Player of the month in
May and that is the man that became World Snooker champion on May Day, and that
is Mark Selby. I have to admit I didn’t think that Mark Selby would have enough
left in him for an assault on the world title after another long season, having
struggled in 2013 and 2012 having done exactly the same, and his performance in
the China Open quarter-finals against Mike Dunn was so bad, that I feared once
again for Selby’s Crucible campaign. He was in trouble in the opening round
against young Michael White, who managed to claw Selby back to a decider, but
Mark struggled through 10-9. In the second round Mark had a slightly easier
time against Ali Carter, before thrashing Alan McManus in the quarters. The semi-finals
brought out a true classic between Mark and one of the players of the season in
Neil Robertson who’d just completed his 100 centuries in a season, and the
Aussie was a strong favourite in my eyes to make the final. Mark was strong
again though and he played incredibly well to beat Neil and make his second
world final. There he played his old rival Ronnie O’Sullivan and despite
finding himself in a precarious position after day one of the final, he was
able to claw things back on the Monday afternoon as the whole final turned on
its head. In a tense and exciting final session it was Selby that had the best
of things to run out an 18-14 winner and win his first World Championship. It’s
tough to say there will be more to come for Mark because there are so many good
players at the top of the game these days, and they’ll be challenging at
Crucible time for the big one. Mark though is one of the best safety players
out there, even when he’s nowhere near his best which is a great asset to his
game, and when he is on top form he’s able to score with the same power as the
likes of Ronnie, Robertson and Ding.
These 2 games for me were classic matches and grab the pure
essence of Mark Selby’s all round game:
Mark Selby 17-15 Neil Robertson – Mark won the first session
of this match to lead 5-3, before drawing the next session to lead 9-7 going
into the Saturday where they would play the final two sessions. Mark opened up
with a 104 century to lead 10-7 before losing all of the next three frames to
be pegged back on terms at 10-10. The next four frames of the session were
shared as the players came into one final session with the scores all square at
12-12 and everything to play for with a place against Ronnie O’Sullivan in the
final looming. A break of 74 from Neil put him 13-12 in front but as Selby
always does he hit back with even more as breaks of 79 and 37 helped him gain
the lead back at 14-13. A run of 53 from Neil levelled the scores again in this
enthralling semi-final at 14-14 at the final mid-session break. Mark came out
of the break the stronger of the two and in gritty Selby style he won the next
two frames with breaks of 77 and 54 to go one away from the final at 16-14.
This match had always been about the players trading blows and big responses, and
a huge response from Robertson to go 15-16 behind with a marvellous century
left us asking if this one was going all the way. It didn’t turn out that way
though as Mark responded again as he always has done, summing up his mentality
to win the match with a fantastic break under pressure of 74 to get into the
final winning 17-15.
Mark Selby 18-14 Ronnie O’Sullivan – On day one of the final
Mark found himself in a precarious position trailing O’Sullivan 10-5 and those
aren’t usually positions that Ronnie squanders. However, Mark never gives up
and always digs in, winning all of the next six frames with breaks including
58, 62, 55, 52 and 74 to somehow find a way to shut O’Sullivan out and lead for
the first time in this final on the Monday afternoon at 11-10. Ronnie won two
of the next three with breaks of 50 and 100 to level the match at 12-12. Mark
followed up with another three frames in a row to give himself some breathing
space at 15-12 by simply managing to grind O’Sullivan down as he can do with so
many opponents. When Ronnie came back at him and closed to within one at 14-15.
That didn’t faze Mark though as he made superb breaks of 127, 87 and a superb
clearance of 35 in the last to win the match and the World Championships,
inflicting Ronnie’s first Crucible defeat on him since 2011, proving that he
has the ability to do things against Ronnie O’Sullivan that nobody else in the
game of snooker can, such his mental strength, gritty style and overall
ability.
Mark Selby is a fantastic ambassador for the game of
snooker, entering all of the events on tour that he possibly can to balance his
snooker with his family life (which will become difficult now that him and his
wife Vikki have recently had their first child) but he gives his all in any
event big or small and he never gives up in any match until the fat lady sings,
which demonstrates his incredible attitude that so many young players could
learn from to dig in when he’s not playing well, and is the sole reason behind
so much of his success and with an attitude like his I’m so glad that he won
the World Title because he is one of those players that it would’ve been a
massive shame if he went his whole career without one. An all-round nice guy on
and off of the snooker table, Mark Selby deserves all of the brilliant things
that come his way.
Mark Selby is superb contender for the title of Player of the Year which will be decided by me on January 2nd, but before that we've still got plenty of months to look back on, continuing tomorrow with June so be sure to come back for more of the same in 24 hours.
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