The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Mcgill up for Crucible fight after terrific comeback

SNOOKER: Scot prepared to step up game against world No 3 Ding

- John skilbeck

Anthony Mcgill produced a remarkable fightback to stay in the Betfred World Championsh­ip yesterday but admitted he must step up his game to worry secondroun­d opponent Ding Junhui.

The 27-year-old Glaswegian dug in from 7-3 and 8-5 adrift to beat Ryan Day 10-8, reeling off five frames in a row as his Welsh opponent crumbled.

Qualifier Day made breaks of 141 and 145 in Wednesday’s first session but that early fluency deserted him, and he squandered chances to make it 9-9 before Mcgill stumbled over the winning line.

Mcgill told himself at 8-5 behind that he needed to give the remaining frames all he had, and he returned from the mid-session interval ready for a fight to the finish.

“It’s the World Championsh­ip, it’s a tournament worth trying in,” he said.

“You lose most of the matches from the position I was in, 99% probably.

“But you’d lose them all if you gave up and that kind of happened last year. I was playing Stephen Maguire and I was 7-2 down and never settled.

“I had a bit more fight in me this year and anything can happen,” he added.

But Mcgill has identified potting as a flaw in his game, and for a snooker player at this level that leaves him vulnerable to any player, with world No 3 Ding sure to be firm favourite when their last-16 match begins on Sunday.

“My potting is just not good enough and the chances are I’ll get found out in the next game but it’s just good to be still involved,” Mcgill said.

“Ding is one of the best break builders there has ever been. I’m in for a tough fight but at least I’m in one. I’ll need to pick it up because you can dig in and all that but eventually you have to play some good snooker.”

Frustrated Day said: “It’s going to be a good month or so before I pick up the cue again, but I’m not really thinking about it now. I’m just going to have a bit of a break, and go again at the start of next season.”

Mark Allen moved into an early lead in his second-round clash with Joe Perry at the Crucible.

The left-hander from Antrim edged an absorbing first session 5-3 against the Cambridges­hire man who knocked out defending champion Mark Selby on the opening day of the tournament.

Allen made breaks of 94, 99, 67, 73 and 50 as the best-of-25-frame contest got under way. He and Perry play to a finish across morning and evening sessions today.

Judd Trump, the 2011 runner-up, is through to the next round after beating world no 55 Chris Wakelin in the late night contest.

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