Monday, 4 January 2016

Championship League Group 1 Day 1

Ronnie O'Sullivan was back and on top on the first day of the Championship League at Crondon Park in Essex. The rocket played three matches on the opening day of group 1, all of which were played in the afternoon. His next best challenger is Barry Hawkins who won two matches of the four he played on day one, losing the other two in last frame deciders (one of which was from 2-0 ahead and looking certain to beat Mark Williams).

Mark Williams and Robert Milkins both won two matches of the three they played on day one, with Mark's loss coming in a deciding frame to Ronnie, while Roberts was to Ricky Walden who also has two wins from four games played. Ricky also hit the headlines for losing a frame on the three miss rule with a red on, in whitewash defeat to O'Sullivan.

John Higgins meanwhile only managed one win from four games he played on the opening day and will have a lot of work to do in order to survive relegation in the first group which is most unexpected, while Ryan Day has failed to win a match so far having played in three.

 
 
As you can see from my classic notepad picture there, Higgins started the day off badly in a 3-0 loss to Hawkins where I don't believe that John looked too interested whatsoever. He then lost from 2-0 up against Ronnie having also been defeated by Mark Williams. He could do with winning both of his remaining games against Ryan Day and Robert Milkins in order to survive relegation and possibly make a late push for the top four.

Barring collapses Ronnie looks a certainty for the semi-finals, while it will be a dogfight between the four guys that have played two games in order to fill the other three spots. Mark Williams and Robert Milkins have the obvious advantage of having to play the extra game, but in a sense it will only count for one, as both guys have to play each other.

Ricky Walden with his inferior frames won score needs to win his remaining two games to be guaranteed, with those being against Barry Hawkins and Mark Williams who are ahead of him. Hawkins other game is against Ronnie and you feel he could get away with only a single win from those two games having won so many frames already.

As for Ryan Day, without wanting to right him off, he'll be struggling to avoid relegation with his remaining games coming against Ronnie, Williams and Higgins the last of which is certainly a must win against a fellow struggler. You feel though that he would need to win at least two to have any chance of staying at Crondon for group two.

If Higgins or Day were to get it together today Walden or Milkins could easily be dragged into it if they suffer some loses in their remaining games, with Milkins having to play Ronnie, Higgins and Mark Williams (exactly the same as Day).

If John could beat Milkins and Day he could still make the top four, where he would likely be joined in the case by Williams, Hawkins and Ronnie, and I have to fancy either the Rocket or the Hawk to come out on top in the group overall in the semi's and final.

However, there is still a long way to go in group one and a very tight table presented after the first day so anything could still happen.

Sunday, 3 January 2016

Championship League Preview

Kicking off the new year of snooker as always a select few will be taking a trip down to Crondon Park Golf Club for the Championship League snooker event. Not many people give this event much coverage or the time of day whatsoever, but with top players involved every year and a place in the Champion of Champions for the overall winner out of the 25 players set to be involved it's well worth keeping an eye on.

The format is the same as usual with the winners of each of 7 qualifying groups going through to make up the winners group at the end of it all.

In each qualifying group every player plays each other once over the course of two days, with the top four in the league table at the end of that qualifying for the semi-finals. 5th place in the group, along with the losing semi-finalists and losing finalist move on to the next group in the list (until group 7 of course). Places 6th and 7th in the qualifying group are therefore eliminated at that stage to play no further part in proceedings.

With all of that in mind, here are the groups for the 2016 Championship League:

Group 1 (Monday 4th and Tuesday 5th January)

Ronnie O'Sullivan
John Higgins
Barry Hawkins
Ricky Walden
Mark Williams
Ryan Day
Robert Milkins

Group 2 (Wednesday 6th and Thursday 7th January)

Mark Selby
Judd Trump
Joe Perry
+ 4 players from Group 1

Group 3 (Monday 25th and Tuesday 26th January)

Marco Fu
Stephen Maguire
Michael White
+ 4 players from Group 2

Group 4 (Wednesday 27th and Thursday 28th January)

Stuart Bingham
Neil Robertson
Graeme Dott
+ 4 players from Group 3

Group 5 (Monday 22nd and Tuesday 23rd February)

Mark Davis
Kyren Wilson
David Gilbert
+ 4 players from Group 4

Group 6 (Wednesday 24th and Thursday 25th February)

Martin Gould
Matt Selt
Michael Holt
+ 4 players from Group 5

Group 7 (Monday 29th February and Tuesday 1st March)

Liang Wenbo
Ali Carter
+ 1 Player 'To be Confirmed'
+ 4 players from Group 6

Winners Group (Wednesday 2nd and Thursday 3rd March)


As you can see there Ronnie O'Sullivan has entered into the very first group as he looks to prepare for the Masters. In fact his very first group match is against his Masters first round opponent Mark Williams. With the first two groups being before the Masters 8 of the 10 players that will be involved in the groups are playing in the Masters, with the exceptions of Ryan Day and Robert Milkins.

Defending champion and World Champion Stuart Bingham enters the tournament for group 4, while one spot in group 7 has yet to be confirmed according to the official championship league website but i'm sure we will find out that missing link before too long.

Not many of the higher ranked players have actually chosen to give the event a miss this time, but Ding Junhui and Mark Allen have once again decided to give it a miss, and after his withdrawal from last years event through illness Shaun Murphy has chosen to give it a miss, having been turned off of the event after featuring in six of the eight 2014 groups, winning the fifth to qualify for the winners group.

Other than that the next highest ranked not to be involved is current world number 26 Alan McManus, so as you can see we have a very strong haul for the event as things stand.

As well as Bingham: Marco Fu, Joe Perry, Judd Trump and Martin Gould are the other former winners involved in the tournament but with so much quality in the event it would hardly be a surprise of any sort to see a new name on that roll of honour (that also includes Ding Junhui and Matthew Stevens as past champions) and it could quite easily come from the lower ranked players featuring later in the groups.

Guys like Kyren Wilson coming in for group 5 will be looking to seize an opportunity because the latter groups are certainly there for the taking, and it wouldn't even be a surprise if somebody like Matt Selt and Michael Holt from group 6 or former runner-up Ali Carter in group 7 won their groups and went on to win the entire thing.

Starting off by looking at Group one though, it will be interesting to see how guys like Ronnie O'Sullivan and Mark Williams shape up ahead of their Masters matches, while Ricky Walden was one guy struggling for form in the latter parts of 2015 so he will be looking to find some over the next couple of days. Barry Hawkins has never won a match at the Masters so will be hoping to go there with some nice wins under his belt even if the matches throughout the tournament are only played over the best-of 5 frames short format.

Robert Milkins form was also a bit shy of the mark in the back half of 2015, while guys like Ryan Day were starting to go nicely and Ryan is one man who can concentrate solely on the group matches ahead without thoughts of being in the Masters.

If you backed me into a corner and forced me to pick a winner of just Group 1 for now then it would have to be John Higgins. After re-finding his form during 2015 he is probably the strongest player in the group form wise, and should certainly win enough matches to make it into the semi-finals on Tuesday.


Just as I did last year for this event I will be back with daily updates during the Championship League to after an opening days play both the results and an as it stands group table courtesy of my famous 'notepad pictures' that got their first outing a year ago. Cue Action Blog is certainly the number one place to be for Championship League updates and be sure to keep in touch with my Twitter page for very frequent updates throughout the days play, and certainly for all of the different qualification scenarios as the groups progress on the second day of the two.

Friday, 1 January 2016

Christmas Countdowns: Complete Lists

As I did last year with my Christmas Countdowns for, Player of the Month/Year, Moment of the Month/Year and the Classic Matches of the Year, I am going to set this post up as a place where you can find links to all of those pieces at once. This is mainly because, with each post being published during the busy Christmas period it would be easy to miss something so it is handy to have all of the pieces integrated in one area.

Classic Matches of 2015 Countdown:

12th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-12th.html
11th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-11th.html
10th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-10th.html
9th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-9th.html
8th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-8th.html
7th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-7th.html
6th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-6th.html
5th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-5th.html
4th Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-4th.html
3rd Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-3rd.html
2nd Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-2nd.html
1st Place: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/classic-matches-of-2015-countdown-1st.html

Player of the Month Countdown and Nominees:

January: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-january-shaun-murphy.html
February: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-february-mark-selby.html
March: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-march-mark-williams.html
April: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-april-anthony-mcgill.html
May: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-and-moment-of-month-may-stuart.html
June: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-and-moment-of-month-june-zhou.html
July: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-july-john-higgins.html
August: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-august-ali-carter.html
September: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-september-kyren-wilson.html
October: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-october-david-gilbert.html
November: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-november-mark-allen.html
December: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-of-month-december-neil-robertson.html

Final Countdown: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/player-of-year-2015-final-countdown.html

Moment of the Month Countdown and Nominees:

January: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-january-murphy-finally.html
February: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-february-woollaston.html
March: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-march-white-wins-indian.html
April: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-april-davis-rolls-back.html
May: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-and-moment-of-month-may-stuart.html
June: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/player-and-moment-of-month-june-zhou.html
July: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-july-gould-so-close-to.html
August: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-august-ford-reaches.html
September: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-september-wilson-wins.html
October: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-october-mcleod-gets.html
November: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-november-world-cup.html
December: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2015/12/moment-of-month-december-wenbo-jumps.html

Final Countdown: http://cueactionsnookerblog.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/moment-of-month-2015-final-countdown.html

Enjoy Folks!!!

2015 - A few thoughts and feelings and predictions for 2016

2015. What a year it was. A lot of people say things like that at the end of a calendar but I genuinely believe this has been one of my favourite years. To say it is the best year of my life so far would be strong, there have been ups and downs in my personal life and with the blog at times.

The obvious place to start for me is by talking a bit about Shaun Murphy. Anyone that's even a casual reader of my blog will know that I am a massive fan of Shaun and someone that is very lucky to have got in touch with him through blog features and get on very well with him. Watching him lift the Masters was special as it was to see him make a third world final. I want to take this as an opportunity to thank Shaun for the support and general generosity with his time that he has once again offered myself with the blog in 2015. That has ranged from his contributions with the fun Q&A and allowing me to publish a few fun stories involving him during my previews. However, this year I have also used Shaun's help as a fellow snooker geek to throw ideas at and build some of the feature based pieces you have seen and will continue to see throughout 2016 I hope.

I also want to talk about Stuart Bingham and his achievements of 2015. I spoke on the phone with Stuart to build some of the match comments on my classic match feature very recently and to me it seemed like he was just as excitable as he was living in that moment on the night of May 4th. We all know how hard a worker Stuart is and I'd like to thank him for being a gentleman and sparing me his time to make that feature one of my favourites that I have put together.

2015 has also seen me take the opportunity to get in touch with more of the blogs readers through Twitter, and I would like to think that there are a good few more of you that I have spoken to through tweets and messages, you'll all know who you are. You all help to keep this blog going and me going with your kind words and banter that helps to keep my spirits up in the tough times.

I feel like I have gained a much greater perspective and understanding over the course of this year, and my involvement in snooker through this blog ranks clearly at number one on the list. I have often been a man to start little projects only to get bored and give up on them easily. February will mark 3 years of me writing this blog. For me that is astonishing. That is why I will be working as hard as ever to continue improving the output that comes from the blog and the mediums in which it comes out. 165 posts were written in 2015 and this will already be the fourth of 2016. I'd love to publish one a day but in the summer months when there isn't much snooker that will become tough. I think a realistic tally of posts to expect for 2016 is 300 so that tells you how hard I am wanting to work.

I would also like to offer up an opportunity to increase reader involvement. I am considering doing a survey on the third year anniversary as I look to get a grasp of what you would like to see, but I would also like to extend an offer to anyone who thinks they have something to offer the blog and would like to contribute in some way with ideas for output they would like to produce.

Predictions wise I think I did pretty well from February through to April, and after a lull at the start of the new season I ended the year on a positive note by tipping the Gibraltar Open winner. But after not doing any predictions for the year that was 2015 (and after a very unpredictable year at times I feel like that was a good decision). Having said that, I may as well have a crack at putting pen to paper on a few gut feelings I have about the snooker year for 2016.


1) Marco Fu is going to get down to the one table set-up at the Crucible. This years World Championships will mark the tenth anniversary of the only other time he has managed this and as he'll be 38 by the time the championships are played you feel he won't have too many more chances to do so. A player of his quality should certainly have won a Triple Crown event and it will be travesty in my opinion if he retires without doing so. At the back end of 2015 he was playing as well as he had done and if he carries that on he will have a great chance at the Crucible in April.

2) Ding Junhui will not be at the Crucible this year. The reality of this one is that without a good run in a ranking tournament in the next few months he is going to be struggling to hold on to his top 16 place and automatic World Championship qualification, and the way he has gone in the last season and a half I even find it tough to see him winning the three matches that would be required to qualify. He is now working with Terry Griffiths though so hopefully for him and his fans he can get out of this current slump.

3) When I tweeted about this I was asked to try and predict which qualifier will go the furthest at the Crucible. Cheers. Realistically you have to look at some of the guys in and around the twenties for inspiration as they have showed the greatest quality. If Kyren Wilson has to come through qualifying he is already a ranking event winner and will be someone none of the seeds would want to draw if they get through. Ryan Day has been threatening to get back into the top 16 for a while with some good wins and it wouldn't surprise me if he qualified and went on to reach the quarter-finals if the draw was kind. Martin Gould is the final person i'm going to pick out on this front as he had a very good year in 2015 and could still easily qualify automatically himself. If he does come through qualifying though he will be a bogey man for the seeds. Ali Carter again shouldn't be a qualifier but will likely have to go down that route to make the Crucible, but with world final appearances in his past I wouldn't want to draw him in round one if he qualifies.

4) Another person asked who I think will win the shoot-out. It really is an absolute lottery so i'm just going to pick out one guy who sort of fits the bill. He doesn't hang around, scores heavily and is lower ranked but certainly on the up and a run in the Shoot-out could be the boost he needs to take the next step. That man is Jimmy Robertson.

5) The legend that is Steve Davis tweeted me and said "I would like you to predict what you think we want to know". Well Steve I think the people will want to know who's going to win this years Triple Crown events. All i'm going to say on this is that there are three players inside of the top four in the world who are pretty much around the right ages (33, 33 and 32 respectively) to reach their peak and absolutely dominate if they keep working hard. Those guys are Neil Robertson, Shaun Murphy and Mark Selby. Selby already has three Masters, to go with his one world and one UK title, while Robertson has just won his second UK title to go with one world and masters. Shaun of course completed the triple crown with his Masters win a year ago meaning he has one of each but also narrowly missed out on a second world title in May. Each has the potential to be a triple crown winner twice over by the end of their careers and at least one of them will take the next step in 2016 with some major runs.

6) Finally, I was asked who had the best chance of winning their first ranking title. I am a little biased in saying this, but we all know the talent that Michael Holt has as well as being a hugely likeable guy. His work with Terry Griffiths in the first half of this season has already produced signs of improvement and he has been pretty unlucky at times to be beaten in both Shanghai and Daqing by the eventual tournament winner, which in a weird way is a good sign for a player.


That's all from me on my old year round up/thank you session and for my 2016 predictions and I would like to wish you all a happy new year. I hope you can all continue to support and read the blog as well as you have done in 2015 and don't forget to send me ideas for new features if you have any o general thoughts on improvement. You can interact with me on Twitter via @CueActionBlog and I will be sure to respond to any ideas or requests.

Thank you and all the best.

Classic Matches of 2015 Countdown: 1st Place: Stuart Bingham Vs Shaun Murphy (World Championships)

Here we go then. The winner of the classic matches of 2015 contest, the World Championship final itself between Stuart Bingham and Shaun Murphy.

Once again for this one I also have some extra “commentary” if you like, as kindly provided by Stuart Bingham and I would like to thank him once again for providing this.

Shaun started off this World Championship final in the same way that he had played the rest of the tournament, thundering in a long red and confidently playing for the black too. This part of his game and his scoring had been the strongest area, just as it was 10 years ago when he won the title previously. Unfortunately he had to play safe on 8 this time, but when Stuart’s attempt to skim off of the pack went all wrong it left Shaun a golden opportunity. A break of 68 left Stuart needing snookers and ultimately it was enough to move 1-0 in front. Stuart’s first chance in ‘live’ play came in frame two after a missed range attempt from Murphy, but after losing black ball position on 17 he played safe. A smoothly struck long pot soon gave an opportunity to Shaun to double his early advantage. A careless miss on 59 on frame ball black denied him the opportunity to kill the frame off in one visit. Stuart won the safety battle on the last three reds and he was clearing nicely until coming up short on the pink, which he missed to the middle and left to let Murphy off of the hook and allow him to go 2-0 in front. After spreading reds all over the table at the beginning of frame three, Bingham missed a tough long cutback yellow to hand a golden opening to Shaun. He made it look easy from there with a break of 65 to storm into a 3-0 lead.

“Shaun was bulldozing everyone in the tournament. I just kept believing everything I was doing was right”.

Frame four started with Murphy rattling a ball from distance and Bingham potting a very good one to the middle to get the first chance. He picked off the loose reds and then with some clever cannons opened up enough balls to win the frame at one visit. In the end it turned into the first century of the final with a 105 to get his first frame on the board and trail 1-3 going into the mid-session interval.

“The ton to go 1-3 really settled me down going into the interval”

After a scrappy start to frame five, the best chance fell to Stuart when he was able to get blue and black back on their spots. Only one cannon was needed in the break of 56 to follow which was enough to eventually put him within one of Murphy at 2-3. Shaun picked out a red in the middle of the bunch to the middle, giving him the first chance of frame six. On 36 he played a brilliant top spin shot into the bunch to make it a frame winning opportunity and he was disappointed not to make a century, missing a red to the middle on 90 but the frame was in the bag to make it 4-2. When Shaun missed an effort from long range in frame seven it cost him, as he left Stuart in from close range. He only accumulated 22 on that occasion, though a second chance did come along when Shaun let him off of the hook. Only another 15 was added before he missed the yellow on the stretch. A miss on the blue from Shaun handed Stuart the opportunity to finish the frame off and some fine cuts and good positional play helped him over the line, and drawing closer again at 3-4 with one frame remaining in the first session. The Magician left Ballrun Bingham the first clear cut scoring visit in the eighth frame. A run of 65 thereafter made it four of the last five frames in the session for Bingham to get out of the opening offerings all square at 4-4.

“Getting out of that first session 4-4 was a massive result for me.”

As session two started on Sunday evening, Stuart got the scoring underway after rolling in a superb red for the black. When going into the reds on 32 the split was by no means a bad one, yet the key moment came on 57 when he rattled his intended red and freed the bunch of four handing Shaun a golden opportunity. On 32 he brought one of the reds off the cushion and on to the middle, allowing him to complete a clearance to the pink of 74 and steal a vital opening frame in the session to lead 5-4. Stuart again potted the first red in frame ten but followed it by missing the blue with the rest to leave Shaun another chance. With the black and blue not in good positions he had to work with the pink but did so in expert fashion and by the time he fluked a red to take the break to 70 it didn’t matter and the end result was his first century of this final, a 106 putting him further ahead at 6-4. Stuart was let in for the first chance once more in the eleventh after Murphy failed from long range. He lost position on 14 and took on a speculative plant which, when he missed, allowed Murphy in with a nice opening. The frame was soon opened up when he went into the bunch on 24, and a stunning long blue on 74 kept hopes of another century alive. A trick shot on the black completed a clearance of 121 to put him three clear at 7-4. In a repeat of the other three frames in the session, Bingham had the first chance in frame twelve but again he could not take advantage, having to play safe on just 41. Shaun won the safety battle after some time and a huge chance was his to take the frame in one visit once more. He went into the final four reds of the bunch but didn’t get the intended split but was certainly back in control of the frame, five in front and with a good safety shot to finish. A fantastic long red gave him the opportunity to finish the frame off, which he did with an additional 51 to lead 8-4 at the mid-session interval.

“At the interval I was thinking ‘this just isn’t going to happen’, I went to the practice table, had a red bull and bananas because I was just exhausted. At this point I thought that coming out of the session 10-7 behind would be a result”.

Following the break, Stuart won a long safety battle to get the first good chance and after some well-played early pots it soon became a frame winning opportunity. A run of 76 was enough to leave Shaun needing snookers and ultimately stop the rot for his first frame of the evening at 5-8. In frame fourteen a long range miss from the Magician left Bingham in once more and he made the most of it again putting together a 130 clearance for the third century of the evening and his first to close some more at 6-8. In frame fifteen Bingham started off with an early 24 before missing a red into the yellow pocket. Stuart had the next chance as well though after rolling a beautiful red into the middle and he had certainly found something in the second half of this session, closing out another frame with a run of 89 making it 7-8. In Frame sixteen Shaun potted his first ball for 30 minutes to get going again, and when he went into the pack early on it started to look like a decent opening. The eventual 76 he accumulated was enough to guarantee a lead after the first day of the final with a 9-7 advantage and only one frame left to play. He potted the first ball in the next with a stunning long red to stun for the black, but with the cue ball closer to the cushion he missed the black to leave the opportunity for Bingham. Stuart only contributed 8 before missing the pink and leaving Murphy in. Shaun then added 21 to his score before falling out of position after a long pot on the black, and being forced to play safe. The next red he attempted from range missed by a long way and left all of the reds on for Bingham to make a critical contribution this time. He built a lead of 39 with 43 but could not clinch the frame with a double attempt with safety in mind. A cross double on the penultimate red from Stuart ended the safety battle and proved enough to win the frame and somehow come out of the evening session only a frame adrift at 8-9.

“After coming out on Sunday night at 9-8 down I got 7 hours sleep which was the best night’s sleep I had had. The next morning a couple of my friends said I looked fresher. I think that won me the tournament”.

In the third session on Bank holiday Monday afternoon, Stuart Bingham had the first decent scoring visit after another brilliant pot from range to get in. From there he made the rest look easy with an 87 to level the match for the first time since the end of session one, at 9-9. Shaun had the first chance in frame nineteen and he made a decent 30 before missing a red when trying to turn it over with side, leaving a chance for Stuart. He went into the bunch from the first blue, splitting all of the remaining reds and the pink making it an excellent chance. He made 51 before missing a simple red with the rest and sticking it up for Murphy. He then potted the red and black, but missed a very tough last red along the cushion, and even though it ran safe, Stuart was able to play an easy snooker. Bingham won the safety battle after Murphy attempted the red from distance and missed, and Stuart did the rest to lead for the first time in the match at 10-9. He rolled in another superb long red in frame twenty and after a few reds and blacks attention already turned to the maximum with the reds nicely positioned. The sixth black was tough but he knocked it in without any problem to keep the break going. The break made it all the way to 112 with 14 reds and 14 blacks before he stuck to the red when trying to bring it off of the cushion and was unable to pot it. In the scheme of the match though maximums do not matter, what mattered was that Stuart was now two clear at 11-9. Shaun had the first chance in frame twenty-one but he missed a blue to the corner he’d have expected to get a large percentage of the time which left a chance for Stuart. 50 came from the opportunity before he jawed a tricky red that was left after he went into the reds. The second wind came when Shaun missed a long shot and the red came back to open the remaining balls, and from that Stuart was able to do enough to move 12-9 in front at the mid-session interval, having won all of the four frames in the session so far and 8 of the last 9 in the match overall.

The Magician needed to do his stuff after the interval to stay in the match and he had the confidence to start proceedings with a great long red stunning around for the black into the same pocket. He constructed a determined 59 before wobbling a red up into the baulk corner pocket. Shaun’s second chance came after potting another red from range and with plenty of reds on he was able to stop a run of five frames lost in a row and make it 10-12. Both players missed gettable balls at the start of frame twenty-three as they looked to earn the first scoring visit. It was Murphy’s miss that proved costly though as Bingham went on to make a break of 87 to re-establish his three frame cushion 13-10 ahead. A wonderful long red gave Shaun the chance to make amends in frame twenty-four. The balls were all open from the safety play so he had plenty to go at, and he swiftly took advantage of this building 84 to close the gap to two again at 11-13, meaning with one frame left in the session he would either be only one behind or three behind coming back in the evening. In that final frame of the session Stuart Bingham kept up the unbelievable standard of scoring in this final. He made 57 from his initial chance but then a missed yellow soon after gave Shaun a chance sitting 58 behind with 75 remaining. He failed to take advantage though missing a green that he tried to power into the middle and allowing Bingham to kill off the frame and lead 14-11 ahead of the evening’s final session.

“Back at the hotel before the final session I remember saying to my wife ‘I don’t to go out there, it’s just hit me. I have the chance to do what I’ve wanted to do for 20 years’. I remember looking down at my feet during the walk-ons for the final session and thinking ‘Don’t trip’. Normally I’d be at home watching this and now it was me doing it. When I was sat watching Shaun walk out I thought ‘this is what I’m used to’.”

After the extra special introductions and some early safety play, the first scoring chance came to Shaun after a nice long red. 33 was accumulated before snookering himself on his intended red after his cannon didn’t go as planned. Bingham missed his opportunity and Shaun was able to build his lead up to 65 with 67 remaining before a cut from range allowed him to seal the first frame of the evening and close to 12-14. Stuart had the chance to re-take his three frame lead after thundering in a red from range early in frame twenty-seven. With the black not on its spot and the pink out of play for the early parts of the break it was a tough break under pressure for Stuart to construct in terms of positional play. Getting the right side of the blue was something he failed to do on a few occasions but he was able to recover each time and keep the break going. In remarkable fashion he ended up making a 102 century break to regain his three frames lead at 15-12 and send out a message to Murphy. Stuart had the early scoring visits again in the twenty-eighth. Somewhat surprisingly, having built up a 55 point lead he missed an easy black to leave Shaun in with a chance. If Bingham had sent out a message the frame before with his century the clearance that Murphy made here sent out an entirely different response and really kept him in the match at 13-15. Stuart’s miss allowed Shaun another chance in frame twenty-nine with reds open and the black available. A break of 64 should’ve been enough but an in-off allowed Bingham to come back for snookers but Shaun did gone on to reduce the gap to just one at the mid-session interval trailing 14-15.

After the break Shaun survived a let off as Bingham missed a chance to get in after Murphy had missed a blue to end his break of 14. The Magician added another 38 before missing another red, but covering it with the black after leaving it in the jaws. Bingham’s swerve failed though bring Shaun back for a third bite of the cherry which was enough on this occasion to kill the frame off and level the match for the first time since 9-9, at 15-15 and you could sense that both players were feeling the pressure but particularly Stuart.

Frame thirty-one was an event in its own right. After a scrappy opening with players potting reds with no colour and both players conceding foul points also, Bingham was able to put a mini 19 together before getting an unlucky result from a decent split of the bunch from the blue. A huge slice of bad luck then went against Bingham as he potted a great long red, clipped a red off of the bottom cushion and went in-off to leave an easy starter for Shaun. He cleared the remaining reds and led by 14 coming down to the yellow only needing it, green and brown to make it four on the spin but putting side onto the yellow he missed it much to Stuart’s relief. Bingham then played a superb snooker behind the black and one that Murphy had great difficulty in getting out of. 30 points in fouls were conceded before he eventually got out of the snooker, putting Stuart 14 ahead. The safety continued for a long while after that until Stuart played another outstanding snooker behind the green yielding 8 more points to put him 22 in front. Unfortunately for the 2005 champion a later snooker escape left the yellow on and with the green close to its pocket Stuart was able to pot both easily and leave Murphy requiring a 2 snookers on the brown. He played on and potted the brown when the chance came, meaning it was now only one snooker to tie on the blue. With the frame having gone on for an hour at this stage Bingham asked the referee to go out for a toilet break and as both players left the arena I too at home was able to relieve myself having been desperate for about half an hour. Potting the blue left one snooker to win on the pink but as Bingham kept putting the pink close to the pocket it was very tough to get one and eventually the pink was potted by Stuart to make it 16-15.

“At 15-15 I thought this wasn’t going to happen for me, but when he missed the yellow when he looked like clearing up I put him in a tough snooker and he barely saw the yellow for the next few visits. Then there was the infamous toilet break. I had been desperate for 15 minutes, I didn’t want to sit down. I just turned to Olivier Marteel and said ‘I’ve got to go’. When me and Shaun both got back the crowd were smiling and laughing about it and that helped to break the tension for me”.

Bingham certainly took confidence from the previous frame judging by his long pot to get in at the start of frame thirty-two. Some good pressure pots kept his break going, and he held himself together well considering how close he was getting to going within a frame of victory. The break ended on 55 though as he couldn’t keep the clutch potting going, but when Murphy had an ambitious attempt at a red down the cushion and left it for Stuart he had a second chance but with the remaining reds safe he could only pot red and pink to move 66 ahead with 75 still remaining if Murphy forced an opening. After more safety Stuart grabbed the red he needed to clinch the frame and take himself a frame away from a World Championship title at 17-15. An ambitious long attempt from the Magician didn’t come off and as the cue ball careered into other reds it left Ballrun Bingham a golden opportunity to try and kill the match off. It was all about holding it together now, and it wasn’t easy as you could see by certain positional shots being under-hit as naturally his arm would have tightened up under the nerves. A break of 88 under the circumstances was phenomenal and gave Stuart Bingham everything that he deserved in an 18-15 victory in this World Championship final that will live long in the memory and was certainly the best match in the snooker year of 2015.

“It helped to play a good friend like Shaun. After one of the afternoon sessions we were all going back to the hotel and he was walking just in front of me holding hands with his fiancé Elaine and I went to hold his other hand and he skipped back to the hotel with me. Anyone that saw that must have wondered what we were doing!! Shaun deserves to be a 2 time World Champion”.
I would like to thank Stuart for his wonderful contributions to this feature, and to all of you who have read and enjoyed another year of classic matches here on the blog. Here's to many more in 2016.

Player of the Year 2015: The Final Countdown

The big moment has arrived. The time to reveal the best player of 2015 (in my opinion). Below I will order all 12 nominees from the player of the month awards and talk a little bit about why I have placed them where they in the list...


12th: David Gilbert (October) - Reaching a first major final for David was fantastic in Daqing and hopefully he has now taken the first step on the way to finally fulfilling his potential, and it was particularly good to see him come back like he did there after narrowly missing out in the semi-finals in Bulgaria just a couple of weeks before. Unfortunately for Gilbert, his performances through the rest of the year are not enough to get him any higher up on the list.

11th: Anthony McGill (April) - Anthony's run through qualifying and to the quarter-finals of the World Championships, winning plenty of tight contests was particularly impressive given some of the deciding frame losses he had suffered during the season. He pushed top players all the way but ultimately lost some key too deciders to Selby in the German Masters and Murphy in the China Open amongst a host of others. Despite all of that he has not been a tournament winner in 2015 and has struggled in the first half of the new season.

10th: Mark Williams (March) - Consistency has been the name of Mark Williams 2015 pretty much throughout as he has risen back inside the top 16 of the world rankings. The run to the semi-finals of the Welsh Open started this all off and was followed by a run to the final of the Gdynia Open, semi-finals in India, Bulgaria and another final at the Players Championship finals, with a whole host of quarter-finals on top of that. He was probably the most consistent player not to win something but because of that and early exits in the World and UK Championships he has to finish lower down on the list.

9th: Zhou Yuelong and Yan Bingtao (June)  - These two guys did brilliantly to win the World Cup in June against all of the odds and that was fantastic to see, but then to come over to the UK and win their Last 16 matches of the Champion of Champions was remarkable. As an individual Zhou was obviously the most impressive of the two as he has been playing in all pro events and has already broken into the top 64 with half a season to go on his original two year tour card. There's going to be plenty more occasions for these two to top the list in the coming years as individuals.

8th: Ali Carter (August) - It was a very special time in August when Ali Carter emotionally won the Paul Hunter Classic. After what he has been through it was great to see him achieve another tournament victory and it was also nice to see him make the quarter-finals of the Masters when his seeding was frozen at 13 for the 2014/2015 season. I still feel that there is a long way to go for Carter before he is back at his very best and I would like to see him achieve this.

7th: Kyren Wilson (September) - Kyren Wilson's win in Shanghai was a magnificent performance in September and he has since followed that up with a semi-final appearance in the Champion of Champions. The next step for Wilson is to break the top 16 and challenge for a big ranking event in the UK or Europe but there is plenty of time for him to achieve this.

6th: Mark Allen (November) - As well as winning the Bulgarian Open in November and the Champion of Champions final, Allen lost out in the semi-finals of the Masters to the rampant Shaun Murphy, and was very unlucky to lose in the Last 16 of the World Championships as Hawkins won four in a row to take that match. A lot of improvement was shown from Allen and I think he is now in a position where he could really challenge for all of the majors in 2016 so well done to him.

5th: Mark Selby (February) - Selby was superb in 2016 and unlucky not to finish higher up on the list. A certain Eurosport commentator considered his season as world champion to be poor with German Masters and China Open titles, what more do you want Mike? The German Masters win was particularly good considering that he has been playing a different cue sport in China just two days before where he made the final, and in the Masters he lost in the first round but to a man who went on to win the whole thing. In the International and UK Championships he lost in the semi-finals to the eventual winners too so it has by no means been a bad year in 2015 for Selby.

4th: Stuart Bingham (May) - Some people will think putting the World Champion in at fourth place is very harsh. What he achieved in Sheffield was superb but he will admit it has been a little bit of a struggle since then, and when you consider the three players that are above him in the list you will see that it was a very tough decision for me. Bingham has been a credit to snooker in 2015 once again and deserves everything good that comes his way from being world champion as he is a genuinely nice man and someone we as snooker fans can be extremely grateful to have representing out sport.

3rd: John Higgins (July) - Three ranking titles for John Higgins would normally see him at the top of this list but I think that his wins in Wales and Australia come in tournaments with either short formats at the start or less top players involved and the prize money tariff reflects this. If he had gone further than the Last 16 of the Masters and World Championships or got over the line in his UK classic with Neil Robertson then he would certainly be number one in my mind and it was nice to see him return.

2nd: Shaun Murphy (January) - Shaun again is quite unlucky not to have won overall as well. Especially when you consider he's my favourite player and we get on well. What a year it was though for Shaun. A Masters win, completion of the Triple Crown, narrowly missing out on a second world title as well as very consistent performances in all of the European Tour events which a lot of players neglect of course. Two finals in Germany at the German Masters and Paul Hunter Classic backed up that this is the best year of Shaun's career to date and I think there is plenty more to come from the Magician. His charity work is another reason that he should be high up on the list. He is a credit to the sport and is leading the way on many fronts. His interaction with fans via social media is second to none and he is always a gentleman. The bottom line is that like Stuart Bingham, we as snooker fans are very lucky to have him.

1st: Neil Robertson (December) - That means that the winner without a doubt is Neil Robertson. For me, Neil is now the leading player in the world. To choose to make a major diet change when you are a sportsman at the very top of your game is a very gutsy decision to make. He is also leading the way when it comes to peaking for the majors. UK Champion, Champion of Champions, Masters finalist and a deciding frame loss in the World quarter-finals. Not a bad haul for 2015 is it!! Add to that a win on the European Tour and a 147 maximum in the UK final then you have a very well rounded player who is the leading man in snooker.
 
So there you have it. 2015 done. What awaits in 2016 and who will be the leading player? Well we'll all just have to wait and see. 

Moment of the Month 2015: The Final Countdown

It's the final countdown. Time for me to reveal my favourite moment from the world of snooker in 2015. I will do this by counting down the 12 monthly nominations in order to get to number one...


12th: Ford makes Riga final months after clinging on to tour spot (August) - This was a nice moment for Tom at the time particularly after the couple of years he had had on the baize. While it was nice to see it doesn't really stick out as one of the main memories of the year.

11th: Ben Woollaston reaches maiden ranking final (February) - A similar feeling for me applies to Ben Woollaston making the Welsh Open final here. While it was a great moment to see him start to kick on and reach a first ranking final, because he didn't win the title and it hasn't led to greater things as yet, it doesn't feel like a pivotal moment in the grand scheme of 2015.

10th: Gould so close to maiden ranking title (July) - This was a good confidence boosting moment for Martin Gould, especially just a few months on from blowing his chance to make the final of the World Grand Prix, and while it would have hurt to lose for a while ultimately he didn't lose the final, John simply won it. He has taken confidence from it as you can see from performances since but again the moment doesn't carry the same magic as certain others.

9th: McLeod grabs first ever tournament win (October) - What a moment this was for Rory McLeod over the course of a weekend a the Ruhr Open for him to win his first professional tournament. To get him higher up on this list though with the stuff of legend in 2015 it would have to be a full ranking title, but that doesn't take anything away from what he achieved.

8th: Davis rolls back the years in black ball thriller (April) - 30 years on from the 1985 black ball final it was just nice to see Steve Davis still competing, but to be playing well and winning matches in deciding frames on the black it was wonderful, even if it was just a one-off event.

7th: World Cup winners beat world finalists (June) - The reason this one was in 7th place is simply because, as good a moment as it was to see Zhou Yuelong beat Stuart Bingham and Yan Bingtao beat Shaun Murphy (unless you'd been invited to watch and was supporting Shaun!!), this wasn't even the Chinese teenagers best moment of 2015, so how could it be mine.

6th: White wins Indian Open and Shoot-out in magical 10 days (March) - In the moment these were two fantastic victories and have really spurred him on up the rankings with greater confidence and are surely the start of great things to come. Winning once a year is enough for most players but to win twice in the space of a couple of weeks for your two biggest pay days in snooker really is magical.

5th: Young Chinese pair win World Cup (June) - This was of course the event I referred to earlier when Yan Bingtao and Zhou Yuelong won the World Cup in Wuxi representing China B, against all of the odds. They weren't even meant to be the best Chinese representatives in the event, purely there some may say to make up the numbers but instead we saw a glimpse into the future and two players who are going to be here for a very long time indeed.

4th: Murphy finally completes Triple Crown (January) - The special thing for me about Shaun Murphy finally winning the Masters to complete snookers Triple Crown was how close he had come before, how long it had been since he completed the second leg by winning the 2008 UK Championship, and some of the worrying reflections he had immediately after his exit in the 2014 Masters. You could see the delight and relief in his body language and expressions immediately after a 10-2 stylish thrashing of Neil Robertson. It was right up there with the snooker memories of 2015.  

3rd: Wenbo jumps for joy as he earns Masters spot (December) - The whole achievement with Wenbo here was getting into a Triple Crown final and securing his spot in the Masters but the real magic with this came with the 'heart on sleeve' philosophy to the play of Liang Wenbo. Especially in the semi-final you could see how much pressure he was under, while his celebrations after each one of his victories in the Last 32, 16, quarter and semi-finals was special to watch and well worth a podium finish in my countdown here.

2nd: Wilson wins in Shanghai as qualifier (September) - He was a qualifier. He nearly didn't get his visa to even attend the tournament. There was certainly no easy draw for Kyren Wilson and a couple of deciders against top players like Ding Junhui and Judd Trump were negotiated with the style that made this such a phenomenal moment. To see someone so young rise through the pack and win his first ranking event shows the sort of potential that we are talking about here with Kyren and there are going to be plenty more magic moments to come from him but second place is by no means bad for your first effort!!!

1st: Bingham’s tearful Triumph (May) - The winner by far though has to be the World Championship victory for Stuart Bingham at the Crucible in May. Like Kyren he didn't do it the easy way with victories against three former world champions and another one in the making in Judd Trump. After his wins against Ronnie and Judd you could see the tears in his interviews and see what it meant to him and just speaking to him about it now you can pick up two things. The first is that this couldn't happen to a nicer, more deserving player as he relishes everything that comes with being a world champion, and the second is very much an extension of the first in that he is such a snooker geek, lover and enthusiast that he appreciates what being a world champion means. He has worked so hard for this moment that it would take a sheer lack of heart for me to not give him first place on my countdown.
 
There you have it then Stuart Bingham and his Crucible win is by far my moment of 2015. I'm sure there will be many great moments in snooker in 2016 too so I look forward to getting the 2016 of snooker underway.