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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayStan Moody came up just short in his bid to become the first teenager to win a match at the World Snooker Championship since 2005 as he fell to a 10-7 defeat to the 2024 champion, Kyren Wilson.
The 19-year-old from Halifax began his Crucible debut in blistering fashion with two centuries and two further breaks over 80 to establish an improbable 6-3 lead at the end of a memorable morning session. Moody duly extended his lead by taking the first frame upon the evening’s resumption, only for Wilson to reel off seven frames in succession to shatter the qualifier’s hopes of emulating Ronnie O’Sullivan, the last teenager to win a Crucible match 21 years ago.
“Gutted” Moody said: “I had the match won at 7-3 and the red to go 8-3, and then it turned around. I felt comfortable out there but to lose bad frames like that, it hurts. I’ll go away and practice and come back strong.”
The pivotal moment came in the 11th frame when Moody missed a red along the top cushion to effectively seal an 8-3 lead. Instead, Wilson cleared the remaining balls and forced a re-spotted black, which he won to reduce the arrears to 7-4. As Moody’s previously solid game began to fall apart, he was far too casual trying to escape from three snookers Wilson required to salvage the 14th frame. Wilson got what he needed to haul level, and from there it was a relatively straightforward route to victory for the third seed.
Wilson will face Mark Allen in the second round but revealed problems with his cue – which he intends to change after the tournament in time for next season – are threatening his chances of repeating his 2024 success. “I absolutely hate my cue,” Wilson said. “It’s too flexible at the top, I’ve got no control, I’ve got no feel in my hand. I’m just fighting all the time. I’m just trying to dig it out with this one. It’s torture, but I’m trying.”

The former world No 1 Ding Junhui secured a last-16 showdown with his Chinese compatriot and reigning world champion Zhao Xintong by completing a 10-5 victory over David Gilbert. The Englishman won three of the first four frames to eat into a 7-2 overnight deficit, aided by Ding misjudging a plant that allowed him to pinch the 13th frame by a point. But Ding – who on Sunday became the eighth player to record a century of centuries at the world championship – replied with breaks of 106 and 61 to close out victory.
“I still have a bit of pressure and between the matches I try to put myself on the shots and concentrate on each one,” Ding told the BBC. “It looks like it’s working good, but I’m not quite enjoying it.”
Meanwhile, John Higgins is relishing the possibility of a seventh Crucible showdown with O’Sullivan after brushing off Ali Carter to reach the second round. They will meet again on Saturday night provided O’Sullivan negotiates his first-round match against Chinese debutant He Guoqiang, which is set to get under way on Tuesday.
Four-time winner Higgins emerged unscathed from an attritional clash with the former finalist Carter, hauling back a 5-4 overnight deficit to win 10-7 and seal his place in the last 16 for the 28th time in his illustrious career.
Higgins said: “It would be a great occasion. It might possibly be the last time we would play each other out there, so it would be a match to savour. We’ve been there for so many years and I would love to play him out there again. You’re playing one of the greatest ever so it would be a great match if he comes through and we play over three sessions.”
Higgins shrugged off the shock of losing the final five frames of Sunday’s opening session, clawing into a 7-6 lead before the pivotal moment in the 14th frame when Carter missed a rash red, allowing the veteran Scot to forge back two ahead. As Carter’s frustrations visibly grew, Higgins pulled further clear with a cool half-century and Carter’s gutsy response in the next frame proved irrelevant as Higgins forced his way over the line, celebrating his safe passage with a fist pump.


1 month ago
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