The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Hearn hopeful fans will be able to return for Crucible final

-

Barry Hearn hopes fans might be allowed back to the Crucible in time for the World Snooker Championsh­ip final after the UK Government brought an early end to the experiment of socially-distanced fans on the first day of the tournament.

The World Snooker Tour chairman said the handful who did make it in yesterday morning had the “ultimate golden ticket” as they saw defending champion Judd Trump put on the back foot by Tom Ford, who led 5-4 at the end of the session after winning the first three frames.

But after those fans had taken their seats, Prime Minister Boris Johnson made a lunchtime announceme­nt in which he said the pilot schemes – which also included racing and cricket – must end due to fears over a rising number of coronaviru­s cases across the country.

Fans with tickets for yesterday’s play would be let in for the afternoon and evening session, but the tournament – which concludes with the final on August 15 and 16 – will continue behind closed doors from today.

“It leaves us on Plan B, we are going to be resilient, we’ll get through as we always will and Plan B is to revert to, from tomorrow, behind closed doors,” Hearn told BBC Sport.

“There is a chance, I’m ever the optimist, a return for the final. In the meantime, I’m gutted, of course, the work the team has done, an amazing job getting this ready and they must feel terribly deflated.

“From day one we followed every single safety guideline, we have a new guideline and we follow that as well.

“Health and safety is paramount and the show must go on and this show is going on!

“Congratula­tions to those guys who were here today because they’ve had the experience as ever, the ultimate golden ticket!”

The decision to remove fans came after qualifier Anthony Hamilton withdrew from the event saying he feared for his health as a chronic asthmatic, leading to criticism from Hearn and others that he had prevented someone else from playing.

Following yesterday’s news, Hearn remained unmoved.

“He pulled out, made his position clear,” he said. “Good luck, see you later son.”

Meanwhile Scot John Higgins has vowed to put his “heart and soul” into his quest to break a run of three consecutiv­e losing finals and claim a fifth world title.

The 45-year-old begins his campaign against fellow veteran Matthew Stevens today and says lockdown has left him refreshed and ready to chase down what would be his first win in almost a decade.

Higgins said: “I’ve been enjoying my practice in the last three or four weeks.

“I’ve been in eight finals, won four and lost four. If someone had told me I’d have won four world titles growing up then I’d have bitten their hand off. But the last three years losing the finals has not been great.”

 ??  ?? Barry Hearn hopes fans will be back for final.
Barry Hearn hopes fans will be back for final.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom