Aaron Bower at the Crucible 

Wu Yize in driving seat but Shaun Murphy stays in touch in Crucible final

Wu Yize will carry a 10-7 lead into the second day of his World Snooker Championship final against Shaun Murphy
  
  

Wu Yize takes a shot during World Snooker Championship match at the Crucible Theatre
Wu Yize hopes to become the second Chinese champion. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

With celebrities aplenty in attendance and a protester bursting on to the hallowed Crucible floor, at one stage on Sunday there threatened to be more headlines off the baize than on it during the opening half of snooker’s two-day extravaganza to crown its world champion.

But by Sunday evening and as the halfway point of the final between Shaun Murphy and Wu Yize approached, both competitors ensured all the talk will be about what is to follow on Monday afternoon and evening inside one of sport’s most famous buildings.

There is history to be made irrespective of who triumphs at some stage on Monday. If it is Murphy who claims his second world title, that would break the record for the longest gap between world titles by some distance: Murphy’s maiden win was way back in 2005 when he was only 22.

But after Zhao Xintong’s historic victory last year burst open the boundaries of possibility for Chinese snooker, there is now the very realistic chance of back-to-back and different champions from China. Should Wu win, it would lean into a wider story of a younger generation of stars taking control of the baize.

He would be the fourth first-time winner in the past four years after Kyren Wilson, Luca Brecel and Zhao. With these narratives in mind, it is not unreasonable to question whether Monday provides a seminal moment for snooker’s direction.

Murphy perhaps symbolically represents the hopes of an older generation; only two men – Ronnie O’Sullivan and Mark Williams – have won the tournament in their 40s this century. Snooker is fast becoming a young man’s game and the emergence of Wu here has suggested most of the tidal wave of young talent continues to come from China.

The times may well be changing for good in snooker but there is a long way to go before we can be definitive on that count after a compelling opening day. The first eight frames in Sunday’s afternoon session were split equally; a good achievement for Wu given he was in action until almost midnight on Saturday in his dramatic victory over Mark Allen.

But there was no real slumber from the 22-year-old, who is attempting to win only his second ranking event after a triumph in the International Championship five months ago. He moved into a 3-0 lead, albeit not with the kind of glistening, error-free snooker he has produced on occasions over the past fortnight.

In the third of those frames a female spectator jumped the barriers and shouted out what many perceived to be comments about the TV licence fee. She was promptly stopped by the referee, Rob Spencer, whose experience as a police officer may well have come in handy in ensuring a swift end to the drama.

But that interruption came at the same time Murphy himself seemed to wake from his malaise. The Magician had been wasteful and sloppy inside the opening hour or so but breaks of 85, 98, 77 and 109 in the blink of an eye transformed what had threatened to be a nightmare opening session into one where he found himself 4-3 ahead.

Wu looked as though he was perhaps wilting, finally being impacted by Saturday night’s late show in Sheffield. But just as he did on several occasions in the semi-final, he roared back from nowhere to claim the eighth and final frame of the afternoon session to level matters.

Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.

If you already have the Guardian app, make sure you’re on the most recent version.

In the Guardian app, tap the Profile settings button at the top right, then select Notifications.

Turn on sport notifications.

You felt with the early nerves shaken off, the evening session would be of a higher standard. And how Wu seemed to thrive. Chris Woakes, one of several sporting stars in attendance on Sunday alongside David Seaman, was among those applauding the youngster’s stunning 103 break as he started with intent in the evening.

He would win three of the first four frames with the brand of snooker for which he has quickly become renowned: high-risk but in the same breath, fearless. Wu moved into an 8-5 lead with such swagger it was as if he were playing a practice match at his local club, not the biggest tournament of them all with the weight of a nation on his shoulders.

But Murphy is granite in these moments. He battled valiantly to make it 9-7 going into the final frame but crucially, Wu won the last one of the day to go three ahead overnight. The first to 18 is crowned champion on Monday: have the coffee on standby, because this could be a late finish for the ages.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*