covering the qualifiers in the glamorous locale
that is Burton-on-Trent.
Davis
(Steve, that is) needed the final black to beat Ian McCulloch 5-4. He was right
behind it and, for any professional, is was a simple pot.
But
that’s the point: it was so simple that it became, paradoxically, missable
because Davis knew that there was no excuse to miss it.
And
he did miss it. He came off after McCulloch potted it and admitted: “I was
shaking like a leaf.”
Steve
Davis shaking like a leaf! Well, it happens to the best of them.
Lee
has steadily built up his confidence and the PTCs have been key in this, as was
evidenced by the fact he won the grand finals last season.
But
if I may make this joke for the third time on this blog, snooker, like the
black pudding industry, relies on a constant supply of fresh blood.
The
younger players are not coming through at the rate they once did, certainly at
the rate Lee and the class of ‘92 did.
Perhaps
this will change if major events revert to ‘flat’ draws where everyone comes in
at the first round. But the PTCs use this system and they are pretty much
always won by an established name.
The
qualifying system is labyrinthine and tough to come through but it is supposed
to be and, in various formats, always has been difficult.
When
Lee turned pro he was one of 600-odd players chancing their arm. Most weren’t
close to his standard but there were plenty of older players capable of denying
the young guns any momentum.
It
seems these days this constituency – the experienced pro – is the dominant
force.
The
likes of Luca Brecel may of course threaten this stranglehold. Ding Junhui
broke through, as did Judd Trump.
But
the older guard are still a formidable force to be reckoned with.