The best performance
of the opening day of the Shanghai Masters came courtesy of Lu Haotian, a 14
year-old who should surely be at school but who in fact defeated Marco Fu 5-4.
Fu
led 3-0, by which point Lu had done nothing to suggest he could possibly win
the match. That all changed with his assured century in the fourth frame. After
he slotted home a long black to win the fifth the pressure clearly transferred
to Fu.
Unless
I’ve missed something, Lu becomes the youngest player ever to win a televised
ranking event match. Wildcards remain a controversial subject but this isn’t
his fault: he was given an opportunity and grabbed it with both hands. It was
very impressive and he could give Mark Allen a few problems later today.
Meanwhile
Mark Williams, who has won three ranking titles in China, the first in Shanghai
ten years ago, coasted through against Mark Davis. The way Williams plays, he
needs the conditions to be to his liking to produce his best. They were and he
did, particularly in completing a clearance in one frame which had to be seen to be believed.
Joe
Perry’s 5-2 defeat of Matthew Stevens boiled down to one shot. Clearing up for
2-2, Stevens left himself a little awkward on the pink. He should have used the
rest but has a seemingly psychological aversion to it and so played the shot
left-handed and missed.
Perry
potted it, ironically using the rest, and it wasn’t hard to identify this as
the major moment.
Steve
Davis played very tidily to see off Zhu Yinghui and secure a last 32 berth. I’m
sure his white ferrule is the talk of Shanghai’s bustling night life.
Mark
Selby won this title a year ago, beating Williams 10-9 from 9-7 down after the
red-or-pink drama of frame 17.
Selby
today plays Jamie Cope. The last two times they have played in China, Selby has
won 5-0.
Mark
King is just the sort of player capable of frustrating Ding Junhui, whose
record in Chinese events is not too great outside Beijing.
King
has been on a disappointing run of results but he was a semi-finalist in
Shanghai last year and well capable of messing Ding about if he needs to.
Peter
Ebdon was very impressive in the Premier League, coping fine with the 25 shot
clock. The last time he played Stephen Maguire, in last season’s China Open
final, it was tortoise rather than hare, particularly in the turgid opening
session in which only six of the scheduled nine frames were played.
They
meet again in what could be one of the matches of the round. Ebdon is resurgent;
Maguire is still looking for his first major ranking title since the 2008 China
Open in Beijing.
4 comments:
"..he could give Mark Allen a few problems later today"
I wonder which problems Mark already has himself .. afterall, he is in China!
i see mike hallett is still calling every double a cross double.
doh
Selby, Fu, O'Brien and Ebbo out. Not a great start for the snails.
"Peter Ebdon & the Free Ball"
To ask the referee to check again is his right.
To carry on asking is not polite, and just embarrassed the young lady.
"Global Game"
Give me a break - only 2 local players (both wildcards) left in the last 32.
ITV Prog Downton Abbey has been sold to 100 countries - that's what I call global
:)
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