Wednesday, 22 November 2017
Home favourite Mark Allen falls in Northern Irish Open last 64
Tuesday, 21 November 2017
Judd Trump causes controversy with Northern Ireland concession
Trump was 3-2 down and 52-0 down in frame six when the incident occurred. On missing a red to the middle pocket and leaving Carrington back in, he took a swipe at the reds, shook Carrington's hand and left the arena. Under the rules it may well earn Trump a fine, though after earning £75,000 for making Saturday's Shanghai Masters final he may not be too bothered about that.
Earlier breaks of 56 and 79 had helped to put Carrington 3-2 in front before a 52 in the sixth had given him a good enough lead to put Trump under pressure, and force what became the fatal mistake.
Trump was not the only big name to exit in the last 128 round of the tournament though. Champion of Champions winner Shaun Murphy fell on Monday afternoon to Chen Zifan. Chen overcame Barry Hawkins in the last 64 of the English Open and picked up another huge result here against Murphy.
Starting with runs of 95 and 92 he confidently went 2-0 in front, before a couple of 40+ breaks in the third frame put him one away. Murphy would get one frame back but could claw the tour rookie back no further and would exit in the last 128 in Belfast for the second year running.
Barry Hawkins also exited to Chinese opposition as he let a 2-0 lead slip against Zhao Xintong. Having comfortably gone ahead, Hawkins may well have taken his foot off the gas when he missed a simple pink in the third when looking good to move within one of victory. Zhao would take that frame, as well as the following two to lead 3-2, aided by a run of 85 in the fourth. Hawkins forced his way back into a decider, but too many errors eventually proved costly and the Chinese youngster marches into the last 64.
There was to be no upset where the million pound chasing Ronnie O'Sullivan was concerned. he too let a 2-0 lead slip though against German Lukas Kleckers who made a magnificent 137 break in frame three of the match. O'Sullivan had earlier opened with runs of 91 and 126 to move 2-0 ahead but the total clearance in frame three followed by a 60 in the fourth got Kleckers back level at 2-2. However, O'Sullivan soon took control again and a run of 71 in the sixth confirmed his 4-2 win.
Sam Craigie produced one of the performances of the round to take out eleventh seed Kyren Wilson. With a new pair of glasses on board, Craigie certainly showed immediate signs of improvement to open the match with a break of 106. Wilson hit straight back with his own 105 break but when Craigie added a 110 to move back in front he really looked to be confident and in charge. Wilson would not score another point in the contest as Craigie closed out the match in emphatic style, winning the final two frames in one visit also, compiling an 88 in the fourth and 81 in the fifth to book his place in round two.
Elsewhere, there were comfortable wins for defending champion Mark King, in-form Jack Lisowski, the under pressure Neil Robertson as well as the likes of Ali Carter and Mark Williams.
With both Northern Irish amateurs falling at the first hurdle, and Joe Swail and Gerard Greene both exiting in deciders, Mark Allen is already the remaining home hope and he had to battle hard to win 4-2 against Sanderson Lam.
Last 128 Results:
Mark King 4-1 Matthew Bolton
Ashley Hugill 4-2 Josh Boileau
Jamie Barrett 4-1 Ian Preece
Yan Bingtao 4-0 Robbie Williams
Zhou Yuelong 4-3 Graeme Dott
Robin Hull 4-3 Eden Sharav
Li Hang 4-3 Cao Yupeng
Ryan Day 4-3 John Astley
Ricky Walden 4-0 Hammad Miah
Jack Lisowski 4-0 Sean O'Sullivan
Jimmy Robertson 4-2 Michael White
Zhao Xintong 4-3 Barry Hawkins
Robert Milkins 4-3 Alfie Burden
Oliver Lines 4-3 Xu Si
Billy Castle 4-2 Declan Brennan
Neil Robertson 4-1 Jamie Jones
Mark Allen 4-2 Sanderson Lam
Tian Pengfei 4-2 Soheil Vahedi
Noppon Saengkham 4-3 Hamza Akbar
Yu De Lu 4-1 Craig Steadman
Fang Xiongman W/O Luca Brecel
Chris Wakelin 4-0 Chris Totten
Jimmy White 4-3 Dominic Dale
Jak Jones 4-3 Lee Walker
Niu Zhuang 4-3 Ian Burns
Ken Doherty 4-2 Peter Lines
Liam Highfield 4-3 Mark Davis
Liang Wenbo 4-1 Jackson Page
Yuan Sijun 4-1 Alan McManus
Lu Haotian 4-3 Joe Swail
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh 4-2 Allan Taylor
Chen Zifan 4-1 Shaun Murphy
John Higgins 4-2 Nigel Bond
Hossein Vafei 4-2 Anthony Hamilton
Gary Wilson 4-1 Alexander Ursenbacher
Stephen Maguire 4-0 Basem Eltahhan
Anthony McGill W/O Boonyarit Kaettikun
Adam Duffy 4-2 Rory McLeod
Zhang Yong 4-3 Sam Baird
Li Yuan 4-0 Aditya Mehta
Mei Xiwen 4-0 Jordan Brown
Alex Borg 4-3 Peter Ebdon
Ben Woollaston 4-3 Mark Joyce
Sam Craigie 4-1 Kyren Wilson
Elliot Slessor 4-0 Kurt Dunham
Kurt Maflin 4-1 Andrew Higginson
Duane Jones 4-1 Mitchell Mann
Ronnie O'Sullivan 4-2 Lukas Kleckers
Mike Dunn 4-2 Jamie Clarke
Matthew Stevens 4-0 Leo Fernandez
Michael Georgiou 4-0 David Grace
Michael Holt W/O Martin O'Donnell
Ali Carter 4-0 Chen Zhe
Xiao Guodong 4-2 Chris Keogan
Matthew Selt 4-0 Rhys Clark
Joe Perry 4-3 Gerard Greene
Akani Songsermsawad 4-2 Zhang Anda
Wang Yuchen 4-2 Scott Donaldson
Tom Ford 4-2 Fergal O'Brien
Mark Williams 4-0 James Wattana
David Gilbert 4-0 Daniel Wells
Paul Davison 4-0 Rod Lawler
Ross Muir 4-2 Thor Chuan Leong
Stuart Carrington 4-2 Judd Trump
Last 64 draw: (Picks in bold)
Mark King Vs Ashley Hugill
Yan Bingtao Vs Jamie Barrett
Ryan Day Vs Li Hang
Zhou Yuelong Vs Robin Hull
Ricky Walden Vs Jack Lisowski
Jimmy Robertson Vs Zhao Xintong
Robert Milkins Vs Oliver Lines
Neil Robertson Vs Billy Castle
Mark Allen Vs Tian Pengfei
Yu De Lu Vs Noppon Saengkham
Chris Wakelin Vs Fang Xiongman
Jak Jones Vs Jimmy White
Ken Doherty Vs Niu Zhuang
Liang Wenbo Vs Liam Highfield
Yuan Sijun Vs Lu Haotian
Thepchaiya Un-Nooh Vs Chen Zifan
John Higgins Vs Hossein Vafei
Stephen Maguire Vs Gary Wilson
Anthony McGill Vs Adam Duffy
Zhang Yong Vs Li Yuan
Mei Xiwen Vs Alex Borg
Ben Woollaston Vs Sam Craigie
Kurt Maflin Vs Elliot Slessor
Ronnie O'Sullivan Vs Duane Jones
Mike Dunn Vs Matthew Stevens
Michael Holt Vs Michael Georgiou
Ali Carter Vs Xiao Guodong
Joe Perry Vs Matthew Selt
Akani Songsermsawad Vs Wang Yuchen
Mark Williams Vs Tom Ford
David Gilbert Vs Paul Davison
Stuart Carrington Vs Ross Muir
Their are some good looking matches for Wednesday's last 64. All matches remain best-of-7 frames and that could throw a couple more surprises into the mix. I think O'Sullivan's million pound dreams will continue with a comfortable win over Duane Jones, while there are also some repeats of recent matches in the draw.
Joe Perry and Matthew Selt play for the second time in two events. Selt made two centuries in his round one win, but Perry had a couple of centuries on the way to whitewashing Selt in Shanghai which will give him a psychological advantage.
Zhou Yuelong may be the favourite to take down Finland's Robin Hull, but Hull did take out the Chinese youngster in a heldover last 128 match at the International Championships 6-2.
The likes of Jack Lisowski and Kurt Maflin are in good form at the moment, and both will be looking to keep that going. Lisowski is in the form of his life and he faces Ricky Walden who has been heading in the opposite direction in recent months but a 4-0 win in round one over Hammad Miah should boost his confidence.
There are two all-Chinese clashes as Yuan Sijun faces Lu Haotian in a match that probably will not feature much safety with two aggressive young players, while Zhang Yong takes on Li Yuan. In all 17 Chinese players have made it into the last 64 which equates to over a quarter of the draw for this round.
Watch out this week for Yan Bingtao. The draw in the top section looks very open and after making it to the International Championship semi-finals he will be as confident as ever. He started his week with a nice 4-0 win over Robbie Williams and it would be a massive shock if he were to lose in the last 64.
Expect no mistake from Neil Robertson as he looks to soldier on in the race for the Masters, though Ryan Day will not have things his own way against Li Hang. Li showed battling qualities to beat Cao Yupeng from 3-0 adrift, while Day overcame John Astley from 3-1 down himself.
Michael Holt and Anthony McGill will be in action for the first time this week after opening round walkovers, with Holt particularly looking to turnaround a poor start to the season by the standards he has set in the last couple of seasons.
Two of the invitational tour card holders Ken Doherty and Jimmy White are both worthy favourites to make the last 32. Doherty faces Niu Zhuang after beating Peter Lines in round one with a century break along the way, while Jimmy White overcame Dominic Dale in a decider to set up a meeting with Jak Jones who came through a real marathon match with Lee Walker that lasted close to five hours.
Overall, there should be some great snooker to watch on day three in Belfast in the early stages of the Northern Ireland open as we eye up who the contenders could be to take home the Alex Higgins Trophy on Sunday night.
Saturday, 18 November 2017
Northern Ireland Open Preview
All eyes will be on the man of the moment Ronnie O'Sullivan when he arrives at the Waterfront Hall. As the winner of the first home nations event in Barnsley he is now the only man left who could win the £1 million bonus and you would certainly not put it past him to keep that going by winning this week. O'Sullivan has followed that win up by making the Champion of Champions final and picking up more silverware at the Shanghai Masters.
Fantastic memories will come flooding back to defending champion Mark King, who's victory here a year ago was the first ranking title of his career and was one of the most magical moments of last season.
Mark Allen is the highest ranked home hope this week, while Joe Swail and Gerard Greene will also receive a lot of support as far as they go into the event. Alongside those are two Northern Irish amateur invites in Jordan Brown (who played last year and overcame Ben Woollaston in round one) and Declan Brennan.
There are a few notable absentees as world number one Mark Selby has decided to give Belfast a miss while Ding Junhui continues to recover from an eye injury and has also not entered. Marco Fu withdrew after the draw and has been replaced by Jamie Clarke.
Quarter 1
Defending champion Mark King has not had the greatest warm up after exiting easily in the last 64 of the Shanghai Masters and while he could get on a run this week given his draw, it is hard to see a repeat of last year's heroics for him. Jack Lisowski could be one of the men to watch though for a surprise winner from outside of the top 16. Lisowski comes to Belfast at the top of his game, and full of confidence after making his maiden ranking event semi-final in Shanghai. That came after two last 16's at the European Masters and International Championship as well as a quarter-final in the first home nations event and you would now expect the left-hander to keep on progressing. Last year's Northern Ireland runner-up Barry Hawkins does not come back this year with much form and has a tough first round draw against young Zhao Xintong. Hawkins made the last 16 in Shanghai to get beyond the last 32 stage of a ranking event for the first time this season. Michael White has been playing well and had a decent run in this event last year but also faces a tough opening round tie with Jimmy Robertson, while him and Hawkins could lock horns in the last 64 before a possible last 32 with Lisowski or even Ricky Walden who is well overdue a good run.
Beyond that section of death, I have gone with the under pressure Neil Robertson to rise to the occasion and make it to at least the semi-finals. Given his recent form it may be difficult to see this happening but the Australian is far too good not to turn his recent slump around. He has not been to a ranking event semi-final since the 2016 European Masters which is a huge reason behind why he is in this battle to make the Masters. There has been very little wrong with his scoring though. Match sheets from both the International Championship (where he fell in the last 16) and the English Open (exiting in the quarter-finals) will testify to that. I like his draw for this week, and think that if he can find something he is more than good enough to come through and make it to the semi-finals. When the best players have their backs to the wall they can produce some of their very best and this may well be the case for Robertson in Belfast.
Quarter 2
Liang Wenbo was one to watch on the Masters race, but a run to the last 16 of the Shanghai Masters has put him £13,000 clear of Neil Robertson and should be able to keep him and Ryan Day at arms length so long as he gets a few wins both here and in York. He has a testing opening round tie against rising young Welsh star Jackson Page but if he comes through that nicely I could see him making at least the last 16 as well this week which would put him in pole position in the Masters list despite a fairly quiet start to this season. He looked decent in Shanghai and could certainly prove a big danger in this section.
My second quarter choice though is the recent Champion of Champions Shaun Murphy. Murphy's victory against Ronnie O'Sullivan in that final is put into even greater perspective by the ease with which O'Sullivan has gone to Shanghai and dismantled the draw to take the title. The 2005 world champion has been in fantastic form this season. Before winning in Coventry he had already been in two finals and this is by far the best start to a season he has had for a number of years. His long potting was superb in Coventry, as it usually is whenever he picks up a trophy, and his scoring has been superb in recent weeks. He looks confident at the table, and it is from there that he is able to be so aggressive and take the game to the best players in the world, which is when Murphy is at his most dangerous. Raring to go again this week in Belfast, there are a couple of banana skins in his section of the draw that he will have to get over to make the latter stages. Thepchaiya Un-Nooh may be inconsistent but can blow any player away on his day, while Alan McManus, Yuan Sijun nor Lu Haotian would be no pushover in a best-of-7 frames contest. However, with the form Murphy is in and with a week to refresh himself after his Coventry triumph along with the pressure that certain top players in this section may be under this week for reasons outlined earlier, I think this is a good chance for him to kick on.
Quarter 3
The third quarter is all about the possible million pound man Ronnie O'Sullivan. The way that O'Sullivan is playing he could end up picking up a million pounds in prize money this season without winning the four home nations events. If you include the Champion of Champions and Hong Kong Masters runner-up prize money, O'Sullivan has so far picked up £337,000, £242,000 of which goes onto his ranking. O'Sullivan is playing phenomenally well and romped to the title in Shanghai, despite a short turnaround after making the final in Coventry last Sunday. His second title of the season coming in such a circumstance is more than enough to suggest that there is plenty more in the locker and he is going to take some serious stopping in Belfast.
John Higgins may have done a lot better in the last month if he did not keep running in to O'Sullivan, defeats in the last 16 of the English Open, quarter-finals of the Champion of Champions and semi-finals in Shanghai were all inflicted by the Rocket, while Yan Bingtao overcame him in the quarter-finals of the International Championship having already seen off O'Sullivan in the last 64. It is certainly taking some good performances to beat Higgins right now and it would not be a shock to see O'Sullivan and Higgins meet again here in the quarter-finals. Fellow Scotsman Anthony McGill may have something to say about that though. Despite losing to Higgins in the first round of the Champion of Champions and not qualifying for Shanghai, he has had a good season so far. A semi-finalist in the first home nations event, he also made the Indian Open final in September and has added another three quarter-finals this season. His draw looks favourable and if he continues some of his good early season play he should make the last 16 in my view, where a potential meeting with Higgins could be his undoing.
My choice in this quarter however, is another man in great form having already reached two finals this season and that is Kyren Wilson. Those two brilliant runs from Wilson came at the World Open before he lost out to Ding Junhui, and then in the opening home nations event in Barnsley, Wilson came through the field before losing out to O'Sullivan and in both of those events he played nicely. A year ago he overcame O'Sullivan in the last 16 stages on the way to making the last four where he would ultimately lose out to eventual winner Mark King. Despite losing from 4-0 up to Martin Gould in the last 32 of the International Championships he still looked to be playing really well and had a maximum 147 break in that match. The scoring of Wilson looks to be where he has improved most so far on last season. Already in the 2017/2018 campaign he has managed 19 century breaks, already three more than he managed in the whole of 2016/2017 despite making a final, two big semi-finals and a World quarter-final. With a strong tactical game and wise match-play brain, Wilson is going to take some beating this season if his form continues.
Quarter 4
Mark Williams consistent run at the start of this season continued in Shanghai, making yet another quarter-final before running into O'Sullivan. That was his fifth quarter-final in seven ranking events this season, though he has only converted one of those into a semi-final at the Riga Masters. He has lost to a lot of in-form players this season as well, showing that it is taking good performances to beat him and you would not put another good run past him here. Ali Carter is another top player with a great chance this week in Belfast. In Shanghai he fell in a last 32 decider to Stephen Maguire, who he beat on the way to the quarter-finals in Daqing. With Fu removed from the top half of this quarter, Carter is the firm favourite from those that remain to make the quarter-finals and this could well turn out to be a big week for the Captain. With that top mini section opening up, it could present a chance for Michael Holt, but his form would need to improve to make that the case. He last won a match at a main venue in the last 64 of the World Open, with only a couple of last 128 qualifying wins coming in the two months since then for the Nottingham man.
My final quarter choice for the week is Shanghai Masters runner-up Judd Trump. Trump has been one of the most clinical players so far this season and he finds it easy to dominate players over any format. In 23 matches won this season, eight have been whitewash wins for Trump, while him and O'Sullivan top the century chart with 31 for the season so far, which is eight more than the next best. Having laser eye surgery has had the desired impact on his game as he defended the European Masters and made the final last week in Shanghai, as well as the International Championship quarters before losing out narrowly to Allen and also losing in a final frame to Lisowski at the English Open. On the occasions that he has been beaten since his Belgian triumph, he has been beaten by someone in equally great form. If he is in the mood this week there is no reason why he could not steamroll his way into the latter stages once again.
Tournament winner selection: Kyren Wilson
It should be another great week of snooker, and could cause a few surprises too and follow the precedent of last year. The tournament will be covered in full by Eurosport, while Quest will again have coverage of the event on freeview during the afternoon sessions. The format is the same as the English Open and the four home nations events of last season.
Fantasy Snooker: Shanghai Masters points
Perhaps due to the short turn around following the Champion of Champions only two players picked the overall winner Ronnie O'Sullivan, and both of these players deployed a captains pick on him so huge rewards have followed for them.
The two players to have Jack Lisowski as a season-long selection are getting plenty from their foresight too as the left-hander has backed up his recent good form by making a maiden ranking event semi-final in Shanghai.
Here is how the table looks in full following events this week:
Friday, 17 November 2017
Ronnie O'Sullivan and Judd Trump to face off in Shanghai finale
Trump reached what will be his third final in Shanghai by overcoming Jack Lisowski in the first last four tie, while O'Sullivan beat John Higgins in their third meeting in the last four events to make a final in China for the first time since winning this title back in 2009.
Trump went 2-0 ahead early on in his semi-final aided by runs of 52 and 70 but in his first ever full ranking semi-final, Lisowski hit back quickly making a 79 in the third frame on the way to levelling the match at 2-2 going into the mid-session interval.
The match high break came in frame five as Trump loaded up a break of 105 to regain the advantage, but a nice 55 in the sixth was enough for Lisowski to pull himself level again with his good friend. Successive frames again saw Trump pull away and take a 5-3 lead, putting him just a frame away from the final.
Lisowski did look like staying in the game and pulling the score back to 4-5, but an under-hit positional shot from yellow to green left Lisowski having to play safe 25 ahead with 25 left. Trump would win a black ball battle to force the re-spot after Lisowski missed a long attempt that rattled in both bottom corner pocket jaws. Then a mis-hit safety from the last four rookie left the twice runner-up a shot at the re-spot from mid-distance and it was the sort of shot that Trump usually buries, and this occasion was to see no exception.
Then it was the turn of O'Sullivan and Higgins, as the Scotsman looked to avenge the 6-0 drubbing handed out by the five times world champion in last week's Champion of Champions quarter-finals. When a scrappy opening frame went to Higgins he was already better off than a week earlier, but things were not to improve hugely when he found himself 3-1 down at the mid-session interval. A run of 79 in the second was followed by a sublime 67 in the third frame.
79 from Higgins after the break got him back in it at 2-3, but O'Sullivan's two frame lead was soon restored, and then in frame seven a big blow was landed. A run of 50 from Higgins was not enough to take the frame and O'Sullivan came from behind to take it on the colours and move one away from the final at 5-2. As always, he then saved his best until last by compiling a superb break of 123 to close out victory and set up a fan favourite final.
Semi-Final results:
Judd Trump 6-3 Jack Lisowski
Ronnie O'Sullivan 6-2 John Higgins
The Final:
Judd Trump Vs Ronnie O'Sullivan (Best-of-19 frames)
This will be the 15th meeting between Trump and O'Sullivan (outside of Championship and Premier Leagues) and the previous 14 have been shared equally between the two. This will also be the fifth time they have played in a major final, and the previous four of those have also been halved. O'Sullivan overcame Trump twice at the back end of 2014 in the Champion of Champions and UK Championship finals while Trump was triumphant in the 2015 World Grand Prix and 2016 European Masters final. Two of those finals went to deciding frames, while the others were both 10-7 so those stats would suggest a close match.
Prior to O'Sullivan's 6-5 win in the Hong Kong Masters semi-finals in the summer, Trump was on a three match winning streak over the Rocket which suggests the stage when this was a "Master and his apprentice" type battle has long since gone.
This is very much a worthy final as the pair have been far and away the best players of the week. Trump has reached this stage for the loss of just the three frames he conceded in the semi-finals, while O'Sullivan has come back strong from defeat in the Champion of Champions final to make his second final in a week, only dropping six frames himself despite playing his five games in the space of three days.
Make no mistake, this would be a valuable victory for O'Sullivan to prove he can get the job done in China, with this being his first ranking event final in China for eight years, in which time he has made 11 ranking finals in the UK and Europe. However, it was this tournament that he won in 2009 after falling short a year earlier in Shanghai to Ricky Walden. Trump meanwhile is also in his third Shanghai final having lost the previous two to John Higgins in 2012 and Kyren Wilson in 2015, both 10-9.
Whatever the outcome, this could well be one of the great finals and should provide more than a fitting end to what has been a great week of snooker.
Thursday, 16 November 2017
Judd Trump and Ronnie O'Sullivan storm into Shanghai Masters semi-finals
Trump is yet to even drop a single frame at the venue in Shanghai, having now produced four 5-0 victories, adding to wins over Alfie Burden and Ben Woollaston earlier in the week by thrashing Stephen Maguire and Luca Brecel on a bumper Thursday of action. Against Maguire, his opponent had chances in the opening two frames but could not force a way through, and after falling 2-0 behind he would not register another point in the contest. Runs of 80 and 108 would help Trump into the last eight.
That was followed in the evening with the victory against in-form Belgian Brecel. He had come from 3-2 and 4-3 behind to beat Graeme Dott in the round of 16, and looked like taking the opener against Trump until missing the final black. Trump would eventually double it into the bottom corner and did not look back. Fantastic break-building that produced contributions of 66, 87, 92 and 114 in the final four frames saw Trump race into Friday's semi-finals, while Brecel could only manage another six points after missing frame ball in the first.
Meanwhile, O'Sullivan's day began with a whitewash of Barry Hawkins. Runs of 51, 67, 78, 87 and 90 made sure there was a 50+ break in every frame from the recent English Open winner and put him into the quarter-finals with ease. In that match he would face Mark Williams after the Welshman saw off world number one Mark Selby in the last 16. Selby started well, making a break of 114 on the way to a 2-1 lead. A brilliant counter-punch of 108 had Williams level and a run of 57 soon had him in front at 3-2. Selby levelled at 3-3, but breaks of 66 and 85 in the final two frames helped Williams to finish the job.
However, he was unable to offer the same challenge to O'Sullivan after losing the opener on a re-spotted black after being ahead in that frame. He certainly had his chances scoring at least 30 points in each of the first four frames but he would lose them all, the highlight for the Rocket being a run of 96 that saw him go into the interval 4-0 in front. A run of 62 in the fifth frame ensured Williams avoided a whitewash but he would go no further as O'Sullivan sealed his semi-final place in the sixth.
O'Sullivan will now face John Higgins for the third time in a month, after John Higgins also had two easy enough victories on day four in Shanghai. The Scotsman started out against Liang Wenbo in the last 16, someone he had never previously been beaten by in eight attempts. It was not to be ninth time lucky for the Chinese number two, and he quickly fell 2-0 adrift though did win the third with a run of 56. Contributions of 51 and 59 helped Higgins to win the frames either side of the interval and lead 4-1 and despite a break of 105 in the sixth frame, it was soon all over with Higgins making 67 in the seventh to secure victory.
He would face Martin Gould in the quarter-finals after Gould scored a nice 5-2 victory against Marco Fu that featured high breaks of 124 and 84. It did not start well though for the Englishman as he fell 2-0 adrift, though he did get the third frame on the board with two 50+ contributions. He had a chance to win the fourth frame and level at 2-2 but when Higgins took it to lead 3-1 at the interval this seemed to kill the match. The fifth and sixth frames followed for the Scot after the break and he was into the semi-finals a 5-1 winner, despite not managing a break of above 50 in the contest.
The final man into the semi-finals is Jack Lisowski who is in the first full ranking semi-final of his career. His furious Thursday started with a tight 5-4 win over Mark Allen. It was Allen that was to be left disappointed after losing from 4-2 up and making three centuries of 100, 102 and 115 in those opening six frames. A 54 in the seventh kept Lisowski in the hunt while Allen's best chance to win came in frame eight, and when that came a went a 62 in the decider proved enough for the Englishman to cross the line
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| Allen was not at all happy with how he lost his match to Lisowski |
Then in the quarter-finals he took on Norweigian Kurt Maflin, who had earlier beaten Mei Xiwen 5-2, and Maflin made a strong start by taking the first frame with a run of 65 and then went 50 points ahead in the second frame. Lisowski would come back to take it and level the scores, and did not look back until he was 4-1 in front, with a run of 82 in the fourth and a century straight after the interval. He had a chance to seal victory in the fifth but his earlier 57 break was cancelled out by a Maflin clearance of 77, a swift 70 then saw him close to 3-4 and out the pressure on the left-hander. He was equal to it though, dominating frame eight to secure what is already the best run of his career.
Last 16 Results:
Kurt Maflin 5-2 Mei Xiwen
Jack Lisowski 5-4 Mark Allen
Judd Trump 5-0 Stephen Magurie
Luca Brecel 5-4 Graeme Dott
John Higgins 5-2 Liang Wenbo
Martin Gould 5-2 Marco Fu
Ronnie O'Sullivan 5-0 Barry Hawkins
Mark Williams 5-3 Mark Selby
Quarter-Final Results:
Jack Lisowski 5-3 Kurt Maflin
Judd Trump 5-0 Luca Brecel
John Higgins 5-1 Martin Gould
Ronnie O'Sullivan 5-1 Mark Williams
Semi-Final Draw:
Judd Trump Vs Jack Lisowski
Ronnie O'Sullivan Vs John Higgins
The first semi-final on Friday will see Judd Trump take on his good friend Jack Lisowski. In seven previous meetings, Lisowski has in fact won four of those including the most recent at the English Open last month. He has been playing well for the best part of the month and it is no surprise at all to see him make his maiden semi-final here. It would also be no surprise if he kept the run going and won the whole tournament such is how well he is playing and scoring presently.
Judd Trump though is proving an even tougher nut to crack than usual this week. In four matches he has not dropped a frame though this will present the biggest test of the week over the best-of-11 frames if Lisowski gets off to a good start. There is a lot of pressure on Lisowski playing on the TV (something he said in Barnsley he is not quite as comfortable with as he would like) and in the biggest match of his life. A win could open all sorts of doors for Lisowski and be the massive breakthrough he needs. While for Trump, it would be his fifth ranking final of 2017 and his seventh since the start of the 2016/2017 season which is a phenomenal display. It would also offer a third chance for Trump to win the Shanghai Masters, having been runner-up in 2012 and 2015.
Then later in the day, John Higgins would face Ronnie O'Sullivan for the third time this season in all competitions, but is still searching for his first victory. Wins for O'Sullivan at the Hong Kong Masters invitational, and the English Open came in deciding frames, but last week's best-of-11 frame quarter-final in Coventry saw O'Sullivan dish out an embarrassing 6-0 loss to the Scotsman. That will surely spur Higgins on to avenge that defeat but with O'Sullivan in sublime form it is a very difficult proposition.
Despite the short turnaround and having to play two matches a day on both Wednesday and Thursday, O'Sullivan has made it to this stage for the loss of just four frames and just looks to be picking up from his performances at the Champion of Champions and English Open. Higgins has had some good victories himself though his scoring does not look to be at the same level as O'Sullivan's if you compare Thursday's match sheets. Higgins failed to make a break of above 50 against Martin Gould and did not register a break over 70 in any of the ten frames won on the day. The interesting point in this match will be whether there is any psychological scarring from the 6-0 defeat last week for Higgins or if that result instead offers the inspiration to beat O'Sullivan here.
Wednesday, 15 November 2017
Mark Selby comes through second Shanghai Masters decider
Reigning World champion Mark Selby had to come through another decider in the last 32 of the Shanghai Masters as he saw off Alan McManus.
Selby had already survived a scare against Chris Wakelin in the last 64 to come through 5-4 and Wednesday told a similar tale. Once again the world number one started well as he took a 3-1 lead at the mid-session interval with breaks of 98 and 56 in frames three and four. McManus came fighting back though with a run of 66 in the fifth and then took the sixth to level the match at 3-3.
Selby went back in front 4-3 but McManus dominated the eight to force a decider. Yet again, there was to be no final frame weakness from Selby who continues his remarkable levels in deciders. Selby has now won eight out of nine deciding frames he has played this season.
Things were much more comfortable for Judd Trump who enters the last 16 having not dropped a frame at the venue in Shanghai this week. This time it was Ben Woollaston who got the whitewash treatment, only managing 31 points in the entire match. There were four breaks above 50 from Trump who had runs of 50, 64, 74 and 92 on the way to another emphatic win.
Ronnie O'Sullivan had to come through two matches on Wednesday to book his last 16 place, but did so without any signs of tiredness from the long trip and short turnaround. O'Sullivan fell short in the Champion of Champions final on Sunday night in Coventry and subsequently had his last 64 match in Shanghai moved to Wednesday morning. In that he overcame Gary Wilson 5-2 with the tournament's new highest break, setting that target at 144 in the fifth frame.
Then in the evening he faced Joe Perry in the last 32. Perry played well making two centuries in his last 64 win, and started nicely by taking the opener in this one. O'Sullivan hit straight back with a 127 break to level the match and Perry would only score a further 19 points in the contest. Breaks of 58 and 56 in frames four and six assisted O'Sullivan on the way to a 5-1 win.
John Higgins looked in fine form as he dusted off Zhou Yuelong 5-1. Higgins was on for a maximum in the opening frame before going in off on the brown. That 125 was followed by breaks of 70, 97 and a closing century of 104.
Fellow Scotsman Stephen Maguire is also into the round of 16 after a tight 5-4 win over Ali Carter. Carter saw off Maguire comfortably at the same stage of the International Championship and would have been hoping for repeat business but soon found himself 2-0 adrift. Breaks of 77 and a massive 143 had Carter level at the mid-session interval but Maguire regained the advantage at 4-2. Carter hit back again with a run of 69 on the way to forcing a decider, though in a lengthy affair Maguire ran out the victor on the colours.
There were also whitewash wins for Mark Allen against Fergal O'Brien, featuring high breaks of 69, 85, 104 and 133 as O'Brien would only manage 25 total points in the match, while Liang Wenbo continued his strong start to the week by thrashing David Gilbert. Liang mustered four breaks of above 60 in the win.
The whitewashes did not end there either, Mark Williams defeated Gerard Greene without dropping a frame in a match that featured a high break of 133 from the Welshman in the opening frame as his good start to the season continued. Luca Brecel recorded his second of the tournament against Jamie Jones. Runs of 60, 72 and 74 helped the Belgian into the last 16. Martin Gould was also in on the act with two centuries in his 5-0 win over Akani Songsermsawad.
Barry Hawkins is into the last 16 of a ranking event for the first time this season after coming from 2-0 down to overcome Michael White 5-3. After falling behind early, he shut the Welshman out in frames three, four and five making breaks of 87, 91 and 121 in the process, while also winning the eighth frame for victory on the final black.
2006 World champion Graeme Dott progressed into the last 16 with a 5-2 win over Robbie Williams. Dott finished the match off with a 101 clearance and won frames four, five and six from behind - most impressively in the sixth from 66-0 behind with a 76 clearance.
Last 32 Results:
Mei Xiwen 5-3 Jimmy Robertson
Kurt Maflin 5-3 Yu De Lu
Jack Lisowski 5-4 Cao Yupeng
Mark Allen 5-0 Fergal O'Brien
Graeme Dott 5-2 Robbie Williams
Luca Brecel 5-0 Jamie Jones
Stephen Maguire 5-4 Ali Carter
Judd Trump 5-0 Ben Woollaston
John Higgins 5-1 Zhou Yuelong
Liang Wenbo 5-0 David Gilbert
Martin Gould 5-0 Akani Songsermsawad
Marco Fu 5-3 Robert Milkins
Barry Hawkins 5-3 Michael White
Ronnie O'Sullivan 5-1 Joe Perry
Mark Williams 5-0 Gerard Greene
Mark Selby 5-4 Alan McManus
Last 16 Draw: (Picks in Bold)
Kurt Maflin Vs Mei Xiwen
Mark Allen Vs Jack Lisowski
Luca Brecel Vs Graeme Dott
Judd Trump Vs Stephen Maguire
John Higgins Vs Liang Wenbo
Marco Fu Vs Martin Gould
Barry Hawkins Vs Ronnie O'Sullivan
Mark Selby Vs Mark Williams
Jack Lisowski has already beaten Mark Allen twice in 2017, in the Riga Masters and Gibraltar Open as well as making it to at least the last 16 for the fourth ranking event in a row, and his fifth overall at the start of this 2017/2018 season. His scoring is the best part of his game by a long way and he has shown that again this week. As for Allen, he too has been in fantastic form with some particularly heavy scoring in his victories this week - which is very similar to most of the tournaments he has played in the last month. In China he has excelled making the World Open semi-finals and the International Championship final, but he has a very tough test here against Lisowski if he is going to continue that strong run.
Luca Brecel will face a tricky test against Graeme Dott. The Scotsman has looked good for his two wins against Xiao Guodong and Robbie Williams making centuries in both games and reaching the last 16 in China for the second time this season. Brecel may have said he was tired and not too bothered about this tournament after the Champion of Champions but so far he has recorded two 5-0 wins and looked solid. Some of Dott's comebacks in frames against Robbie Williams suggest he is up for the fight this week as he always is when he plays well, and his tactical play can also give Brecel problems.
Despite stating his tiredness from a hectic schedule at the start of the week, John Higgins looks to be in fine form, nearly making a maximum in frame one of his last 32 encounter. His record against Liang Wenbo is an excellent one with the current Chinese number two not yet managing to beat him in a major meeting. Liang has been going well in his last couple of matches, scoring heavily in wins over John Astley and David Gilbert. If Liang plays his best he obviously has a great chance, but with good looking form and a perfect head to head it is going to be tough for him to beat Higgins.
Another interesting meeting awaits between Judd Trump and Stephen Maguire. Trump is yet to drop a frame at the venue while Maguire has had to dig in to beat Rory McLeod and Ali Carter in deciding frames. The head to head between the two is pretty even in ranking event play, though Trump has won the last couple of meetings. Given that Maguire was one of the last players to finish on days two and three he may not be as fresh as Trump who seems to be on a roll this week. A good start will be vital for the Scotsman or he could easily be steam rolled like Trump's previous opponents.
Barry Hawkins and Ronnie O'Sullivan will meet for the first time since Hawkins knocked O'Sullivan out of the 2016 World Championship. However, that is one of only two occasions when Hawkins has beaten the Rocket in major competition from 11 previous meetings. It has not been the best start to the season from the left-hander and he has gone 2-0 down in both of his opening two games so will need a much faster start if he is to have any chance here against such a great front runner. O'Sullivan himself has had a quick turnaround but showed no signs of slowing down and was still in great form in his two Wednesday wins.
Mark's Selby and Williams meet in the last 16 for the second Chinese event in a row and have had contrasting routes to this stage. Williams has only dropped a single frame in his wins over Wang Yuchen and Gerard Greene and played pretty nicely, while Selby has come through two deciders in the last two rounds. They have played three times in 2017 in big tournaments and while Selby has won them all, they have been tight tussles and the Welshman has had his chances. With the world number one's hectic schedule and unconvincing route to this stage, this may be the time for Williams to overcome him.
Following the last 16 in an early session time than usual, the quarter-finals will take place in the evening again over the best-of-9 frames ahead of Friday's semi-finals, making it a packed day of action on day four in Shanghai.
