Friday, 26 December 2014

Classic Matches of 2014: 7th Place: Mark Williams Vs Ronnie O'Sullivan (International Championships)

As we reach the halfway stage of my classic matches of 2014 countdown on Boxing Day as today it's time for 7th place and that match is Mark Williams Vs Ronnie O'Sullivan from the quarter-finals of the International Championship back on Thursday 30th October. I would certainly describe the contest as one where frames were won in clusters...

Mark Williams Vs Ronnie O'Sullivan:

Ronnie O’Sullivan played a brilliant red from range to get the scoring in this quarter-final going, but there weren’t many available reds and he only made 14. The next opportunity fell to Mark Williams, and this one was much nicer with a large number of the reds available, but a couple of shots where he couldn’t hold position cost him as he missed a red from middle distance on just 10. The players then handed chances back and forth in what was turning into a very poor quality opening frame, until O’Sullivan was back in again with four reds remaining and a nine point lead. Ronnie built his lead up to 26 on the last red before laying a snooker behind the black. Pretty soon he’d potted the last red and was able to clear to the yellow to make it 1-0. Mark Williams had the first scoring effort of frame two but was only able to accumulate 16 before missing one to the centre, leaving the chance for O’Sullivan and from it he produced 65 to build a 49 point lead with 59 available when the break ended with a safety shot. Williams earned himself another opportunity to claw his way back into the frame with a nice cut from range, but when he missed one near the cushion, Ronnie was able to play the balls he needed to double his lead. Frame three got off to a poor quality start with both players having a couple of scoring visits but not being able to make more than just a few, but it was eventually Williams that started to build a lead and he was 51 ahead with 59 on when he missed frame ball red into the middle. That gave O’Sullivan a lifeline as he chipped away at that deficit by potting the first of the four remaining reds with a black, before then having a piece of good fortune as he left a red over the corner and Mark failed twice (having hit the green on the first attempt and being put back) to hit the red, leaving a great chance for his opponent to clear. A superb shot from pink to black was needed, but Ronnie did clear and was already halfway to victory in this best-of-11 at 3-0. After a re-rack in frame four O’Sullivan had the first chance to put some points on the board once again, only making 19 this time before missing an incredibly thin black, which gave the chance to Mark, but again he couldn’t find any rhythm only managing 14. Again both players struggled to string a substantial break together and with four reds remaining O’Sullivan had an 11 point lead in what was another scrappy frame. A nice long red gave Williams a good chance of getting his first frame on the board, and he did just that clearing to the blue to trail Ronnie 1-3 at the mid-session interval.

Straight after the break, Ronnie missed a red from range leaving an early opportunity for Mark to gather some points. Once the break was up to 29 Williams had the reds open and was in prime position to build at the very least a commanding lead in the frame. He hurried to the winning line in the frame and a quick fire century break of 120 closed the gap to a single frame at 2-3. The first decent chance of frame six also went to Mark Williams after Ronnie missed a simple enough green and a run of 59 gave Williams a very useful 52 point advantage with just 67 remaining and plenty of reds safe. Ronnie made the mistake pretty much immediately and an additional 11 was all Mark needed to level the match at 3-3. Again in the seventh frame Williams had the first break building opportunity, although he was unlucky when opening the pack not to get on a red and had to play safe on only 19. A clever double gave Ronnie an opening, though an uncharacteristic miss on the blue highlighted that he was struggling and brought the break to a premature end on 27. From here the Welshman had a golden chance to win his fourth frame on the bounce and a break of 37 including a good double on the final red secured that and completed Mark’s turnaround for him to lead for the first time at 4-3. A safety error early in frame eight provided Williams with the first scoring chance yet again in a frame and he soon made it into a full chance as a break of 77 was more than enough for him to make it five frames in a row and go one away from the semi-finals at 5-3.

Needing to win all of the remaining three frames, O’Sullivan knew he needed to step up, and he knew he couldn’t let Williams have too many more chances which was what he did at the start of frame nine. Williams made it to 30 before falling unlucky with his split of the pack, followed by a tricky miss into the middle. Ronnie then knocked in a good red to the top corner and with the reds handy these are usually the chances he thrives upon. A very quick fire 72 was what it took for O’Sullivan to close the gap to one at 4-5. A missed long red from Williams left O’Sullivan in early on in frame ten, but he had some bad luck with his split this time and missed a very thin cut to the left corner. Mark though missed the same red and left it over the pocket for Ronnie putting him back in straight away. This time around Ronnie nearly secured the frame, but he missed frame ball after a break of 44, though Mark missed a similar shot to the middle and O’Sullivan was back in sealing the frame to take us into a decider at 5-5. The first ball of the decider was potted by Ronnie but he missed the black off of it’s spot straight away, leaving a Mark a decent opening to build a handy lead in this decider. Mark went into the pack on 50 but there was the break ended and he knew it immediately slapping the table as he failed to get on a red. A 49 point lead is always nice, but can evaporate quickly with O’Sullivan who made the cross double but finished awkward on a black that was incredibly thin, yet he over cooked it. A brilliant double then followed for Williams, knowing he would be on the black over the right corner and additional 22 from Mark was more than enough for him to see off Ronnie O’Sullivan with a fine 6-5 victory ending what was a huge drought between wins for Mark Williams, but he came out on top in this classic to make the International Championship semi-finals.
 
What a fantastic match that was with Ronnie O'Sullivan looking in control at one stage, before Mark Williams took control, only for Ronnie to hit back again before Williams finished off the match. It's really taken some great matches to top this so be sure to come back tomorrow and find out which match made it into 6th.

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