Ding
Junhui’s capture of the International Championship was final proof of how he
has matured into a formidable all round player, now strong in every department.
In
a gripping final, he compiled five centuries but in the end had to come from
9-8 down to edge Marco Fu 10-9.
It
seemed this final consisted of either big breaks – Fu himself made two
centuries – or lengthy, tense, tactical duels.
Fu
won most of the latter but Ding’s resolve never wavered. There was no slouching
in his seat, no shouldering arms. He competed superbly. His concentration was
excellent. He continued to go for his shots. He played two excellent final
frames.
Ding
is someone that other players, not always forthcoming with praise, purr over.
They admire the sheer skill he possesses and his ability to produce his best
with the pressure on.
Fu
likened his break building performances as like ‘Stephen Hendry in his prime,’ which is
as high a compliment as can be paid.
So
it’s three ranking titles in a row for Ding. The run has to end some time
because all runs do but he has shown qualities of late which point to continued
success in the future.
Domination
in snooker is not necessarily about how many titles you win but which ones. In
the past, dominant players have been world champion and world no.1. Ding is
neither. Yet. But he’s up to third in the rankings, his highest ever position,
and if he can take this mindset to the Crucible will take some stopping next
spring.
Ding
claimed the first of his nine ranking titles at the age of just 18. He won
three while still a teenager, a feat only previously achieved by John Higgins.
But
in recent months Ding has been transformed from the boy prince to the current
king of snooker.
If
he carries on like this he will be the player to beat not just this season but
in the years to come. At 26, he has age and time on his side.
We
may well look back at this golden spell in 2013 as the start of the Ding
dynasty.
3 comments:
Hi Dave,
I like your header. Spot on!
As a commentator, I have now upgraded
Dings nickname from "the Panda boy"
to "Professor Panda" but maybe King Panda should be more appropiate for the near future.
A lot of great matches in Chengdu and great to see Perry,Dott, Ebdon ,Robertson, Fu and Ding fight their hearts out in quality matches.
Zhao Xintong is a quality prospect too for sure.
To be honest, i think Marco Fu choked again in this final. 9-8 up with a potential match-winning break on the cards; and he threw it all away by playing an atrocious shot that saw the white ball going in.
A phenomenal achievement but not 3 consecutive ranking wins as Ding lost to Mark Allen in the German PTC which carries ranking points .
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