Ronnie
O’Sullivan once again proved himself to be too good for the rest by sweeping to
victory in the Paul Hunter Classic in Furth, Germany.
Focused,
determined and playing at times superbly, O’Sullivan got over an early scare on
the last day – edging Anthony McGill 4-3 – to beat Stuart Bingham 4-0, Mark
Selby 4-2 and Gerard Greene 4-0 and lift the title.
He
was given a prolonged standing ovation by the passionate German crowd, much
deserved following an eye-catching display of snooker.
The
world champion says he is committed to playing in at least ten tournaments this
season. While this isn’t as many as the other top stars will play, it is about
as many as O’Sullivan had the option to play in five years ago.
The
pick and choose era is perfect for Ronnie. He can now play when he wants to.
And when he is in the mood to play, he invariably plays well (as we saw at the
Crucible last season).
He
turns 38 in December but there is no perceptible decline in his game, or at
least nothing serious enough to suggest he can’t go on winning titles for a
number of years yet if he is still motivated to do so.
As
for the tournament, the cream once again rose to the top despite a Saturday of
shocks as big names – Neil Robertson, Ding Junhui, John Higgins, Shaun Murphy,
Stephen Maguire – tumbled.
Ali
Carter fought from 3-0 down to level with Greene in the semi-finals but it was
Greene who prevailed in the decider.
Despite
losing to O’Sullivan, to reach the final was a huge confidence boost for
Greene, who came into the event 57th in the world rankings.
Robertson,
a champion on the table and sometimes a scatterbrain away from it, arrived late
for his first round match and was docked a frame. He lost 4-0.
This
is a tournament played in memory of a much missed popular star of snooker and
is made special not only by the players but also the crowds, who once again
flocked in huge numbers to watch the action.
Germany
seems to get snooker. And this weekend they were given a reminder of what an
entertaining game it can be, particularly in the hands of a maestro.
7 comments:
Oh dear, when ROS turns up every other player seems to send their own game home. Although I'm sure he's happy to win I think he would welcome a bit more competition.
Thank you for the report, Dave.
What an awesome break in the last frame of the final : beginning with a double in the center and finishing in style with a century.
Congrats, Ronnie !
Anyone know why Mark Williams didn't play?
Has Andy Hicks retired?
My dad keeps asking me how Hicks is getting on, but keep saying I'm not sure as couldn't recall his results from this season.
However, I've just looked at the ranking list and he doesn't seem to be on it.
I guess he could have been relegated but my understanding of expanding the tour to 128 players was that relegation wouldn't happen at the end of last season.
Anyone got some information on this?
He dropped out of the top 64 and thus off the tour
Thanks Dave, I thought might be the case but, like I said before, I wasn't sure if relegation had been dropped to allow numbers to increase.
For me, Hicks is arguably the best player never to have reached a ranking final.
Why on earth is Stephen Hendry still showing in the rankings list?
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