A
thrilling night at the Tempodrom has left us with four semi-finalists locking
horns for the Betfair German Masters title this weekend.
Mark
Selby’s great run came to an end at the hands of Barry Hawkins, who went into
the match full of confidence after his terrific performance against Mark Allen
on Thursday.
Selby
has played a lot of snooker of late and looked tired. While Hawkins had had the
day off, Selby had already fought out a 5-3 win over Ding Junhui in the
afternoon.
Typically,
he threatened a comeback when he won the fourth frame after needing a snooker
on the pink but Hawkins didn’t buckle and there was to be no Selby recovery this time.
Hawkins
now plays Marco Fu, erratic but very solid when playing well. It’s five and a
bit years since Fu won his only ranking title to date, the 2007 Grand Prix, but
he has very quietly come through the field this week and has the metronomic
style to temper Hawkins’s attacking approach.
The
match of the day was Neil Robertson’s 5-4 victory over Shaun Murphy, who hasn’t
beaten the Australian in anything significant for three years. Robertson has
now won their last six meetings.
It
wasn’t a vintage contest in terms of standard, with neither player particularly
enamoured of playing conditions, but Murphy, as he so often does when in
arrears, got his act together in fine style with two successive centuries to
recover from 2-4 to 4-4.
The
nervy decider eventually came down to a shot Murphy played in which he
attempted to drop in behind the blue but in fact left a red to the green bag,
which Robertson potted before going on to wrap up victory.
Kudos
must also go to the referee, Jan Verhaas, who made a great call in frame six
when Murphy just clipped the black attempting to escape from a snooker on the
last red, which left he himself requiring snookers.
Very
sportingly, Robertson queried the call but television replays confirmed Verhaas
had been correct.
Robertson
tackles Ali Carter this afternoon after the Captain came from 2-0 down to beat
Michael Holt 5-2.
Carter
is a tough, at times feisty competitor: a roll up the sleeves and get stuck in
kind of player. He currently has two ranking titles to his name but if he beats
Robertson will surely be favourite for a third.
They’ve
played a couple of memorable matches at the Crucible and the Tempodrom is a
fitting setting for another battle.
An
audience of around 2,200 is expected for each session this weekend as we go
down to one table.
Some
have asked why the tournament isn’t longer but they don’t understand the
commercial realities. The fact is this: the Tempodrom is a venue much in demand
and thus expensive to hire. Therefore, the length of the tournament has to make
economic sense. It wasn’t a sell-out for the early rounds, which is no
different to virtually every other event on the calendar.
Personally,
I think five to seven days is more than long enough to play a tournament,
outside of the longer frame formats. To have players spending up to three days
without having a match to play is absurd. The only reason the BBC tournaments
outside the World Championship have been longer was to provide sport on the
weekends when they had programmes like Grandstand to fill up.
The
great thing about the German Masters from a spectator point of view is that
there is always something happening. In a city which famously tore down its
wall, all partitions have been removed in the arena. Not all players like this
but most just get on with it.
There
won’t be any distractions from now this weekend. It’s just one table and the
fight for the title.
4 comments:
for the record - watching this afternoon on the ES Player, commetary is a second or so ahead of the pictures.
Its not spoiling it though.
its spoiling it for me 244
It annoys me that every thread on here comes back to Ronnie OSullivan all the time.
He has retired, get over it guys.
Mystic Joe was calling some pots when the ball was travelling to the pocket! Carter potted a great acute red into the middle and Joe called it 'early'... :-)
Can he do the same on the lottery numbers though??!
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