The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Murphy’ s tirade over teen victor dismissed

- MARK STANIFORTH

World Snooker chiefs have dismissed Shaun Murphy’s claims that Chinese teenager Si Jiahui should not have been given the chance to score a famous UK Championsh­ip upset over the 2008 winner on Tuesday night.

Murphy, a former world champion who has banked more than £4 million in career prize money, was bundled out of the event at the first-round stage by 19-year-old Si, who is playing as an amateur after dropping off the tour at the end of last year.

Afterwards the 39year-old launched an extraordin­ary tirade against World Snooker Tour for allowing players like Si to compete via the “top-up” system, in which the topranked players outside the tour gain entry if the 128 available profession­al slots cannot be filled.

Murphy told BBC Radio Five Live: “I am going to sound like a grumpy old man but that young man shouldn’t be in the tournament. It is not fair, it is not right.

“I feel extremely hard done by that I have lost to someone who shouldn’t even be in the building.

“I don’t know why we as a sport allow amateurs to compete in profession­al tournament­s. This is our livelihood. This is our living. We are self-employed individual­s and not contracted sportsmen. We don’t play for a team.

“The other 127 runners and riders in the tournament, it is their livelihood too. It is wrong, in my opinion, to walk into somebody who is not playing with the same pressures and concerns I am.

“He played like a man who does not have a care in the world, because he does not have a care in the world.

“Amateurs should not be allowed in profession­al tournament­s, the end. This is our livelihood. This is how I put food on the table.

“This is how I earn money. Since turning profession­al at 15, I have earned the right to call myself a profession­al snooker player. He hasn’t done that. He shouldn’t be on the table.”

World Snooker Tour issued a robust response, saying it “strongly disagreed” with Murphy’s claims and insisting the opportunit­y for young amateur players to compete on the biggest stage formed a “crucial part” of their developmen­t.

The organisati­on said in a statement: “Si Jiahui earns a place in ranking tournament­s this season as one of the leading players on the 2021 Q School rankings. While he may have amateur status, he deserves his place in our events, based on his results.

“Amateurs play under the same rules as profession­als, they can earn prize money and places on the World Snooker Tour based on results.

“Many elite amateur players like Si Jiahui train and compete fulltime in the hope of earning a guaranteed tour place, therefore they are competing under significan­t pressure with no guarantees.

“Providing opportunit­ies for the best amateur players is important for our growth as a sport and that is something that Shaun benefited from during his early days as a player.

“We have come a very long way as a global sport over the past decade and that has partly been down to the structures we have built both at profession­al and grassroots level worldwide.

“For the best young players, the chance to compete on the big stage is a crucial part of their developmen­t and the developmen­t of the sport as a whole.”

This season there are only 122 profession­al players on the World Snooker Tour, mainly because a number of the amateur tournament­s which offer tour cards as prizes were not played due to the pandemic.

This means the best amateurs, ranked by virtue of their performanc­es at Q School - in which Si finished fifth – are effectivel­y guaranteed a top-up place in 128-strong tournament­s.

Murphy himself played as an amateur golfer when he tried to qualify for The Open in 2019, missing out after a 12-over-par score of 84 at County Louth.

● Gary Wilson made his fourth career maximum break in York yesterday.

He achieved the 147 score in the sixth frame of his best-of-11 clash with Ian Burns, which he went on to win 6-2.

His maximum puts Wilson in line for the tournament’s £15,000 high break prize.

 ?? ?? EARLY EXIT: Former world champion Sean Murphy looks on as 19-year-old amateur Si Jiahui takes command at the table in the first round.
EARLY EXIT: Former world champion Sean Murphy looks on as 19-year-old amateur Si Jiahui takes command at the table in the first round.

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