The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fu joins Ding in World Championsh­ip semi-finals

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LONDON: Dreams of a first Asian world snooker champion moved closer to reality as Hong Kong’s Marco Fu joined China’s Ding Junhui in the semi-finals of this year’s World Championsh­ip at Sheffield’s Crucible Theatre on Wednesday.

The pair have been kept apart in the last four, raising the prospect of an all-Asian final to decide the winner of snooker’s most prestigiou­s prize.

Fu withstood a fightback by Barry Hawkins to win 13-1l on Wednesday, the day after Ding became the first man into this year’s semi-finals with a 13-3 thrashing of former champion Mark Williams.

Now Fu will faces England’s world number one Mark Selby in the last four, with Ding up against experience­d Scottish cueman Alan McManus.

Since the modern World Championsh­ip came into being in 1969, only two players from outside Britain and Ireland -Canada’s Cliff Thorburn (1980) and Australia’s Neil Robertson (2010) -- have lifted the trophy.

An estimated audience of 100 million in China alone watched Ding beat Fu to win the 2011 World Championsh­ip results LONDON: Results from the World Snooker Championsh­ip at the Crucible Theatre, Sheffield, on Wednesday (x denotes seed): Quarter-finals (best of 25 frames) Mark Selby (ENG x2) bt Kyren Wilson (ENG) 13-8 Alan McManus (SCO) bt John Higgins (SCO x8) 13-11 Marco Fu (HKG x14) bt Barry Hawkins (ENG x11) 13-11 Played Tuesday Ding Junhui (CHN) bt Mark Williams (WAL x13) 13-3 Semi-finals (best of 33 frames) Matches start Thursday: Alan McManus (SCO) v Ding Junhui (CHN) Marco Fu (HKG) v Mark Selby (ENG) - AFP Masters title, proof both of the Chinese player’s popularity in his homeland in particular and the growing appeal of snooker in general across the region.

Fu though had to fight hard to reach the semi-finals on Wednesday after Hawkins, who knocked out five-times world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan in the previous round, launched a remarkable recovery from the seemingly hopeless position of 9-1 behind.

The 38-year-old Fu started well enough Wednesday when, resuming 7-1 up, he won the first two frames of the session, only for Hawkins to rally in style.

But Fu, last a world semi-finalist in 2006, eventually held his nerve with a superb break of 74 -- in response to 60 from Hawkins -- in the 24th frame that saw him into the last four.

“That has to be the best clearance of my life,” said Fu. “I was under a lot of pressure at the end and I couldn’t really pot the last ball.

“Some of the shots I played were were horrendous -- and I was choosing all the wrong shots. Under pressure, you can think a bit silly.

“I almost threw it away, but luckily I made a good break at the end.”

Meanwhile McManus, 45, reached his first world semi-final in 23 years after winning the last four frames of his all-Scottish clash with John Higgins as he too won 13-11. - AFP

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