New Straits Times

Ding fights back in semi-final thriller

-

SHEFFIELD: Chinese superstar Ding Jinhui produced stunning snooker on Friday to roar back into contention for a second successive world championsh­ip final appearance as he was tied 12-12 with defending champion Mark Selby.

The 30-year-old Chinese cueman had looked flat during the session earlier on Friday seeing his overnight lead, in the best of 33-frame duel, of 5-3 turned round to a 9-6 advantage for Selby.

However, Ding was a different player in the evening session showing the sort of form that had seen him overcome fivetime world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan in the quarter-finals.

Selby had ground down his opponent in overhaulin­g his early advantage — he has won the five frames that crept over the half hour mark — but there was little of that when Ding managed to put a break together when he got to the table.

Indeed trailing 12-10, with just two frames remaining, Ding showed extraordin­ary resolve in rattling off two century breaks (117 and 128) to level the match and set up a mouthwater­ing final session on Saturday.

It had been a very different story in their first session on Friday as Selby won six of the eight frames on offer in their morning session.

Selby, who also won the world title in 2014, was unapologet­ic about his laborious play.

“You know in this tournament you’re not going to be able to play well in every single session, it’s more or less impossible,” Selby said.

“So you need to be able to scrap it out and I’ve shown in the past I can do that.”

In the other semi-final, Scotland’s four-time world champion John Higgins — appearing in his first semi-final since the last time he won the crown in 2011 — retained control advancing to a 106 lead after being up 5-3 overnight against Barry Hawkins. AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia