The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Record-breaking win no thrill for O’Sullivan

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Ronnie O’Sullivan shrugged off his record-breaking exploits after becoming the first player to win a Crucible match in less than two hours.

O’Sullivan won the two frames required to convert an 8-1 overnight advantage into a 10-1 win over Thepchaiya Un-Nooh in a total match time of 108 minutes.

The victory by the five-time world champion comfortabl­y eclipsed the previous record of 149 minutes set by Shaun Murphy when he whitewashe­d Luo Honghao last year.

But O’Sullivan said: “I’m not really bothered by records. I stopped bothering about records when I reached them and they didn’t really give you that buzz for very long.

“They’re nice when you’re chasing them but once you get them they’re over-rated in many ways. So I think you just take each game as it comes and it’s just nice to be out there playing some snooker.”

Thepchaiya missed a chance to prolong the inevitable in the opening frame of yesterday’s session as he was punished for missing a simple red on 22.

O’Sullivan duly stepped in with a clearance of 93 – his eighth break of more than 50 in the match – to move within one frame of the second round.

Despite breaking down on 41 when he missed a simple red, O’Sullivan was gifted a second chance to wrap up a crushing win with a further break of 48.

O’Sullivan, who next faces Ding Junhui, had caused controvers­y on the eve of the tournament by claiming players were being treated like “lab rats” over the decision to introduce a limited crowd.

But following the government’s U-turn during the tournament’s opening day, O’Sullivan admitted he felt more relaxed playing in front of an empty arena.

He added: “I prefer it – I don’t have to deal with the pressure and expectatio­n of the crowd and getting in and out of the venue.”

Scot Anthony McGill edged past Jack Lisowski in a tight match.

The Englishman had forced a deciding frame but McGill won a nervy final frame in which both players missed chances to seal a 10-9 victory.

Judd Trump will face Yan Bingtao in the second round after the Chinese 16th seed withstood a stirring comeback from qualifier Elliot Slessor.

Yan converted a 7-1 overnight lead into a 9-2 advantage before Slessor reeled off five frames in a row – including a debut Crucible century – to reduce the deficit to 9-7.

But with the game threatenin­g to stretch into an extra session, Yan managed to nudge over the line with a 10-7 win.

Thailand’s Noppon Saengkham built a 6-3 overnight lead against 10th seed and former champion Shaun Murphy.

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