The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Welsh veteran Williams holds off Higgins to claim his third Crucible title

Snooker: Third title for Welshman as Scot comes up just short

- John skilbeck

Mark Williams withstood an incredible fightback from John Higgins to land his third Betfred World Championsh­ip title – and then stripped off in celebratio­n.

The Welshman became the oldest winner at the Crucible for 40 years and came good on his promise to hold his press conference naked – although he wore a towel to protect his modesty.

Higgins had roared back from 14-7 behind to level at 15-15, feasting on mistakes from his opponent, putting the Scot seemingly on the march to glory and Williams in turmoil.

Back came Williams, and a century break to go one frame away from victory suggested his nerves had settled.

But, at the moment when he stood on the very brink of victory, Williams twitched, missing a pink that was match ball. Higgins had not expected another chance but came back to the table and cleared up with a 65 break, vintage snooker from the four-time champion.

Williams needed another chance and gave himself one early in the next frame. This time Williams made no mistake, a break of 69 leaving Higgins needing three snookers. This time Higgins was beaten, but he had played his part in one of the greatest Crucible finals.

Ray Reardon was 45 when he won in 1978, and his fellow Welshman Williams is the oldest man to get to grips with the trophy since.

Williams, previously champion in 2000 and 2003, lost to Grimsby’s Stuart Carrington in qualifying last year.

He spent the time he would have been in Sheffield “away in my caravan, getting drunk and watching it on TV”, even missing the tournament’s 40th anniversar­y celebratio­ns for which he was the only absent living winner.

Now he has his sport’s most coveted trophy again.

He led 10-7 overnight and soon stretched that to 14-7, Higgins potting just 31 points over the four frames.

At that stage the Welshman had a slim chance of winning with a session to spare, but Higgins had other ideas and won three of the afternoon’s remaining four frames to narrow the gap to 15-10.

Higgins first won the title 20 years ago, and he dearly wanted to move level with Ronnie O’sullivan, who has remained stuck on five Crucible triumphs since 2013.

He started his evening’s work with a 131 break, his fourth century of the match, swept in a 67 clearance in the next frame and then an 82 to close to 15-13. The 42-year-old from Wishaw swept through the next two frames too, and incredibly he was level.

Williams, who as a teenager was a keen amateur boxer, looked stricken but bounced back off the ropes, stopping the rot by nudging back in front and then firing a break of exactly 100 to move one away from victory.

Huge twists were still to come but Williams got the job done.

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 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Mark Williams, world champion for a third time after last night’s thrilling finale.
Picture: PA. Mark Williams, world champion for a third time after last night’s thrilling finale.
 ??  ?? John Higgins: Beaten in the final for a second year running despite fighting back from 14-7 down.
John Higgins: Beaten in the final for a second year running despite fighting back from 14-7 down.

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