Posts

Shooting from the Hip

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The Snooker Shootout has become a regular event on the snooker tour calendar with past winners including Nigel Bond, Michael Georgiou and Thepchaiya Un-Nooh. The Watford based tournament is fast and frenetic as all 128 players are pitched against each other in a hybrid form of snooker and pool that attracts a noisy audience and produces an unexpected winner at the end of the few days played. The creation of this tournament has attracted praise and criticism, especially with the recent addition of it being classed as a ranking event with valuable points attached to the winner. Born out of the Pot Black and Power Snooker formats, the Shootout has managed to survive and has prevented the other two from making a comeback. As excitement builds for this competition next week, I would like to argue the case for this fixture and why it should remain part of the calendar. Having been a snooker fan for over thirty years, I have seen many changes in snooker with players and tournaments crash a...

Judd’s Judgement

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In a recent interview with Phil Seymour for BetVictor, Judd Trump expressed his concern for the future of the UK youth game, saying that few players were breaking through into the professional tour, describing them as “struggling”. He went on to say that he thought that China was championing the market with many of the Chinese field expected to make up “ half the top sixteen in the next five to ten years”. Trump went on to say that he believes he could be playing for the next fifteen to twenty years and already has Ronnie’s 1,000 centuries’ record in his sights, confident that he can possibly make 1,500 career centuries. Perhaps a bold statement but one that looks viable with his current form, having already won last year’s World Championship and looking dominant in the current German Masters. Once considered to be a player who led a lavish lifestyle, posting tweets from Dubai or driving fast cars, the player has scaled down his “downtime”, concentrating on match preparation but st...

A Crucible VIP ?

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The Crucible has been a long standing venue for snooker's World Championship tournament. Since 1977, the thrills and spills of the sport have been played out in this Sheffield theatre and it has become a treasure that is savoured by all that survey. However in recent weeks, The World Snooker Tour, as the body is now called, has revamped its Masters event at the Alexandra Palace, proving those who wish to pay a bit extra the chance to experience the VIP treatment with private viewing boxes installed, a Century Club and a soft seating area at the back of the arena. The question has been posed of whether to roll this out this out to other tournaments and especially the World Championship. When this question was posed on Twitter regarding revamping the Crucible event, there was swift retort from Barry Hearn, Chairman of the World Snooker Tour, saying: "Crucible stays as it is. Too special to change" With only 980 seats, the Crucible provides an intimate atmosphere wi...

You couldn’t go wrong with Ron

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Mention the name Ron Gross in the snooker circle and nothing comes back but warm memories and praise for this great man. A former amateur and professional player, Ron Gross lived through the golden era of snooker, spanning from the post war years to the development of the World Championship. Ron was a three time amateur champion, winning the title in 1957,1960, 1962 and was a late addition to the professional tour, turning professional in 1972. He even beat the late, great Joe Davis in an exhibition match. He had a mixed fortune at the World Championship with his best performance being in 1973 when he made the last 24. Ron was lucky enough to play in a era when the likes of Patsy Houlihan, Patsy Fagan and lesser known players  like Wally West who also owned the Top Spot Snooker Hall. This was an era where you could literally get drunk on the atmosphere that snooker created. Players flocked to Ron’s club in Neasden to play and this was a club that was a hub for money games. Open t...

A Cut above the Rest

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For anyone who is involved in snooker, you would have seen Gary Wilkinson in the tournament foyer issuing passes and tickets to people attending. However before joining the World Snooker Tour team, Gary was part of the man tour as a player from 1987-2006. I remember Gary from when I first started watching snooker and was impressed by his calibre as a player. He competed in a era when Alex Higgins and Steve Davis were fading lights in the sport and Stephen Hendry had made a meteoric rise to the top of the game. Wilkinson first came to the forefront of snooker when he beat Alex Higgins in the non-ranking WBSA Invitational event in 1988, 5-4. However Gary played at a time when single person dominance was still apparent and this was a major stumbling block for many of those who competed at the time for the winning glory. Wilkinson sadly came up against that barrage of competition and never reached his full potential. Gary managed to get through to two major finals, losing in the Brit...

The Arabian Journey

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An announcement was made by Barry Hearn just before Christmas that World Snooker had signed a ten year deal for a tournament in Riyadh in Saudi Arabia, beginning this October. With a total prize fund of £2.5 million pounds, one lucky winner gets set to scoop £500,000 in prize money. These are exciting times as snooker blows the sand off the tables of this region. Anyone who knows the history of snooker in this neck of the woods knows that mixed success exists here, the Dubai Classic ran successfully for many years and the Bahrain Open bombed after one tournament due to a poor response. The aim of targeting this area of the world is two fold. First to showcase snooker and secondly to energise a new market, bringing potential Arabic players out of the woodwork to play on the main stage. Hearn hopes that this approach will continue to expand his snooker mission of  the globalisation of the sport. Barry Hearn has sold this tournament to players by saying that you can either take part...

Should Stephen Lee make a return to snooker?

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Stephen Lee was probably one of the most recognised players in snooker until recently and impressed his audience with a game that was accompanied with a Rolls Royce cue action that only is equalled by Shaun Murphy currently. A player who turned professional in 1992, he rose up the ranking list and  climbed to a high of number five. His game dipped before he returned to form in the 2011/12 season and compiled 184 centuries in his career. I was inspired to write this piece after learning that an online petition has been mounted to campaign for his return to the sport with 783 signatures. Lee was banned from snooker after the governing found him guilty of match fixing, deliberately losing matches for financial gain. A series of matches were cited including matches against Ken Doherty and Marco Fu in the Malta Cup in 2008, losing the first frame against Stephen Hendry and Mark King at the 2008 UK Championship and losing matches with a pre-determined score against Neil Robertson at the ...