The Daily Telegraph - Sport

‘My wife says I am the biggest show-off – this is unsettling’

Shaun Murphy admits an empty Crucible will bring extra challenges as he seeks to repeat his world-title heroics of 2005

- By Jim White

For the 128 competitor­s who gathered for the World Snooker Championsh­ip at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, things have been rather different from what they have experience­d before. For a start, the tournament is taking place in August, delayed by the coronaviru­s pandemic from its convention­al April slot.

And, when they arrive at the venue, the players have been faced with the sort of Covid-preventing measures, from undergoing frequent tests to not shaking hands before a match, that ensure this is like no other tournament.

“The list of dos and don’ts we’ve been sent is extreme,” says Shaun Murphy, the 2005 champion who begins his tournament against Noppon Saengkham, of Thailand, today. “And rightly so. The governing body have done a brilliant job to prepare us for this. They are flag bearers for the return of normal sport. So it’s important we’re seen to be doing the right things.

“Yes, a few of the strictures may be a little over the top, but ultimately we’re all very lucky to be going back to work. If there’s a few hoops we have to jump through, so be it.”

Murphy arrived in Sheffield after attending the funeral in Portugal of his manager and mentor Brandon Parker. He says he is hoping to dedicate success to the man who had been with him since he won the world title. But he knows the circumstan­ces are not easy. Like all of those involved, Murphy has barely played a competitiv­e match since February.

“Back then I’d been on the road for six, seven weeks consecutiv­ely,” he recalls. “I did an interview postmatch at one tournament and once the cameras were off I said, ‘Jeez, I’d like a week or two off this just to stay at home and work on my game’. All I can say is be careful what you wish for.”

At least in lockdown he did work on his game. Consigned to his home in Ireland for 11 weeks, he spent much of the time watching videos on Youtube of former players in action, trying to improve through study. When he was finally able to go back to the snooker club in Dublin where he practises, he reckons that it was as big a release as he has ever felt.

“I never want to go through that again,” he says of lockdown. “Let’s just say I don’t think my wife thought I was great company.” After the longest gap in competitiv­e action in his profession­al career, he played in the Tour Championsh­ips in Milton Keynes at the end of June. Staged behind closed doors, it was, he says, a very odd experience. Not least because he lost in the first round to his practice partner Mark Allen. “I made six centuries and there wasn’t one clap, not one tap of the knee,” he says. “The silence was deafening.

“My wife says I’m the biggest show-off she’s ever met and I use snooker as my vehicle.

“I think the top competitor­s in any sport are performers. To go out to nobody and just play down the lens was unsettling.”

Not only that, he suggests the lack of a response changed the rhythm of the match.

“Normally when somebody makes six centuries in front of a crowd it gets such a reaction it lifts the player so much it builds momentum. And it can swamp his opponent. That didn’t happen, Mark [Allen] hit me back.

“The lack of a crowd really did play a part in the eventual result. Or that’s my excuse anyway.”

The plan was that the Crucible would host spectators throughout the competitio­n, but this was shelved after the first day when Prime Minister Boris Johnson slammed the brakes on fans attending sporting events.

The question is whether the arena holds the same level of intimidati­on, but Murphy is adamant it remains one of the most intimidati­ng venues in the sport.

“Oh, the Crucible can eat you alive, no question,” he says. “I remember the first time I walked out as a debutant to play against Stephen Hendry.

“I was so nervous, whilst I was waiting for Hendry to be introduced, I unscrewed my bottle of water and tried to pour it without looking as I’d seen guys do on the TV many times. I missed the glass.

“I had only been in the arena for two minutes and I nearly drowned myself.”

When he starts his first-round match against Saengkham today he is hoping his aim has improved.

“I certainly hope I can deal with it all a lot better now,” he smiles.

‘I made six centuries and there wasn’t one clap, not one tap of the knee. The silence was deafening’

 ??  ?? Back on cue: Shaun Murphy is happy to be playing again after the lockdown lay-off
Back on cue: Shaun Murphy is happy to be playing again after the lockdown lay-off

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