Daily Record

I’m losing my belief that I can win fifth world title

Higgins now going mental

- BY NEIL GOULDING

SCOTS snooker star John Higgins has admitted the belief he can win a famous fifth World Championsh­ip is slowly dwindling as the years go by.

But the Wizard of Wishaw, 48, has linked up with a sports psychologi­st in his bid to finally conjure up another Crucible crown.

Snooker’s spiritual Sheffield home is a 17-day marathon of the mind as much as the body.

And even the greatest players ever have wanted the ground to swallow them up at the intimate venue as matches and titles have slipped away from their grasp.

Higgins will make his 30th straight Crucible appearance against tough Welsh qualifier Jamie Jones, who dumped out 2010 champion Neil Robertson in the final round of qualifying.

But the world No.13 admits he’s struggling to truly find the motivation.

He said: “The belief I can win it again is getting less and less if I’m being totally honest.

“It’s getting harder and harder as the years go on. But you never give up, do you?

“I’ve spent 30 years going to the Crucible and it is where you really need that mental side. It’s a difficult tournament, it really is.

“It’s a very enjoyable tournament obviously because it’s your final tournament of the year, and you want to put everything into it. But it is difficult, it’s difficult when you get down to that final weekend.

“Everybody’s trying to get down to that one-table set-up. It’s hard there. “I’m really enjoying working on the mental side. It’s something that’s still quite new to myself.

“I’m just trying something different to give yourself a fresh impetus into the game. Sometimes you need that.

“I’ve got stuck in a routine and got a bit lazy over the years and continuall­y doing the same thing. Sometimes you just need something new to try. That’s what I’m doing.”

Higgins’ last Crucible triumph came back in 2011.

Since then he has suffered agony in three successive finals between 2017-2019 and two seasons ago missed out on a ninth showpiece following a frustratin­g 17-11 semi-final defeat to rival Ronnie O’Sullivan.

“You enjoy competing and you enjoy playing,” insisted Higgins. “I know I keep on saying it.

“But it’s the other side of it. It’s the practice side of it I struggle with now. It gets more difficult as you get older.

“You’ve got to be putting the hours into your practice to then compete with the best players in the world.”

 ?? ?? TO THE FOUR Higgins now an elder statesman after spending 30 years coming to the Crucible and winning world titles, bottom left
TO THE FOUR Higgins now an elder statesman after spending 30 years coming to the Crucible and winning world titles, bottom left

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