Edinburgh Evening News

Vafaei laments state of Crucible following World Championsh­ip loss

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Hossein Vafaei strongly criticised the conditions at the Crucible after crashing out of the World Snooker Championsh­ip in a 10-5 defeat by former champion Judd Trump.

The Iranian described the famous Sheffield venue as ‘smelly’, compared its practice facilities to ‘like playing in a garage’, and questioned the treatment of players in the course of the marathon 17-day event.

"Everything's so bad. If you ask me if I want to come back here, I would tell you no way," said Vafaei, who is no stranger to Crucible controvers­y after playing a rash break-off shot in his defeat by Ronnie O'Sullivan last year. "Forget the history, you want to go somewhere really nice as a player. You walk round the Crucible and it smells really bad. You go to other countries, and everything is shiny. But here it's completely different. The practice room – do you see anything special? I feel like I'm practising in a garage."

Speculatio­n over the future of the Crucible, which has staged he tournament since 1977, has been heightened since world number one Ronnie O'Sullivan suggested it should be moved to Saudi Arabia or China when the existing deal expires in 2027. Vafaei, who made his debut in 2022, is clearly no fan and continued: "Look at the China venues, how fantastic they treat the players, a red carpet and an opening ceremony. The players are treated like stars. But here no one looks after the players, before and after the match no-one cares who you are.

"If they don't want to lose the Crucible, invest some money, make it shinier, make it nicer, make it more luxury for the people. If they make it cleaner and nicer, people will enjoy it."

Trump turned a 6-3 overnight advantage into a comfortabl­e win over his opponent, who cut a frustrated figure after failing to take chances to reach the midway point with more of a chance against the 2019 champion. Trump was not required to summon a halfcentur­y in a low-key second session, and was happy to ease though a potentiall­y tricky assignment and seal his place in the last 16 against either Tom Ford or Ricky Walden.

"I got the job done in that first session," shrugged Trump.

"I knew it was going to be a bit demoralisi­ng for him to be 6-3 down after that performanc­e, so today was about getting a few frames early on and knocking the belief out of him.

"Coming into this event I was a lot more confident than I have been in the last three or four years. It's nice to know I'm into the second round and I've got a few days off so I can sit back and watch other people sweat."

It was a different matter for four-time champion Mark Selby, who is on the brink of falling at the first hurdle after losing his first session 7-3 to debutant Joe O'Connor.

Selby, who questioned his future in the sport after losing to Gary Wilson in the Tour Championsh­ip earlier this month, was second best against his Leicester rival, who reeled off five frames in a row to leave himself in a commanding position ahead of today's resumption.

Eleventh seed Zhang Anda followed defending champion Luca Brecel out of the tournament as he was hammered 10-4 by last year's surprise quarter-finalist Jak Jones.

Shaun Murphy fashioned a 6-3 lead over China's Lyu Haotian despite a dreadful missed black in the fifth frame that briefly inspired his opponent to claw back a 3-1 deficit and level at 3-3.

Look at the China venues, how fantastic they treat the players

 ?? ?? Hossein Vafaei, right, voiced his criticism of the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield after losing to Judd Trump.
Picture: Richard Sellers / PA
Hossein Vafaei, right, voiced his criticism of the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield after losing to Judd Trump. Picture: Richard Sellers / PA
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